Geral(dine)’s Reviews > The World According to Garp > Status Update
Geral(dine)
is on page 5 of 609
📚 Quote Page 5
"She felt if she ever had children she would love them no less when they were twenty than when they were two; they might need you more at twenty, she thought. What do you really need when you're two? In the hospital, the babies were the easiest patients. The older they got, the more they needed; and the less anyone wanted or loved them."
— 4 hours, 52 min ago
"She felt if she ever had children she would love them no less when they were twenty than when they were two; they might need you more at twenty, she thought. What do you really need when you're two? In the hospital, the babies were the easiest patients. The older they got, the more they needed; and the less anyone wanted or loved them."
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Geral(dine)’s Previous Updates
Geral(dine)
is on page 5 of 609
📚 Quote Page 5
"She felt detached from her family (...) and then at some appointed, prearranged time they seemed to stop the flow of affection and begin the expectations —as if, for a brief phase, you were expected to absorb love (and get enough), and then, for a much longer and more serious phase, you were expected to fulfill certain obligations."
— 5 hours, 1 min ago
"She felt detached from her family (...) and then at some appointed, prearranged time they seemed to stop the flow of affection and begin the expectations —as if, for a brief phase, you were expected to absorb love (and get enough), and then, for a much longer and more serious phase, you were expected to fulfill certain obligations."
Geral(dine)
is on page 3 of 609
👁️👋Hello 11th book on my currently reading list that's way too long to be squeezed in this casually....
📚 Quote Page 3
"(...)This was shortly after the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor and people were being tolerant of soldiers, because suddenly everyone *was* a soldier. Jenny Fields was quite firm in her intolerance of the behavior of men in general and soldiers in particular."
— 5 hours, 19 min ago
📚 Quote Page 3
"(...)This was shortly after the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor and people were being tolerant of soldiers, because suddenly everyone *was* a soldier. Jenny Fields was quite firm in her intolerance of the behavior of men in general and soldiers in particular."

