An excerpt by Emma Donoghue The Fox on the Line Any other June, we would be in Hengwrt by now. I would be waking up with the white-topped mountains ringed around me. Cader Idris, where the giant once sat, would raise its shoulder between me and all harm. Sitting under the snowy cherry tree, I would keep one ear cocked for the brook that sounds so much like a woman singing, you have to lay down your book and go and see. But we are trapped in London, waiting to make history. Keeping a diary is a monstrous waste of time. But ...
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An excerpt by Emma Donoghue The Fox on the Line Any other June, we would be in Hengwrt by now. I would be waking up with the white-topped mountains ringed around me. Cader Idris, where the giant once sat, would raise its shoulder between me and all harm. Sitting under the snowy cherry tree, I would keep one ear cocked for the brook that sounds so much like a woman singing, you have to lay down your book and go and see. But we are trapped in London, waiting to make history. Keeping a diary is a monstrous waste of time. But I cannot seem to help it. Without words, we move through life as mute as the animals. Of course, I burn these jottings at the end of each year. What I should keep instead is a daily memorandum of F and all her works. Posterity will not interest itself in me; I am only her Mary. On the first of June 1876, then, our Society held its first General Meeting at the Westminister Palace Hotel, Lord Shaftesbury presiding. Cardinal Manning defied the Pope and spoke in our favour. Resolutions in support of our Bill were passed with the utmost enthusiasm.*** It stands to reason that those who assault nature will suffer at her hands in the end. I read these stories every other day in the Times. A boy was beating a plough horse with the stock of his gun. It backfired and took his arm off. Do Isound uncharitable? It has been a long year. *** Every week our Bill creeps a little further through the House, progressing like a pilgrim under the flag of Lord Carnarvon. I try to steady my heart. I work a little every morning in my sculpture studio at the bottom of the garden. My hopes shoot up and down like a barometer. But we walk by the Thames when the sky has begun to cool, and F ends each evening by convincing me all over again. The great sacrifice she made last year, when she laid down all her other cau
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Add this copy of Circa 2000: Lesbian Fiction at the Millennium to cart. $13.55, good condition, Sold by Booksalvation rated 3.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Manchester, LANCASHIRE, UNITED KINGDOM, published 2000 by Alyson Books.
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Good in good dust jacket. Outline: -Renowned authors and editors Terry Wolverton and Robert Drake have brought together the gifted voices of Dorothy Allison Rebecca Brown Emma Donoghue Achy Obejas Gerry Gomez Pearlberg and Sarah Schulman plus those of a host of talented newcomers to provide a collection of fiction that serves as a cultural touchstone that not only illustrates the amazing metamorphosis of this important literary genre but also provides a beacon for the lesbian literature of the future. -> the publisher of this LARGE PAPERBACK book is Alyson Books The date of this copy is 2000 booksalvation have grade it as Good and it will be shipped from our UK warehouse This book is from the Series. Shipping is Free for UK buyers and at a reasonable charge for buyer outside the UK.
Add this copy of Circa 2000: Lesbian Fiction at the Millennium to cart. $57.80, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 2000 by Alyson Books.