Luisa > Luisa's Quotes

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  • #1
    Arundhati Roy
    “It is curious how sometimes the memory of death lives on for so much longer than the memory of the life that is purloined. ”
    Arundhati Roy , The God of Small Things

  • #2
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “I think a lot about queer villains, the problem and pleasure and audacity of them. I know I should have a very specific political response to them. I know, for example, I should be offended by Disney’s lineup of vain, effete ne’er-do-wells (Scar, Jafar), sinister drag queens (Ursula, Cruella de Vil), and constipated, man-hating power dykes (Lady Tremaine, Maleficent). I should be furious at Downton Abbey’s scheming gay butler and Girlfriend’s controlling, lunatic lesbian, and I should be indignant about Rebecca and Strangers on a Train and Laura and The Terror and All About Eve, and every other classic and contemporary foppish, conniving, sissy, cruel, humorless, depraved, evil, insane homosexual on the large and small screen. And yet, while I recognize the problem intellectually—the system of coding, the way villainy and queerness became a kind of shorthand for each other—I cannot help but love these fictional queer villains. I love them for all of their aesthetic lushness and theatrical glee, their fabulousness, their ruthlessness, their power. They’re always by far the most interesting characters on the screen. After all, they live in a world that hates them. They’ve adapted; they’ve learned to conceal themselves. They’ve survived.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #3
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “When the historian of queer experience attempts to document a queer past, there is often a gatekeeper, representing a straight present.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #4
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “The trouble with letting people see you at your worst isn’t that they’ll remember; it’s that you’ll remember. —Sarah Manguso”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #5
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “We can't stop living. Which means we have to live, which means we are alive, which means we are humans and we are human: some of us are unkind and some of us are confused and some of us sleep with the wrong people and some of us make bad decisions and some of us are murderers. And it sounds terrible but it is, in fact, freeing: the idea that queer does not equal good or pure or right.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #6
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “Putting language to something for which you have no language is no easy feat.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #7
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “The past never leaves us; there's always atmosphere to consider; you can wound air as cleanly as you can wound flesh. In this way, the Dream House was a haunted house. You were the sudden, inadvertent occupant of a place where bad things had happened.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #8
    Carmen Maria Machado
    “So many cells in my body have died and regenerated since the days of the Dream House. My blood and taste buds and skin have long since re-created themselves. My fat still remembers, but just barely — within a few years, it will have turned itself over completely. My bones too. But my nervous system remembers. The lenses of my eyes. My cerebral cortex with its memory and language and consciousness. They will last forever, or at least as long as I do. They can still climb onto the witness stand.”
    Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House

  • #9
    Samantha Irby
    “Sure, sex is fun, but have you ever pooped on a reliable schedule>”
    Samantha Irby, Wow, No Thank You.: Essays

  • #10
    Samantha Irby
    “Are you Roxane Gay?”
    Samantha Irby, Wow, No Thank You.: Essays

  • #11
    Samantha Irby
    “Why has age made me better at so few things?”
    Samantha Irby, Wow, No Thank You.: Essays

  • #12
    Matt Haig
    “How to stop time: kiss.
    How to travel in time: read.
    How to escape time: music.
    How to feel time: write.
    How to release time: breathe.”
    Matt Haig, Reasons to Stay Alive



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