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works herself into a snit, dropping her voice for a confidential aside to the audience, or inserting the tiniest of pauses before announcing, "I was filled with joy," Moore leaves listeners feeling as if they've spent the summer watching a good friend arc into adulthood, as wobbly but as full of possibility as a forward pass. Here is Branch, for instance, summing up the difference between the two presidents King had to deal with: "Whereas Kennedy had charmed King while keeping him at a safe distance, harping in private on the political dangers of alleged subversives in the civil rights movement, Johnson in the White House was intensely personal but unpredictable--treating King variously to a Texas bear hug of shared dreams or a towering, wounded snit. Anselm's atonement theology "does not mean that God has fallen into an emotional snit or that he is a raging dysfunctional father demanding to be placated, or that he needs to see blood before his rage will die down," Barron explains. |
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