Kelley Armstrong Quote

We did as we were told, staying outdoors, and not bothering Jeremy and Peter. Yet that could bedone while sitting outside the study window, where we could listen to the conversation within.Kids who don’t eavesdrop on adult conversations are doomed to a childhood of ignorance.Of what I heard that afternoon, I understood only one key point: that Peter was leaving the Pack.Why he was leaving, what that meant for his life, how difficult that decision was for him tomake, all that I wouldn’t fully understand for years to come. From the tone of the conversation,though, I knew that this decision marked the end of a long personal struggle with the issue ofPack-hood. I knew too that this was a decision Jeremy had both known and feared was coming.Roughly half of all Pack youth left the group in their early twenties. It was like membership in any regimented segment of human society—children stay with the group because they have to, then when they hit adulthood, they realize that they have a choice. Some, like Antonio, chafe at the rules, but not enough to consider leaving. Some, like Jeremy, disagree with many of the principles, but believe in the institution itself enough to stay and try to effect change from within. Others look around and say ‘I don’t belong here, and this was the case with Peter.

Kelley Armstrong

We did as we were told, staying outdoors, and not bothering Jeremy and Peter. Yet that could bedone while sitting outside the study window, where we could listen to the conversation within.Kids who don’t eavesdrop on adult conversations are doomed to a childhood of ignorance.Of what I heard that afternoon, I understood only one key point: that Peter was leaving the Pack.Why he was leaving, what that meant for his life, how difficult that decision was for him tomake, all that I wouldn’t fully understand for years to come. From the tone of the conversation,though, I knew that this decision marked the end of a long personal struggle with the issue ofPack-hood. I knew too that this was a decision Jeremy had both known and feared was coming.Roughly half of all Pack youth left the group in their early twenties. It was like membership in any regimented segment of human society—children stay with the group because they have to, then when they hit adulthood, they realize that they have a choice. Some, like Antonio, chafe at the rules, but not enough to consider leaving. Some, like Jeremy, disagree with many of the principles, but believe in the institution itself enough to stay and try to effect change from within. Others look around and say ‘I don’t belong here, and this was the case with Peter.

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About Kelley Armstrong

Kelley Armstrong (born 14 December 1968) is a Canadian writer, primarily of fantasy novels since 2001.
She has published thirty-one fantasy novels to date, thirteen in her Women series, five in her Cainsville series, six in her Rockton series, three in her Darkest Powers series, three in her Darkness Rising trilogy and three in the Age of Legends series, and three stand-alone teen thrillers. She has also published three middle-grade fantasy novels in the Blackwell Pages trilogy, with co-author Melissa Marr. As well, she is the author of three crime novels, the Nadia Stafford trilogy. She has also written several serial novellas and short stories for the Otherworld series, some of which are available free from her website. Starting in 2014, a Canadian television series based on the Women of the Otherworld, called Bitten, aired for 3 seasons on Space, and SyFy.