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  • #1
    Kristin Harmel
    “He had taught her to love reading, one of the greatest gifts a parent could give a child, and in doing so, he had opened the world to her.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #2
    Kristin Harmel
    “Once you’ve fallen in love with books, their presence can make you feel at home anywhere, even in places where you shouldn’t belong.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #3
    Kristin Harmel
    “But we aren’t defined by the names we carry or the religion we practice, or the nation whose flag flies over our heads. I know that now. We’re defined by who we are in our hearts, who we choose to be on this earth.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #4
    Kristin Harmel
    “Remember that God’s plan for you might be different than the plan you have for yourself.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #5
    Kristin Harmel
    “anyone who saw the magic in books had to be good.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #6
    Kristin Harmel
    “Ah. I should have known. You’re one of us. … You’re someone who finds herself in the pages,”…”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #7
    Kristin Harmel
    “She doesn’t understand what it means to love books so passionately that you would die without them, that you would simply stop breathing, stop existing. It is quite beyond me, in fact, why she became a librarian in the first place.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #8
    Kristin Harmel
    “We’re defined by who we are in our hearts, who we choose to be on this earth.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #9
    Kristin Harmel
    “My room is lined with books, most of them stacked in precarious piles on the bowing bookshelves Louis assembled years ago. They are filled with other people’s stories, and I’ve spent my life disappearing into them. Sometimes, when the nights are dark and silent and I’m alone, I wonder if I would have survived without the escape their pages offered me from reality. Then again, perhaps they just gave me an excuse to duck out of my own life.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #10
    Kristin Harmel
    “I mention in the dedication that this book is partially in honor of booksellers and librarians everywhere. I can’t say enough about how much I’ve been impacted by the magic of bookstores and libraries. Books can change lives, but it is the people who love them, who dedicate their lives to them, who make the real difference. If books can’t find their way to the readers who need them, who will be touched by them, who will be transformed by them, they lose their power. So thank you for the bottom of my heart to anyone who works in a bookstore or a library—and especially to those of you who have been courageous and adventurous enough to become bookstore owners, which must be as perilous at times as it is rewarding. Books are more than just words on a page; they are bridges to building communities and to developing more compassionate, more aware citizens. Those of you who love books enough to want to share them are truly changing the world. (in acknowledgements)”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #11
    Kristin Harmel
    “I am, too, but the greatest deeds in life require us to rise above our fear.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #12
    Kristin Harmel
    “The path of life is darkest when we choose to walk it alone.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #13
    Kristin Harmel
    “It’s you,” he said softly when finally he was at her side. “It’s you,” she breathed, and then his lips were on hers, and he was kissing her in a way that made her forget the world around them for a few precious seconds.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #14
    Kristin Harmel
    “...we are only responsible for the things we do—or fail to do—ourselves.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #15
    Kristin Harmel
    “There’s something almost miraculous about seeing a child’s eyes light up when you hand him a book that intrigues him. I’ve always thought that it’s those children—the ones who realize that books are magic—who will have the brightest lives.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #16
    Kristin Harmel
    “Because books bring us to another time and place,” the woman said as she handed over Eva’s pens and accepted the francs Eva gave her. “And you look as if you need that.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #17
    Kristin Harmel
    “Hope was a dangerous thief, stealing her today's for a tomorrow that would never come”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #18
    Kristin Harmel
    “Books, wherever they were in the world, always felt like home to her.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #19
    Kristin Harmel
    “those “who realize that books are magic… will have the brightest lives.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #20
    Kristin Harmel
    “There’s danger in being principled in the midst of a war, but I believe that it’s more dangerous not to be.” “What do you mean?” He seemed to be searching for the words. “I mean that I would rather die knowing I tried to do the right thing than live knowing I had turned my back. Do you understand?”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #21
    Kristin Harmel
    “Loss would forever be etched on the child like a tattoo; it might fade over time, but it would never be erased.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #22
    Kristin Harmel
    “our ability to raise our children is always colored by the lives we’ve lived before they came along.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #23
    Kristin Harmel
    “You do honor her—and me—every day by being the kind of person we raised you to be.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #24
    Kristin Harmel
    “Books change the world, I think.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #25
    Kristin Harmel
    “That’s what books were for, after all. They were passageways to other worlds, other realities, other lives one could imagine living.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #26
    Kristin Harmel
    “Once you've fallen in love with books, their presence can make you feel at home anywhere, even in places where you shouldn't belong.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #27
    Kristin Harmel
    “Later that night, after Mamusia had gone to sleep, Tatus found Eva in the small library off the parlor, shelves piled high with all the books the two of them treasured so much. He had taught her to love reading, one of the greatest gifts a parent could give a child, and in doing so, he had opened the world to her.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #28
    Kristin Harmel
    “But if we shrink from them, if we lose our goodness, we let them erase us. We cannot do that, Eva. We cannot.”
    Kristin Harmel, The Book of Lost Names

  • #29
    Tia Williams
    “Girls are given the weight of the world, but nowhere to put it down. The power and magic born in that struggle? It’s so terrifying to men that we invented reasons to burn y’all at the stake, just to keep our dicks hard.”
    Tia Williams, Seven Days in June

  • #30
    Tia Williams
    “One thing,” she whispered, her lips by his jaw. She didn’t want anyone to overhear. “Before I forget.” “What’s that?” “Stop writing about me.” Only Eva could’ve noticed the change in his expression. She saw the flinch. The slow, satisfied curl of his lip. His bronzy-amber eyes flashing. It was like he’d been waiting years to hear those words. Like the girl whose pigtails he’d been yanking during recess all year had finally shoved him back. He looked gratified. In a voice both raspy and low, and so, so familiar, Shane said, “You first.”
    Tia Williams, Seven Days in June



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