
“I didn't call my father. Instead I thought about my aunt. I hadn't thought about her for a long time. But I imagined Marla bursting into the room, restarting my mother the way she used to restart old cars. I imagined my aunt punching the doctors who failed us. I imagined my aunt flying into the side of the building and bursting in through the window in a spangle of broken glass, her eyes flashing like rubies, her dragonish scales a brilliant contrast to the thin hospital light, her muscles rippling across her flexible frame. An astonishment of light and heat and violent intellect.”
―
When Women Were Dragons
Share this quote:
Friends Who Liked This Quote
To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!
2 likes
All Members Who Liked This Quote
This Quote Is From

68,306 ratings, average rating, 10,534 reviews
Open Preview
Browse By Tag
- love (100950)
- life (78985)
- inspirational (75543)
- humor (44230)
- philosophy (30807)
- inspirational-quotes (28700)
- god (26816)
- truth (24630)
- wisdom (24454)
- romance (24272)
- poetry (23107)
- life-lessons (22507)
- quotes (20908)
- death (20490)
- happiness (18909)
- hope (18453)
- faith (18291)
- inspiration (17225)
- travel (16921)
- spirituality (15628)
- relationships (15432)
- religion (15353)
- motivational (15241)
- life-quotes (15208)
- love-quotes (15044)
- writing (14907)
- success (14151)
- motivation (13096)
- time (12808)
- science (12043)