Sam followed [his father], loved him, listened to him talk. He believed deeply in luck, the old man, though he was careful never to say the word. He called it the shifty shadow of God. All his life he paid close attention to the movements of that shadow. He taught Sam to see it passing, feel it hovering, because he said it was those shifts that governed a man's life and it always paid to be ahead of the play. If the chill of its shade felt good, you went out to meet it like a droughted farmer goes out, arms wide, to greet the raincloud, but if you got that sick, queer feeling in your belly, you had to stay put and do nothing but breathe and there was a good chance it would pass you by. It was as though luck made choices, that it could think. If you greeted it, it came to you; if you shunned it, it backed away.
Australian novelist, short story writer, children's writer and screenwriter (born 1960)
Timothy John Winton (born 4 August 1960) is an Australian writer. He has written many novels, as well as children's books, non-fiction books, and short stories.
From: Wikiquote (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Birth Name:
Timothy John Winton
Alternative Names:
Timothy J. Winton
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T. J. Winton
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T. Winton
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Winton, Timothy John
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Уинтон, Тим
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Тим Уинтон
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Т. Уинтон
From Wikidata (CC0)