Anna And Mister God, por Fynn

"After some little time (...) she managed 'You love me, don't you?'
   Even had it not been true, I could not have said 'No' (...). I said 'Yes'.
   She gave a little giggle, and pointing a finger at me, said, 'You love me,' and then broke into some primitive gyration around the lamp-post, chanting 'You love me. You love me. You love me'. (...)" página 15

"Some evenings were given over to piano-playing. I play a fairly good honky-tonk piano, a bit of Mozart, a bit of Chopin, and a few pieces like 'Anitra's Dance' just for good measure. On the top of the piano were several electronic devices. One device, the oscilloscope, held all the magic of a fairy wand for Anna. We'd sit in this room for hours on end playing single notes, watching the green spot on the 'scope do its glowing dance. The whole exercise of relating sounds that one heard with the ears to the visual shape of those sounds actively seen on the little tube's face was a source of never-ending delight. (...)" página 32

" 'Does Mister God love us truly?'
   'Sure thing,' I said. 'Mister God loves everything.'
   'Oh,' she said. 'Well then, why does he let things get hurt and dead?' Her voice sounded as if she felt she had betrayed a sacred trust ... (...)" página 36


Excertos do livro "Anna And Mister God", do escritor Fynn
Ilustrações: Papas
Editora: Harper Collins Publishers
Edição: 1998

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