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Phyllis
Phyllis is finished with Sense and Sensibility
Lucy does not want sense , and that is the foundation on which every good thing may be built. -And after all, Marianne, after all that is bewitching in the idea of a single and constant attachment, and all that can be said of one's happiness depending entirely on any particular person, it is not meant—it is not fit-it is not possible that it should be so.
Dec 19, 2025 08:34PM Add a comment
Sense and Sensibility

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 68 of 255 of A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter
[Austen’s heroines] were inexperienced and needed to discover their feelings, or they were neglected and needed to stand up for them… Their problem…was that they had too great a belief in their own feelings. They had achieved the relative autonomy of adolescence-learning to trust yourself-but now they had to take the next step, into the full autonomy of adulthood. They needed to learn to doubt themselves.
Dec 18, 2025 03:49PM Add a comment
A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter

Phyllis
Phyllis is starting A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter
I was twenty-six, and about as dumb, in all human things, as any twenty-six-year-old has a right to be, when I met the woman who would change my life. That she'd been dead for a couple of hundred years made not the slightest difference what-soever. Her name was Jane Austen, and she would teach me everything I know about everything that matters.
Dec 18, 2025 03:46PM Add a comment
A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 64 of 409 of Sense and Sensibility
Mrs. Jennings, Lady Middleton's mother, was a good-humoured, merry, fat, elderly woman, who talked a great deal, seemed very happy, and rather vulgar. She was full of jokes and laughter, and before dinner was over had said many witty things on the subject of lovers and husbands; hoped they had not left their hearts behind them in Sussex, and pretended to see them blush whether they did or not.
Dec 11, 2025 03:12PM Add a comment
Sense and Sensibility

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 16 of 409 of Sense and Sensibility
"To be sure," said she, "it is better than parting with fifteen hundred pounds at once. But then if Mrs. Dashwood should live fifteen years, we shall be completely taken in."
"Fifteen years! my dear Fanny; her life cannot be worth half that purchase.“
Dec 09, 2025 12:32PM Add a comment
Sense and Sensibility

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 23 of 243 of Nettle & Bone
It would be very satisfying to be a sad-eyed, beautiful ghost who drifted through the halls, gazing up at the moon and weeping silently...she was still short and round-faced and sturdy, and there were very few ghost stories about short, sturdy women. Marra had not managed to be pale and willowy and consumptive at any point in eighteen years of life and did not think she could achieve it before she died.
Nov 30, 2025 11:54AM Add a comment
Nettle & Bone

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 24 of 320 of Death on Gokumon Island (Detective Kosuke Kindaichi, #4)
Until the end of time he would never forget his first sight of Gokumon Island. To the west, the autumn sky was clear and bright, bathed in late-afternoon sunshine. But the gloomy sky over Gokumon Island all the way to the east hung heavy like molten lead. The island itself loomed out of the sea, just at that moment shimmering as it caught the light from the western sun.
Nov 28, 2025 08:32AM Add a comment
Death on Gokumon Island (Detective Kosuke Kindaichi, #4)

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 22 of 320 of Death on Gokumon Island (Detective Kosuke Kindaichi, #4)
“Summer grass —no trace of mighty soldiers' dreams." (Uncredited haiku)

"That noise."

"The more distant sounds are the mines," replied the priest. "The closer sounds are from that island over there. They're knocking down the military installations. As if toppling what is left of 'mighty soldiers' dreams! Doesn't it remind you of that haiku? I'd like the great Basho to be able to see all this."
Nov 28, 2025 08:31AM Add a comment
Death on Gokumon Island (Detective Kosuke Kindaichi, #4)

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 141 of 355 of The Devil's Flute Murders (Detective Kosuke Kindaichi, #5)
Travelling was a still a hardship in the autumn of 1947. Even getting a train ticket was no mean feat. …since the trains tended to be packed with black marketeers and their buyers, they were not places where public displays of police presence were welcome... So now, Kindaichi found himself squeezed into this sardine-can of a train car looking like a crumpled handkerchief and gasping for breath.
Nov 24, 2025 06:42PM Add a comment
The Devil's Flute Murders (Detective Kosuke Kindaichi, #5)

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 89 of 336 of Just Mercy
"It's been so strange, Bryan. More people have asked me what they can do to help me in the last fourteen hours of my life than ever asked me in the years when I was coming up."
—Herbert Richardson
Nov 18, 2025 07:37PM Add a comment
Just Mercy

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 78 of 336 of Just Mercy
By the end of the decade, some justices had become openly critical of the review that death penalty cases received. Chief Justice William Rehnquist urged restrictions on death penalty appeals and the endless efforts of lawyers to stop executions. "Let's get on with it," he famously declared at a bar association event in 1988. Finality, not fairness, had become the new priority in death penalty jurisprudence.
Nov 18, 2025 07:34PM Add a comment
Just Mercy

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 6 of 336 of Just Mercy
"Bryan," he said at some point during our short flight, "capital punishment means 'them without the capital get the punishment.' We can't help people on death row without help from people like you."
Nov 18, 2025 08:06AM Add a comment
Just Mercy

