![]() ![]() I read “Detectives in Togas” by Henry Winterfeld and the “Booky” series, which is about a girl in Toronto during the Depression by Bernice Thurman Hunter. I read books from the ‘50s because it was what they had. The book mobile drove by every few weeks. Sometimes I listen to them on headphones while I’m laying in bed next to my kids waiting for them to go to sleep, which can take forever.īOOKS: What kind of reader were you as a kid?īEATON: We only had the school library, where the books were demolished from overuse. ![]() You read it and then you keep thinking about it.īEATON: Because I have small children I got more into audiobooks. He not only drew but also embroidered some of the pages, which makes the book look extremely of its times. For everyone else, it’s so illuminating.īOOKS: Do you have a favorite graphic novel?īEATON: It’s usually the one I just read, which was Gareth Brookes’s “The Dancing Plague.” It’s about the medieval dancing plague. Hark, A Vagrant: Wuthering Heights pt 6 buy this print As it happens, boring Nelly and self absorbed Lockwood are really the last two people you would want as narrators. Thank you all who picked up King Baby I went on a book tour to schools and stores, and I loved all the little ones so much. Heathcliff has come home and everyone is reasonable and I don’t really see trouble brewing at all. For someone who needs that book, that can be validating. Here we are, back at Wuthering Heights after an extended leave. It’s about her dealing with multiple personality disorder and being a transgendered woman. I recently read “The Third Person” by Emma Grove, a gigantic brick of a book. BOOKS: How often do you read graphic novels?īEATON: All the time. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |