John C.  Ryan

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John C. Ryan

Goodreads Author


Born
in Staten Island, The United States
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Johanna Lindsey Amanda Forester Kathleen Woodiwiss

Member Since
January 2013


New (and hopeful) author of Historical Romances, especially of Scotland and the British Isles. Love to write about kilts and Celts with my cats and a Cabernet.

When not engrossed in the creation of my next novel, or rapt in dreams of romance in the beautiful Emerald Isles, I share my home in New York with a myriad of pets, several of them handicap, and the love of my life, Elizabeth, a Veterinary nurse.

One of eight children, I credit my parents with stoking my interest in my Celtic heritage. My father, of Irish descent, passed prematurely from an illness attributed to his tenure in the New York City Fire Department. He was my living example of the Ryan creed, Death before Dishonor. My mother, a registered nurse, has Italian roots and has tra
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Average rating: 3.16 · 31 ratings · 22 reviews · 2 distinct works
Lady of the Loch

3.25 avg rating — 24 ratings — published 2015 — 3 editions
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TWO LAIRDS ONE LADY

2.86 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 2013 — 3 editions
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Quotes by John C. Ryan  (?)
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“One way to minimize your driving is to have a car that doesn’t run particularly well. If it’s a joy to drive the car, you’ll be out there driving all the time. You want something that’s unpleasant.—Ray Magliozzi, co-host of National Public Radio’s Car Talk”
John C. Ryan, Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things

“In our personal lives, we can seek to align our behavior with our values. We can live more simply, at once reducing environmental impacts, saving money, and leading by example. In our public lives—in our workplaces and in our democracy—we can advocate for dramatic reforms in the systems that shape our consumption patterns. We can, for example, advocate the elimination of perverse taxpayer subsidies such as those that make aluminum too cheap and undammed rivers too rare. And we can promote an overhaul of the tax system. If governments taxed pollution and resource depletion, rather than paychecks and savings, prices would help unveil the secret lives of everyday things. Environmentally harmful goods would cost more and benign goods would cost less. The power of the marketplace would help propel the unstuffing of North American life.”
John C. Ryan, Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things

“The time is ripe for confronting consumption. Not only are ecological problems like climate change more pressing than ever, consumerism has lost some of its allure in its North American epicenter. A majority of Americans already feel that their quality of life is suffering because of overemphasis on work and material gain. Encroachment of work and shopping on leisure time has millions of people searching for ways to restore balance in their lives—through lifestyles that trade money for time, commercialism for community, and things for joy. These people—”downshifters” or practitioners of “voluntary simplicity”—may one day attract the majority to their way of life by demonstrating that less stuff can mean more happiness. A North America that prospers without overusing the Earth—a sustainable North America—is entirely possible. All the pieces of the puzzle—from bike- and transit-friendly cities to sustainable farms to low-impact lifestyles—exist, scattered all over the continent. All that remains is for us to do the work of putting the pieces together.”
John C. Ryan, Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things

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