tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4835312024806005247.post1185773024126982673..comments2022-03-28T03:03:09.472-05:00Comments on Choose Your Change: Change in Living Your StoryUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4835312024806005247.post-18666564141408061952011-12-03T10:21:30.684-06:002011-12-03T10:21:30.684-06:00I have long wanted to read Sir Walter Scott. Now I...I have long wanted to read Sir Walter Scott. Now I know I should! Somehow the idea of critics believing Milton's Paradise Lost was too long made me think of this. I didn't want that book to end either.<br /><br />So they have been evicted from the Garden for their sin and now know that they are going to die, but they still have their whole lives to live before that death. Milton's Leticiahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03934266180056793554noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4835312024806005247.post-11265138076038421612011-12-03T09:50:44.030-06:002011-12-03T09:50:44.030-06:00Beautiful insight! I loved what you said about the...Beautiful insight! I loved what you said about the sense of always wanting more in a book, as though it is somehow deeply right that a story should never end--as we know that, indeed, our stories do not end. Chesterton said something similar when he praised Walter Scott for being the kind of writer who would have liked to write a book that went on forever.Sarah Gutierrezhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13839695650935724809noreply@blogger.com