Dave Davies
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Right, or get the flu. We should note that no one has been criminally accused of killing anybody there. Of course, a lot of this happened decades ago, and so the evidence isn't easy to acquire, and some of the perpetrators are now deceased. The kids did work and produce stuff. Was the school a source of profit for some local people?
Right, or get the flu. We should note that no one has been criminally accused of killing anybody there. Of course, a lot of this happened decades ago, and so the evidence isn't easy to acquire, and some of the perpetrators are now deceased. The kids did work and produce stuff. Was the school a source of profit for some local people?
Right, or get the flu. We should note that no one has been criminally accused of killing anybody there. Of course, a lot of this happened decades ago, and so the evidence isn't easy to acquire, and some of the perpetrators are now deceased. The kids did work and produce stuff. Was the school a source of profit for some local people?
There are quotes from Martin Luther King in the story because they come from this record that Elmwood loved to play. And one of them you quote a couple of times and it's striking. It's in which King describes the nonviolent resistance and the importance of loving your oppressors. And kind of an abridged version of the quote is he says, throw us in jail and we will love you.
There are quotes from Martin Luther King in the story because they come from this record that Elmwood loved to play. And one of them you quote a couple of times and it's striking. It's in which King describes the nonviolent resistance and the importance of loving your oppressors. And kind of an abridged version of the quote is he says, throw us in jail and we will love you.
There are quotes from Martin Luther King in the story because they come from this record that Elmwood loved to play. And one of them you quote a couple of times and it's striking. It's in which King describes the nonviolent resistance and the importance of loving your oppressors. And kind of an abridged version of the quote is he says, throw us in jail and we will love you.
We will wear you down by our capacity to suffer. We will not only win freedom for ourselves, we will so appeal to your heart and conscience that we will win you in the process and our victory will be a double victory. Tell me why that quote was something you wanted to use in the story.
We will wear you down by our capacity to suffer. We will not only win freedom for ourselves, we will so appeal to your heart and conscience that we will win you in the process and our victory will be a double victory. Tell me why that quote was something you wanted to use in the story.
We will wear you down by our capacity to suffer. We will not only win freedom for ourselves, we will so appeal to your heart and conscience that we will win you in the process and our victory will be a double victory. Tell me why that quote was something you wanted to use in the story.
In the last part of the book, we meet some of the characters later in life. And I don't want to say more than that about it because it would spoil it for readers and they deserve to experience this. But I have to say the narrative structure here of how the course of their lives is revealed I think is pretty brilliant.
In the last part of the book, we meet some of the characters later in life. And I don't want to say more than that about it because it would spoil it for readers and they deserve to experience this. But I have to say the narrative structure here of how the course of their lives is revealed I think is pretty brilliant.
In the last part of the book, we meet some of the characters later in life. And I don't want to say more than that about it because it would spoil it for readers and they deserve to experience this. But I have to say the narrative structure here of how the course of their lives is revealed I think is pretty brilliant.
And I wonder if you can, without giving away the story, just talk a little bit about how you β decide to reveal the outcomes?
And I wonder if you can, without giving away the story, just talk a little bit about how you β decide to reveal the outcomes?
And I wonder if you can, without giving away the story, just talk a little bit about how you β decide to reveal the outcomes?
You know, the book is a lot about the struggle between optimism about social change and kind of a pragmatic acceptance of the world as it is. And we're in some pretty turbulent times in this country these days. How optimistic are you for positive change?
You know, the book is a lot about the struggle between optimism about social change and kind of a pragmatic acceptance of the world as it is. And we're in some pretty turbulent times in this country these days. How optimistic are you for positive change?
You know, the book is a lot about the struggle between optimism about social change and kind of a pragmatic acceptance of the world as it is. And we're in some pretty turbulent times in this country these days. How optimistic are you for positive change?
How old are your kids?
How old are your kids?