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Miranda Hale

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Miranda Hale

Goodreads Author


Born
in Spokane, WA, The United States
Website

Twitter

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Member Since
August 2009

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Miranda Celeste Hale is a  writer, rhetoric/composition instructor, author, public  speaker/presenter, researcher, skeptic, and atheist.

Her work within the skeptic community, including presentations at TAM 2012 and TAM 2013, primarily focuses on the intersection of rhetoric and skeptical activism.

She has also written, discussed, and spoken a great deal about the serious consequences and life-long negative after-effects of Catholic childhood religious indoctrination.

On her website, you can find her blog, resume, articles & essays that she's written for various other websites, information on her talks and presentations, and links to her YouTube videos, podcast & video interviews, and other media appearances.

Miranda is available for and inter
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Average rating: 4.0 · 4 ratings · 0 reviews · 4 distinct works
Church and State

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2011 — 2 editions
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'A woman like that is not a...

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The Pleiades Three

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The Daughter Of A demon

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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

French: Short Sto...
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The Mirror Crack'...
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Erica Jong
“I had gone to graduate school because I loved literature, but in graduate school you were not supposed to study literature. You were supposed to study criticism. Some professor wrote a book 'proving' that TOM JONES was really a Marxist parable. Some other professor wrote a book 'proving' that TOM JONES was really a Christian parable. Some other professor wrote a book 'proving' that TOM JONES was really a parable of the Industrial Revolution. . . . Nobody seemed to give a shit about your reading TOM JONES as long as you could reel off the names of the various theories and who invented them. . . . My response was to sleep through as much of it as possible. ”
Erica Jong, Fear of Flying

A.S. Byatt
“He had been violently confused by her real presence in the opposite inaccessible corner. For months he had been possessed by the imagination of her. She had been distant and closed away, a princess in a tower, and his imagination’s work had been all to make her present, all of her, to his mind and senses, the quickness of her and the mystery, the whiteness of her, which was part of her extreme magnetism, and the green look of those piercing or occluded eyes. Her presence had been unimaginable, or more strictly, only to be imagined. Yet here she was, and he was engaged in observing the ways in which she resembled, or differed from, the woman he dreamed, or reached for in sleep, or would fight for.”
A. S. Byatt

Vladimir Nabokov
“I recall certain moments, let us call them icebergs in paradise, when after having had my fill of her –after fabulous, insane exertions that left me limp and azure-barred–I would gather her in my arms with, at last, a mute moan of human tenderness (her skin glistening in the neon light coming from the paved court through the slits in the blind, her soot-black lashes matted, her grave gray eyes more vacant than ever–for all the world a little patient still in the confusion of a drug after a major operation)–and the tenderness would deepen to shame and despair, and I would lull and rock my lone light Lolita in my marble arms, and moan in her warm hair, and caress her at random and mutely ask her blessing, and at the peak of this human agonized selfless tenderness (with my soul actually hanging around her naked body and ready to repent), all at once, ironically, horribly, lust would swell again–and 'oh, no,' Lolita would say with a sigh to heaven, and the next moment the tenderness and the azure–all would be shattered.”
Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita

Kingsley Amis
“Consciousness was upon him before he could get out of the way.”
Kingsley Amis

Ray Bradbury
“You're a hopeless romantic," said Faber. "It would be funny if it were not serious. It's not books you need, it's some of the things that once were in books. The same things could be in the 'parlor families' today. The same infinite detail and awareness could be projected through the radios, and televisors, but are not. No,no it's not books at all you're looking for! Take it where you can find it, in old phonograph records, old motion pictures, and in old friends; look for it in nature and look for it in yourself. Books were only one type or receptacle where we stored a lot of things we were afraid we might forget. There is nothing magical in them at all. The magic is only in what books say, how they stitched the patches of the universe together into one garment for us. Of course you couldn't know this, of course you still can't understand what I mean when i say all this. You are intuitively right, that's what counts.”
Ray Bradbury, Fahrenheit 451

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