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Paul Legler

Paul Legler’s Followers (27)

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Paula
1,776 books | 1,053 friends

Oliver ...
370 books | 37 friends

Jonatha...
23 books | 119 friends

Ingrid
2,701 books | 168 friends

Becky L...
4,064 books | 57 friends

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C
1,753 books | 18 friends

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158 books | 253 friends

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Paul Legler

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Born
The United States
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Member Since
October 2008


Paul Legler is a former-lawyer-turned-writer. He grew up on a small farm in North Dakota and was educated at the University of North Dakota, University of Minnesota, and Harvard University. He worked as a poverty and civil rights attorney, Senior Policy Analyst at the Malcolm Wiener Center for Social Policy at Harvard University, and policy adviser in President Clinton's Administration. He currently lives in Minneapolis, Minnesota where he works as a writer and public policy consultant. ...more

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Paul Legler I have three books that I will definitely read this summer. I already purchased them, but I’m saving them for those lounge chair afternoons on the pat…moreI have three books that I will definitely read this summer. I already purchased them, but I’m saving them for those lounge chair afternoons on the patio or the beach (If I can wait that long): The Books of Jacob by Olga Tokarczuk, Old Poets: Reminiscences and Opinions by Donald Hall, and The Paris Bookseller by Kerri Maher. I am also looking for any Edna O’Brien books that I have not read. I have read most of her books, but I never tire of her writing so I need to find the remaining. (less)
Average rating: 4.32 · 74 ratings · 21 reviews · 3 distinct worksSimilar authors
Half the Terrible Things

4.33 avg rating — 49 ratings2 editions
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Song of Destiny

4.32 avg rating — 25 ratings — published 2013 — 4 editions
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Low-income fathers and chil...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.

Paul’s Recent Updates

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Primeval and Other Times by Olga Tokarczuk
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The First Fascist by Sergio Luzzatto
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Stranger Than Fiction by Edwin Frank
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History by Elsa Morante
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The Lost Steps by Alejo Carpentier
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Man's Fate by André Malraux
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A Naked Singularity by Sergio de la Pava
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The Siege by Ismail Kadare
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Flesh by David Szalay
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It's a puzzle to me how this book won the Booker Prize. ...more
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Jim Harrison by Jim Harrison
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It seems he was a better poet than novelist.
More of Paul's books…
Katherine Boo
“The astonishing thing is that some people are good, and that many others try to be.”
Katherine Boo

Rivka Galchen
“If a story seems too random, or perhaps too brilliant, for a "madman" to have conceived of it himself, then consider that the "author" might be reality and the "madman" just the reader. After all, only reality can escape the limits of our imagination.”
Rivka Galchen, Atmospheric Disturbances

Stacy Schiff
“The Massachusetts elite had read everything in sight, some of it too closely. As would be said of logic-loving Ipswich minister John Wise, those men were not so much the masters as the victims of learning. They had read and reread bushels of witchcraft texts. They parsed legal code. They knew their history. They worked in the sterling name of reason.”
Stacy Schiff, The Witches: Salem, 1692

Siri Hustvedt
“All thoughts of revenge are born of the pain of helplessness. 'I suffer' becomes 'You will suffer'. And let us not lie: Vengeance is invigorating. It focuses and enlivens us, and it quashes grief because it turns the emotion outward. In grief we go to pieces. In revenge we come together as a single pointed weapon aimed at a target. However destructive in the long run, it serves a useful purpose for a time”
Siri Hustvedt, The Blazing World

Jim Harrison
“Beware O wanderer, the road is walking too.”
Jim Harrison

63470 On the Southern Literary Trail — 2185 members — last activity 6 hours, 37 min ago
Whether you prefer Faulkner, O'Connor, McCullers or more recent authors of Southern Literature such as Clyde Edgerton, Tom Franklin, William Gay, or M ...more
179994 Great Plains Book Club — 60 members — last activity Jan 12, 2025 07:35PM
Discussion forum for readers of the Great Plains. General discussion is come one, come all for books of the Great Plains. Coffee Klatch Annex is speci ...more
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