7 Quotes & Sayings By Janelle Gray

Janelle Gray is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the "sold out" women's fiction series, The Circle Trilogy. Her most recent book, The Circle Rapist, was released in April 2013. The Circle Rapist debuted on the New York Time Best Sellers List at #3. Janelle has been described as "a writer with a sharp wit, a love for historical events, and an ability to create characters with heart." She lives in Colorado with her husband and two sons.

The saddest feeling is knowing you deserve freedom and still...
1
The saddest feeling is knowing you deserve freedom and still feeling caged. Janelle Gray
2
Our history, America’s history, has been so heavily edited. In history classes, we don’t really go into full discussions about the past. People, struggles, and triumphs have been erased. As a result, we now have a generation, my generation, of people who are intelligent but ignorant of and blind to the truth. Janelle Gray
3
I watched as people went to the memorial reading the names. I started at the first entry from 1954. I read each one quietly but out loud to myself, like I’d done with the names of those in the museum. I felt somehow they were getting the message that their sacrifice was known and their voice was heard. Janelle Gray
4
Back then, Black churches were a small piece of peace. Church was a world where, even with its imperfections, the offer of equality and common humanity was the sustenance needed to make it through the rest of the week in a society that deemed them less than human. Janelle Gray
5
I once listened to a woman describe a group of men marching toward her house with sticks lit afire, screaming things like 'git the nigger' and 'kill the nigger bitch.' Those tiki torches weren't about protest. They were about a statement. It said, 'We're still here because we never left. Janelle Gray
6
But what's braver?' Emmanuel said. 'Naming the bigots and possibly being killed for it? Or living in silence in order to protect yourself and those you love?' I think bravery had more to do with making the choice and less to do with the choice it self. In that situation, bravery was both living and dying. Janelle Gray