Wendie Creitz

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Iain Banks
“What height is this table?' he said suddenly, just as I was about to go to the bread bin for a slice to wipe my plate with. I turned round and looked at him, wondering why he was bothering with such an easy question.
'Thirty inches,' I told him, and took a crust from the bin.
'Wrong,' he said with an eager grin. 'Two foot six.'
I shook my head at him, scowling, and wiped the brown rim of soup from the inside of my plate. There was a time when I was genuinely afraid of these idiotic questions, but now, apart from the fact that I must know the height, length, breadth, area and volume of just about every part of the house and everything in it, I can see my father's obsession for what it is. It gets embarrassing at times when there are guests in the house, even if they are family and ought to know what to expect. They'll be sitting there, probably in the lounge, wondering whether Father's going to feed them anything or just give an impromptu lecture on cancer of the colon or tapeworms, when he'll sidle up to somebody, look round to make sure everybody's watching, then in a conspiratorial stage-whisper say: 'See that door over there? It's eighty-five inches, corner to corner. ' Then he'll wink and walk off, or slide over on his seat, looking nonchalant.”
Iain Banks, The Wasp Factory

Aravind Adiga
“Good, Country-Mouse. It’s all here. And where is your master? Will you drive him there?” “I am my own master.”
Aravind Adiga, The White Tiger

Walter Isaacson
“the Macintosh lacked a fan, another example of Jobs’s dogmatic stubbornness. Fans, he felt, detracted from the calm of a computer. This caused many component failures and earned the Macintosh the nickname “the beige toaster,” which did not enhance its popularity.”
Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs

Michael              Parker
“Are you ready for nuclear Armageddon?”
Michael Parker, The Devil's Trinity

“Finally I realized these were the nasty Christians praying for their neighborhoods, their communities, their families—the prayers of the people I hated the most. Wherever these praying Christians lived, I couldn’t penetrate the neighborhood. I got in, but I couldn’t do the evil acts I had come to perform. So I would move on to the next neighborhood. This was my calling, and it was also what I loved to do.”
John Ramirez, Out of the Devils Cauldron

year in books
Kimbra ...
558 books | 44 friends

Morris ...
271 books | 33 friends

Romana ...
536 books | 25 friends

Mica Sp...
267 books | 7 friends

Coleen ...
489 books | 53 friends



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