- It has a great sense of nostalgia, and does a great job of recalling the wonder of childhood.
- The first or second chapter has a beautiful passage where the boy (young Ray Bradbury) is playing outside on a lovely day in early summer and all of the sudden he discovers self-awareness and declares "I'm really alive!
There was a storm tonight, which is pretty rare in these parts. I sat outside and watched the lightening and felt that cool feeling when the air is just barely colder than comfortable, so that your body doesn't habituate to it and you become completely aware that your skin is touching the world. I love that I'm a part of the world and that I get to have a piece of the human experience. Sometimes in the back of my mind I question if my life has enough of a purpose. Sitting outside I tonight, I thought that just being alive is enough.
Sorry that I'm not a better writer and can't express these thoughts without melodrama.
1 comment:
How transcendental of you. I wish I could have been out in the storm too, but we had to finish Potter.
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