Which was crazier, she wondered, seeing patterns when they weren't there, or ignoring patterns when they obviously were? - Lis Wiehl
" "Which was crazier, she wondered, seeing patterns when they weren't there, or ignoring patterns when they obviously were?
About Lis Wiehl
Lis Wiehl (born August 9, 1961, Yakima, Washington) is a New York Times bestselling American author of fiction and nonfiction books, and a legal analyst. After working at NBC News and National Public Radio's All Things Considered, Wiehl moved to the Fox News Channel (FNC) where she served as a legal analyst and reporter for over fifteen years, appearing on numerous FNC shows. She is a regular commentator for CNN and also appears often on CBS, NPR and other news outlets.
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Additional quotes by Lis Wiehl
It was not the sense that something had been there. It was the sense that something was still there, palpable but not visible. A sense (and now he thought he was really losing his mind) that the forest was grieving, or that something in it was dying…a feeling, if he had to name it, that evil had been there.
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Mike Stone was Portland’s premier lawyer—if you were in deep, deep trouble. He took on clients other lawyers avoided—swim team coaches accused of child molestation, surgeons who had operated while three sheets to the wind, bank presidents caught embezzling millions…Just being defended by Stone was a sure sign that you were involved in something embarrassing or off-putting