and i know that you live there so, sroehoatw you spea at, i u'iv iw c asstondenghu ftoboken and why you left. >> guest: we left about, um, 13 years ago. aly g sc iewwal ev d.ko mat and this got older, their social lives were increasingly in aneewnns'vlt an decided that i should come home. and that's what i di >> host: and this is an e-mail from peggy sage inli re jinan inty th yroms t11 s t whe edlo terms thri fear and flashback. >> guest: oh. >> host: i want to thank you for your writings, i lost my mother, too, at age 19. meng o gef h hed w reing an iflt u cd rmy m isine w w tta of more onal stories than we ever get. is this, do people relate to you in that way? me a, bret. as oyau i me rngaboys line '30s." and my mother died when i was young, too, and there's really a sense of people wi say to me limetimes yove bn wrinmy dt ayohe igh a yauyo b i dt woure >> host: anna quindlen, what are you currently reading, and what is on your summer reading list? guest: wh am i curently i'stis"b he es er tirf t ilth'sngoo on thomas cromwell i know a lot of the tudors, it's teg tth tte o ldt in ian