Vybarr Cregan-Reid

  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    But there was little that was normal about mine and our family’s relationship with Dad. I certainly didn’t love him, whatever that meant.
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    A library is a good place to go when you feel unhappy, for there, in a book, you may find encouragement and comfort … Books are good company, in sad times and happy times, for books are people—people who have managed to stay alive by hiding between the covers of a book.
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    real love, love as ‘strong as death’, is that which is made of companionship and passion
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    how far I’d come and how much reading had changed me, what
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    What healed all that damage for me in the end was quite simple. Reading
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    After I’d been rescued by books in my twenties, I read at home, on my way to work, at work, on my lunch break, on my way back home
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    Later on in life, I might boast that I managed to read Margaret Atwood’s The Blind Assassin on the same day as J. M. Coetzee’s Disgrace, but on that day, I read far more than I had at any previous point in my life.
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    processing our thoughts, feelings and interpreting the world.

    Its remit
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    enabling the student to become an independent and critical thinker
  • Roberto Garzahas quoted3 months ago
    And there’s a damaged character in the novel: John. He is put to work by the group and is, like George R. R. Martin’s Hodor, simple, well-meaning, easily led and strong as a rhino. ‘Where you going now?’ is all he can say, and he repeats it throughout the novel.
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