Sawyer Paul

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Sawyer Paul

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August 2010

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Average rating: 2.75 · 4 ratings · 1 review · 5 distinct works
No Chinook

3.50 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2007 — 3 editions
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A Record Year for Rainfall

it was ok 2.00 avg rating — 2 ratings
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The Good Coffee (Lattice #1)

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 2013
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The Heart is Raw, Season 1

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Galactic Epoch I

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings2 editions
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More books by Sawyer Paul…
All Fours
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by Miranda July (Goodreads Author)
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Real Americans
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by Rachel Khong (Goodreads Author)
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Sawyer’s Recent Updates

Sawyer Paul wants to read
How to Become the Dark Lord and Die Trying by Django Wexler
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Sawyer Paul is 30% done with All Fours
All Fours by Miranda July
All Fours
by Miranda July (Goodreads Author)
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The Education of Aubrey McKee by Alex Pugsley
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Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots
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Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots
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Sawyer Paul is currently reading
The Education of Aubrey McKee by Alex Pugsley
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Sawyer Paul is currently reading
Real Americans by Rachel Khong
Real Americans
by Rachel Khong (Goodreads Author)
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All Fours by Miranda July
All Fours
by Miranda July (Goodreads Author)
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Catch Me If You Can by Frank W. Abagnale
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Catch Me If You Can by Frank W. Abagnale
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Quotes by Sawyer Paul  (?)
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“That’s why I walked the same route to the LRT as I always did after seeing Shawn. It occurred to me that I should find another route to set my mind off course, that I could erase sections of memory that always held me when I walked this street. I thought that if I found a path I’d never taken, I’d be able to clear my head of Shawn, Kate, Carly, Mark, everyone. Maybe if I travelled somewhere new. Maybe if I met some new people. Maybe if I reinvented myself somehow.
But I didn’t, because the path I took no longer signified anything. I kept straight down the same path I had taken every other time. I climbed the same steel staircase that seemed to lead straight up to the clear, wide Calgary sky.”
K. Sawyer Paul

“I excused myself from the conversation, walked away, and stuck my hands in my jacket pockets. I had no drink. I didn’t fidget. I kept my head down and headed for the door. It wasn’t that far. I just had to get by some people who wouldn’t suspect a thing, because I didn’t know any of them. I didn’t have to grab my coat because it was still on my shoulders. If Shawn saw me, I would say I was just going for air or a smoke or something. I had been trying to quit, and he knew this, so maybe going out for air was a better excuse. Sure, it was probably eleven below, but it was crowded and he’d buy it because I’d made him believe that I’m shy. I could be out in the midnight winter chill and home within an hour. It would have been safe, and I would have been warm, and no Chinook would have hit me.”
K. Sawyer Paul, No Chinook

“I excused myself from the conversation, walked away, and stuck my hands in my jacket pockets. I had no drink. I didn’t fidget. I kept my head down and headed for the door. It wasn’t that far. I just had to get by some people who wouldn’t suspect a thing, because I didn’t know any of them. I didn’t have to grab my coat because it was still on my shoulders. If Shawn saw me, I would say I was just going for air or a smoke or something. I had been trying to quit, and he knew this, so maybe going out for air was a better excuse. Sure, it was probably eleven below, but it was crowded and he’d buy it because I’d made him believe that I’m shy. I could be out in the midnight winter chill and home within an hour. It would have been safe, and I would have been warm, and no Chinook would have hit me.”
K. Sawyer Paul, No Chinook

“That’s why I walked the same route to the LRT as I always did after seeing Shawn. It occurred to me that I should find another route to set my mind off course, that I could erase sections of memory that always held me when I walked this street. I thought that if I found a path I’d never taken, I’d be able to clear my head of Shawn, Kate, Carly, Mark, everyone. Maybe if I travelled somewhere new. Maybe if I met some new people. Maybe if I reinvented myself somehow.
But I didn’t, because the path I took no longer signified anything. I kept straight down the same path I had taken every other time. I climbed the same steel staircase that seemed to lead straight up to the clear, wide Calgary sky.”
K. Sawyer Paul

“... I wondered what my husband was doing right then and I wondered what he'd ever do now that we'd both have to do things in this new kind of without, the kind of without that was final, the kind that meant there would be no apologies, no forgiveness, and now we'd each have to go about the slug of waking, bathing, eating, without the other as a witness, this person we'd split so much of our lives with, a person who housed entire armies of information about the other and who, I wondered, who would we thumb over our pasts with and who would notice how golden my husband's pale skin became in the lamplight in his office so late at night when his mind would move chalk sticks across, across, across, creating problems and solutions and problems and solutions and if there was no one to notice these things about my husband would my husband even exist anymore? And where would all the me that he had housed in himself go if I wasn't there to be with him and see what he kept of me in him, and did the versions of each of us that we had crafted so exactly and precisely for the other person, did those versions just evaporate, just die, just disappear, just fall out of a building somewhere in each of our brains and if they did then why didn't we get to have funerals for them? I loved the he that he was to me. I loved him and he is dead and I want a black moment for that man. Give me a black moment for that.”
Catherine Lacey, Nobody Is Ever Missing

“The best work that anybody ever writes is the work that is on the verge of embarrassing him, always.”
Arthur Miller

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