Modesta Rudat

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Alan Weisman
“The lesson of every extinction, says the Smithsonian’s Doug Erwin, is that we can’t predict what the world will be 5 million years later by looking at the survivors.

"There will be plenty of surprises. Let’s face it: who would’ve predicted the existence of turtles? Who would ever have imagined that an organism would essentially turn itself inside out, pulling its shoulder girdle inside its ribs to form a carapace? If turtles didn’t exist, no vertebrate biologist would’ve suggested that anything would do that: he’d have been laughed out of town. The only real prediction you can make is that life will go on. And that it will be interesting.”
Alan Weisman, The World Without Us

Wallace Stegner
“This early piece of the morning is mine.”
Wallace Stegner, Crossing to Safety

Yvonne Korshak
“Aspasia had herself fallen into very good fortune. So good that at the age of twenty years, she’d probably used up the whole life’s portion of good luck that Tyche had allotted her. To make good fortune last—for herself and the child in her womb—would be up to her.”
Yvonne Korshak, Pericles and Aspasia: A Story of Ancient Greece

Johanna Spyri
“Sometimes I felt as if I could not bear it any longer to be away from you!”
Johanna Spyri, Heidi

Catherine Marshall
“I could also see just by looking around me how we tend to over-romanticize history. Life in those other centuries had not been all knights-and-ladies stuff. There was nothing romantic about cottages where eight or ten people slept in one room with no privacy; where there were no bathrooms, not even outside privies—even if the cottage did happen to have picturesque thatch on the roof. There was nothing glamorous in any century about no running water in which to bathe or about fleas on human beings; or about the blackgum twigs with which some of the women right now, in 1912, dipped snuff and then rubbed their teeth and gums. So many of the people had terrible-looking teeth or no teeth at all. And the eye trouble that was so prevalent. I had learned that it was trachoma and that it was a dangerous infection which, if unchecked, resulted in blindness.”
Catherine Marshall, Christy

year in books
How Far to Bethlehem? by Norah LoftsA Christmas Grace by Anne PerryThis Way to Christmas by Ruth SawyerThe Politics of Christmas by Drew  TaylorThe Berenstain Bears Go Christmas Caroling by Mike Berenstain
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