The 57 Bus: A True Story of Two Teenagers and the Crime That Changed Their Lives
Rate it:
Open Preview
68%
Flag icon
who had robbed him at gunpoint, the one he had thought of as a friend.
68%
Flag icon
He, too, hoped to be forgiven.
69%
Flag icon
ADHD
69%
Flag icon
“God works in mysterious ways,”
69%
Flag icon
atrophied
70%
Flag icon
It earned 103,202 signatures and an official White House response, which said, in part, “We know how important this issue is, and we understand the profound impact, both symbolic and otherwise, of having official documents that accurately reflect an individual’s identity … We cannot overstate the care and seriousness that should be brought to bear on the issue.”
71%
Flag icon
“I feel pretty!” Sasha announced, twirling in front of the mirror.
71%
Flag icon
waltz
73%
Flag icon
owe
77%
Flag icon
Asperger’s
79%
Flag icon
vestibule
79%
Flag icon
languor.
79%
Flag icon
punitive.
80%
Flag icon
That was the story as she saw it: Richard did well when he was confined and poorly when he wasn’t. Clearly, then, the solution was to keep confining him.
81%
Flag icon
distraught.
82%
Flag icon
She sighed. “If I’d read the letters, I would have had a different speech to give to him.”
83%
Flag icon
N. A.
90%
Flag icon
androgynous,
92%
Flag icon
indeterminate.
93%
Flag icon
cisgender.
93%
Flag icon
A retired US Army sergeant named Jamie Shupe receives permission from an Oregon court to legally change their gender to nonbinary, becoming the first US person to do so. 2017
1 2 4 Next »