Ilona Andrews American husband-and-wife novelist duo
Source: Magic Burns
Source: City of Lost Souls
Ilona Andrews American husband-and-wife novelist duo
Source: Magic Burns
“There're many things untold I need to get off my chest”
E.M.S (1995) Nigerian rapper, singer and record producer
88 Bars (2012)
Stephanie Pearl-McPhee (1968) Canadian writer
Source: At Knit's End: Meditations for Women Who Knit Too Much
Jack Johnson (boxer) (1878–1946) American boxer
On women, as quoted in "Jack's Women" at Unforgivable Blackness at PBS (2005) http://www.pbs.org/unforgivableblackness/knockout/women.html
“Many share my views with me. But I don't share them with them.”
Karl Kraus (1874–1936) Czech playwright and publicist
Half-Truths and One-And-A-Half Truths (1976)
John Brunner book Stand on Zanzibar
continuity (37) “Storage”
Stand on Zanzibar (1968)
Irshad Manji (1968) Feminist from Canada, author, journalist, activist
Muslims need critical thinking - Irshad Manji http://www.ifeminists.net/introduction/editorials/2004/0818verhofstadt.html August 18, 2004 (interview by Dirk Verhofstadt)
Ben Carson (1951) 17th and current United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development; American neurosurgeon
Source: Gifted Hands: The Ben Carson Story (1990), p. 161
George Henry Lewes (1817–1878) British philosopher
The Principles of Success in Literature (1865)
Context: Every one who has seriously investigated a novel question, who has really interrogated Nature with a view to a distinct answer, will bear me out in saying that it requires intense and sustained effort of imagination. The relations of sequence among the phenomena must be seen; they are hidden; they can only be seen mentally; a thousand suggestions rise before the mind, but they are recognised as old suggestions, or as inadequate to reveal what is sought; the experiments by which the problem may be solved have to be imagined; and to imagine a good experiment is as difficult as to invent a good fable, for we must have distinctly present — clear mental vision — the known qualities and relations of all the objects, and must see what will be the effect of introducing some new qualifying agent. If any one thinks this is easy, let him try it: the trial will teach him a lesson respecting the methods of intellectual activity not without its use.