Amelia Atwater-Rhodes Quote

We will do what is necessary to assure our child’s prosperity. The statement hurt as I recalled my conversation with Irene. We have some time before the decision must be made. If we can find no way to raise the child so both our kinds will accept her…then she will be raised to be Tuuli Thea, and I will name Salem my heir until--, I had been about to say, but there would be no other child. Danica wrapped an arm around my waist and gave me a half hug, despite how scandalized her mother would be by the contact.Nacola nodded, and for the first time, I saw a glimmer of respect in her eyes.We will decide what we must, when we must. Danica’s soft voice cut through the silence. I hope you will trust us to do what is best. For the moment, she said, changing the subject deftly as her tone lightened, my most pressing concern is that this has been a long and difficult morning, and I’ve yet to have breakfast. Perhaps you might join me?One thing was true in both our cultures: When a woman carrying a child said she was hungry, people listened. Danica had no shame in ruthlessly using that fact to disengage us from her mother’s interrogation.

Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

We will do what is necessary to assure our child’s prosperity. The statement hurt as I recalled my conversation with Irene. We have some time before the decision must be made. If we can find no way to raise the child so both our kinds will accept her…then she will be raised to be Tuuli Thea, and I will name Salem my heir until--, I had been about to say, but there would be no other child. Danica wrapped an arm around my waist and gave me a half hug, despite how scandalized her mother would be by the contact.Nacola nodded, and for the first time, I saw a glimmer of respect in her eyes.We will decide what we must, when we must. Danica’s soft voice cut through the silence. I hope you will trust us to do what is best. For the moment, she said, changing the subject deftly as her tone lightened, my most pressing concern is that this has been a long and difficult morning, and I’ve yet to have breakfast. Perhaps you might join me?One thing was true in both our cultures: When a woman carrying a child said she was hungry, people listened. Danica had no shame in ruthlessly using that fact to disengage us from her mother’s interrogation.

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About Amelia Atwater-Rhodes

Amelia Holt Atwater-Rhodes (born April 16, 1984), known professionally as Amelia Atwater-Rhodes, is an American author of fantasy and young adult literature and a Language Arts/Literature teacher at Learning Prep School in West Newton, MA.
She was born in Silver Spring, Maryland and has lived most of her life in Concord, Massachusetts. Her debut novel, In the Forests of the Night, was published in 1999, when she was fourteen years old. She has moved from her family's Sudbury home to a nearby Massachusetts town.