Where the Drowned Girls Go (Wayward Children, #7)
Rate it:
Open Preview
Read between September 19 - September 19, 2023
2%
Flag icon
It can be difficult to find the places where fiction ends and fact begins, but perhaps that’s simply a part of the process of traveling, of visiting places where the customs and cultures and laws of physical reality are different than they are here.
2%
Flag icon
But taking something back doesn’t mean it never happened, only that someone was willing to fight hard enough to change it. Some graves lie empty; some children run home. Some children hide under their covers and cry, not for the beauty of a sky filled with rainbows or a field of singing roses, but from the weight of all they’ve seen and done and lost and paid.
19%
Flag icon
For the first time in her life, she was leaving a place she loved because she had chosen to do so, and there was power in that.
42%
Flag icon
How could you choose good over evil when no one was really sure what evil was? Under enough pressure, the only good that counted was saving yourself.
43%
Flag icon
It took most of Sumi’s attention to keep herself from interrupting, pointing out how it was funny how “real” history seemed to be all about white men doing important things while everyone else barely existed except when they needed to be shown the errors of their ways.
44%
Flag icon
Sometimes she felt like the world where she’d been born was the most nonsensical of them all. Sure, gravity always worked and clouds didn’t talk, but people told lies big enough to block the sun, and everyone just let them, like it was nothing to revise the story of an entire world to make yourself feel better.