I think everyone should read Governor William Bradford's diary.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
If you read somebody's diary, you get what you deserve.
Anybody who writes a diary insists it must be read by someone else.
People deserve to see a governor who is hustling every day.
I don't think the author should make the reader do that much work to remember who somebody is.
I read the book with interest, but when Jackson was a candidate in 1828 for the Presidency, I opposed him and voted for Adams. I favored a protective tariff.
Go on thinking that you don't need to be read and you'll find that it may become quite true: no one will feel the need tom read it because it is written for yourself alone; and the public won't feel any impulse to gate crash such a private party.
Memory... is the diary that we all carry about with us.
No one is reading my diary, that's for sure.
I started reading the big histories and the small histories, the memoirs and so forth. At some point, I found the diary of William E. Dodd.
Lacey said if he wanted to read a daily or regular critiques of the Bush administration, he would read the New York Times, and that's not what he wanted in the Village Voice.