Phyllis
Phyllis is 15% done with The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War
This is surprisingly good so far; the audiobook includes 1940s era snippets from newsreels, interviews, etc. including one voiced by Ronald Reagan during his B movie days.
Nov 12, 2025 09:59AM Add a comment
The Bomber Mafia: A Dream, a Temptation, and the Longest Night of the Second World War

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 73 of 307 of The Berry Pickers
By the time I started to experience freedom, my dreams had faded, like a watercolour left in the sunlight. The colours thinned, the night warmed, the birds and the night creatures quieted, the fear and confusion dulled. And even though I never forgot them completely, they began to take up less space my life.
Nov 07, 2025 01:44PM Add a comment
The Berry Pickers

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 60 of 482 of Witchcraft for Wayward Girls
"Most of us, the decisions we make today shape our tomorrows. ... But your gift is that you have a chance to start over. It's like life is a notebook, and the page you're on is full of mistakes and places where you've erased too much, and maybe you've written some boy's initials in the margins over and over, but now you have a chance to turn to a fresh page and start over.”
Nov 05, 2025 11:59AM Add a comment
Witchcraft for Wayward Girls

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 26 of 112 of The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World
There is no formula complex enough to hold the birthplace of stories.
Nov 05, 2025 04:54AM Add a comment
The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 12 of 112 of The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World
Enumerating the gifts you've received creates a sense of abundance, the knowing that you already have what you need. Recognizing "enoughness" is a radical act in an economy that is always urging us to consume more.
Nov 05, 2025 03:52AM Add a comment
The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World

Phyllis
Phyllis is starting The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World
The cool breath of evening slips off the wooded hills, displacing the heat of the day, and with it come the birds, as eager for the cool as am. They arrive in a flock of calls that sound like laughter, and I have to laugh back with the same delight.
Nov 05, 2025 03:40AM Add a comment
The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 171 of 254 of Cluny Brown: A Novel
Glancing away from Mr. Wilson, she met the small brown eye of his mother, and surprised there a most unexpected expression: the old lady looked extremely amused. But she said nothing. She had retreated too far into the narrow world of age—in her case bounded by food, warmth, and the villainy of her neighbours—to be bothered with the younger generation.
Oct 30, 2025 07:29PM Add a comment
Cluny Brown: A Novel

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 34 of 254 of Cluny Brown: A Novel
As his physical powers declined, making hunting impossible, Sir Henry had taken to the Pen; all over the world the friends of his youth began to receive very long, very dull letters from him. … So the letters took a long time to get there, and the replies even longer to get back, and all the news was out of date; and this gave his correspondence a peculiar timeless quality which was very soothing.
Oct 23, 2025 03:21PM Add a comment
Cluny Brown: A Novel

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 157 of 317 of Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries (Emily Wilde, #1)
Bambleby stayed put in the sleigh wrapped in two blankets and speaking only to complain about the cold. His nose turned a brilliant red from blowing it, the sound of which always seemed to coincide with moments when I was spellbound by the quiet loveliness of the snowy wood Finally I demanded that he eat one of Poe's cakes and was relieved by his acquiescence, which spared me the effort of shoving it down his throat
Oct 11, 2025 05:51PM Add a comment
Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries (Emily Wilde, #1)

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 122 of 253 of Miss Plum and Miss Penny
“An unaccountable lump rose in Ronnie's throat as he stood there looking down upon his sleeping father. He was an ass, of course, but he was his father. Mother must have loved him once…

I love him, too, he thought with surprise, and felt an impulse to wake him and tell him so. But he turned away and went silently from the room.”
Sep 27, 2025 08:51AM Add a comment
Miss Plum and Miss Penny

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 90 of 253 of Miss Plum and Miss Penny
“If we don't get shut of Miss Plum soon, Ada thought, slashing at the raisins with deep animosity, Alison will go an' do summat daft, like getting hersen wed to yon flabby-belly Hartley, or happen the vicar-and then where shall we be!

It was a thousand pities, in Ada's opinion, that Miss Plum had not been allowed to walk slap into her duck pond, and have done with it. ...”
Sep 27, 2025 08:30AM Add a comment
Miss Plum and Miss Penny

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 7 of 304 of Fear Stalks the Village
"But there must be a story everywhere" persisted Joan.

“All right,” she conceded. "But I'll have to follow my own special line. Something like this. This village seems an earthly paradise, with a population of kindly gracious souls. But the flowers are growing on slime. When twilight falls, they light their lamps and draw down their blinds. And then —when no one can see them they lead their real lives."
Sep 21, 2025 07:15AM Add a comment
Fear Stalks the Village

Phyllis
Phyllis is on page 2 of 304 of Fear Stalks the Village
“A perfect spot. Viewed from an airplane, by day, it resembled a black-and-white plaster model of a Tudor village, under a glass case. At night, however, when its lights began to glow faintly, it was like some ancient vessel, with barnacled hull and figure-head, riding in the peace of a forgotten port.”
Sep 21, 2025 07:13AM Add a comment
Fear Stalks the Village

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