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1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

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Page 1: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

Page 2: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

2. “What’s the matter? Cat got your tongue?”

Page 3: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

3. “The snow cried when you stepped on it.”

Page 4: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

4. “Bong! Bong! Round One.”

Page 5: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

5. “The morning of the fight Tompkins Square was a beehive of activity with numerous workers setting up the ring.”

Page 6: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

6. “Dondre’ Green’s story brought that childhood memory back to life.”

Page 7: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

7. “He knew Antonio had the habit of playing possum when hurt, to sucker an opponent within reach of the powerful bombs he carried in each fist.”

Page 8: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

8. “You’re going to rock the boat, Sayers – and there’s plenty of people around who are already seasick.”

Page 9: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

9. “He starts to slowly tear the speech up, shaking his head, grinning. Gale’s mouth is like Death Valley.”

Page 10: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

10. “I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes about ten minutes from now.”

Page 11: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

11. “The toad gave a heave of muscles and plopped its heavy mudball of a body a few inches farther away from her.”

Page 12: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

12. “In the brownish photo, my father sits up straight like a wooden board.”

Page 13: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

13. “Stories are carried like seed to a new country.”

Page 14: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

14. The first week of August hangs at the top of the summer, the top of the live-long year, like the highest seat of a Ferris wheel when it pauses in its turning.”

Page 15: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

15. “On the left stood the first house, a square and solid cottage with a touch-me-not appearance, surrounded by grass cut painfully to the quick and enclosed by a capable iron fence some four feet high which clearly said, “Move on – we don’t want you here.”

Page 16: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

16. “His long chin faded off into a thin, apologetic beard, but his suit was a jaunty yellow that seemed to glow a little in the fading light.”

Page 17: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

17. “The house was so proud of itself that you wanted to make a lot of noise as you passed, and maybe even throw a rock or two.”

Page 18: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

18. “When I stepped out into the bright sunlight from the darkness of the movie house, I had only two things on my mind: Paul Newman and a ride home.”

Page 19: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

19. “And that would have been a disaster so immense that this weary old earth would have trembled on its axis like a beetle on a pin.”

Page 20: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

20. “Winnie was suddenly reminded of the stiff black ribbons they had hung on the door of the cottage for her grandfather’s funeral.”

Page 21: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

21. Things gotta get better, I figured. They couldn’t get worse. I was wrong.

Page 22: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

22. “Through the twilight sounds of crickets and sighing trees, a faint, surprising wisp of music came floating to them, and all three turned toward it.”

Page 23: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

23. “He put on his hat, and in the moonlight his long fingers were graceful and very white.”

Page 24: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

24. “The sun was just opening its own eye on the eastern horizon and the cottage was full of silence.

Page 25: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

25. “There were little flowers she did not recognize, white and palest blue; and endless, tangled vines; and here and there a fallen log, half rotted but soft with patches of sweet green-velvet moss.”

Page 26: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

26. “She had always pictured a troupe of burly men with long, black moustaches who would tumble her into a blanket and bear her off like a sack of potatoes while she pleaded for mercy.”

Page 27: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

27. “Her heart was pounding, and her backbone felt like a pipe full of cold running water.

Page 28: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

28. “He was thin and sunburned, this wonderful boy, with a thick mop of curly brown hair.”

Page 29: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

29. “Know what happens then? To the water? It goes on,” Tuck repeated, “to the ocean. But this rowboat now, it’s stuck. If we didn’t move it out ourself, it would stay here forever, trying to get loose, but stuck. That’s what us Tucks are, Winnie. Stuck so’s we can’t move on.”

Page 30: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

30. “He rowed without a single splash.”

Page 31: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

31. “The fish was beautiful and horrible too, with gleaming, rainbow-colored scales, and an eye like a marble beginning to dim even as she watched.”

Page 32: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

32. “As the sun set reluctantly behind the treetops, the haze hardened to a brilliant brownish-yellow.”

Page 33: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

33. “With a dull, cracking sound, the stock of the shotgun smashed into the back of his skull.”

Page 34: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

34. “The road was an aisle of brilliant velvet dust.”

Page 35: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

35. “They’d all come running like pigs to the slop.”

Page 36: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

36. “The earth, where it was worn bald under the gate, was cracked and hard as rock.”

Page 37: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

37. “The sun was a ponderous circle without edges, a roar without a sound, a blazing glare so thorough and remorseless that it seemed an actual presence.”

Page 38: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

38. “ The tinkle of a little music box drifted out behind them.”

Page 39: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

39. “Winnie wandered restlessly around her room, sat in her rocker, lay on her bed, counted the ticks of the hall clock.”

Page 40: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

40. “Outside, the night seemed poised on tiptoe, waiting, waiting, holding its breath, for the storm.”

Page 41: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

41. “And there, in the clear yard behind it, like a great L upside down, was the gallows.”

Page 42: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

42. “Mae and Tuck clattered on into the village proper.”

Page 43: 1. “As I listened, my own childhood memory from thirty-two years ago broke free.”

43. “In the branches of a willow behind him, a red-winged blackbird chirped.”