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Niffenegger, The Time-Traveler's Wife

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"I wake up in the hospital. Henry is there. The baby is dead."
--Niffenegger, page 376
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/MatthewHenderson/2009/04/i_wake_up_in_the.html

“Alba is chattering to Teddy in her room. For a moment I feel as though I’ve time traveled, as though this is some stray moment from before, but then I let my eyes travel down Henry’s body to the flatnesses at the end of the blanket, and I know that I am only here and now” (Niffenegger 482).
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/AlyssaSanow/2009/04/its_the_cause_and_ultimate_sou.html

http://blogs.setonhill.edu/SueMyers/2009/04/gomez-and-clare.html

"Gomez is in love with Clare"
"Yes" I'm not helping her out with this.
"So....Clare has been telling him to take a hike, and he thinks that if he just hangs in there long enough something will happen, and he'll end up with her."
"Something will happen....?"
" To you." Charisse meets my eyes. (Niffenegger 442).

"In the past I feel much more solid. Maybe the future itself is less substantial? I don't know. I always feel like I'm breathing thin air, out there in the future. That's one of the ways I can tell it is the future: it feels different."
~page 167

http://blogs.setonhill.edu/JenniferPrex/2009/04/the_future_isnt_set_in_stone.html

"...I had this huge crush on Patty Hearst...She was a rich Californian college girl who got kidnapped by these awful left-wing political terrorists, and they made her rob banks...Why did I like her? Ah, I don't know. It's irrational, you know? I guess I kind of knew how she felt, being taken away and forced to do stuff she didn't want to do, and then it seemed like she was kind of enjoying it." (Niffenegger 65)
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/AliciaCampbell/2009/04/patty_of_willendorf.html

http://blogs.setonhill.edu/NikitaMcClellan/2009/04/wacko_is_your_diagnoses.html

My rant on manic-depressive disorder. The mother is not "wacko" but now I understand how Clare and Alicia can see her that way.

"That's why he's great; he plays everything as though he's in love with it."

-Niffenegger, page 201

Henry's father has been in mourning ever since the loss of his wife. He has lost the love that is within his heart and soul. Violin playing has become second to drinking...

http://blogs.setonhill.edu/ChristopherDufalla/2009/04/love_what_you_do.html

"Me. it was me. I'm down in the Monroe Street Parking Garage, no clothes, fifteen degrees below zero. God I hope the car starts."

http://blogs.setonhill.edu/JoshuaWilks/2009/04/who_were_you_talking_to_on_the.html

"I thought free will had to do with sin."
I think about this, "No", I say, "why should free will be limited to right and wrong? I mean, you just decided, of your own free will, to take off your shoes. It doesn't matter, nobody cares if you wear shoes or not, and it's not sinful, or virtuous, and it doesn't affect the future, but you've exercised your free will."
Clare shrugs. "But sometimes you tell me something and I feel like the future is already there, you know? Like my future has happened in the past and I can't do anything about it."
"That's called determinism," I tell her. "It haunts my dreams." (Niffenegger p. 75)
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/RosalindBlair/2009/04/free_will_vs_determinism.html

It's Just Sex: A Connection to Foster and to My Attitude
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/AjaHannah/2009/04/its_just_sex.html

"...and we laugh, and laugh, and nothing can ever be sad, no one can be lost, or dead, or far away: right now we are here, and nothing can mar our perfection, or steal the joy of this perfect moment." (241)

Niffenegger can write as a male or female narrator of all ages.
http://blogs.setonhill.edu/MarieVanMaanen/2009/04/writing_at_all_ages.html

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Rebecca Marrie on Niffenegger, The Time-Traveler's Wife: YOU CANT FIGHT FATE http://blogs.setonhill.edu/Re
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