It looks like I have a nucleus but not the atoms, and a fully-formed elbow, and a small cluster of stars. And I don’t know whether I’m building a boat or a jigsaw puzzle or a planet-destroying death ray. […]
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It looks like I have a nucleus but not the atoms, and a fully-formed elbow, and a small cluster of stars. And I don’t know whether I’m building a boat or a jigsaw puzzle or a planet-destroying death ray. […] When the preacher came, no lie any adult could tell would put me at ease. Preacher Curley was bald, perpetually red-faced, and short. On Sunday mornings he was all fire and brimstone and Baptist, delivering baleful sermons to a flock eager for chastening. On Sunday afternoons, he had dinner with my grandparents, and sometimes I was there too, cowed into politeness by my memories of earlier in the day. But it was a Saturday this time that Preacher Curley drove up. There’s no church on Saturdays. Papaw died that afternoon, in the middle of Preacher Curley’s prayers. […] |
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"There are times I've wished I said all the folly in my heart and not the wisdom in my head." ~ A.J. Roach |
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