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  • #1
    A.S. Byatt
    “...it is not possible to create the opposite of what one has always known, simply because the opposite is believed to be desired. Human beings need what they already know, even horrors.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Virgin in the Garden

  • #2
    A.S. Byatt
    “Art does not exist for politics, or for instruction- it exists primarily for pleasure, or it is nothing.”
    A.S. Byatt

  • #3
    Vincent van Gogh
    “And when I read, and really I do not read so much, only a few authors, - a few men that I discovered by accident - I do this because they look at things in a broader, milder and more affectionate way than I do, and because they know life better, so that I can learn from them.”
    Vincent Van Gogh, The Letters of Vincent van Gogh

  • #4
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “I was the shadow of the waxwing slain/By the false azure in the windowpane...”
    Vladimir Nabokov, Pale Fire

  • #5
    D.H. Lawrence
    “The novel is the one bright book of life. Books are not life. They are only tremulations on the ether. But the novel as a tremulation can make the whole man alive tremble.”
    D. H. Lawrence

  • #6
    Marya Hornbacher
    “I didn't particularly want to live much longer than that. Life seemed rather daunting. It seems so to me even now. Life seemed too long a time to have to stick around, a huge span of years through which one would be require to tap-dance and smile and be Great! and be Happy! and be Amazing! and be Precious! I was tired of my life by the time I was sixteen. I was tired of being too much, too intense, too manic. I was tired of people, and I was incredibly tired of myself. I wanted to do whatever Amazing Thing I was expected to do— it might be pointed out that these were my expectations, mine alone— and be done with it. Go to sleep.”
    Marya Hornbacher, Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia

  • #7
    Alberto Moravia
    “You can't think on purpose about somebody or something. Either you think about them naturally or you don't think at all.”
    Alberto Moravia, Boredom

  • #8
    Muriel Spark
    “Allow me, in conclusion, to congratulate you warmly upon your sexual intercourse, as well as your singing.”
    Muriel Spark, The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie

  • #9
    Edward Albee
    “Dashed hopes and good intentions. Good, better, best, bested.”
    Edward Albee, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

  • #10
    Edward Albee
    “I said I was impressed, Martha. I'm beside myself with jealousy. What do you want me to do, throw up?”
    Edward Albee, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

  • #11
    Edward Albee
    “You...you've been here quite a long time, haven't you?"
    What? Oh...yes. Ever since I married What's-her-name. Uh, Martha. Even before that. Forever. Dashed hopes, and good intentions. Good, better, best, bested. How do you like that for a declension, young man?”
    Edward Albee, Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?

  • #12
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “As happens in dreams, when a perfectly harmless object inspires us with fear and thereafter is frightening every time we dream of it (and even in real life retains disquieting overtones), so Dreyer's presence became for Franz a refined torture, an implacable menace. [ ... H]e could not help cringing when, with a banging of doors in a dramatic draft, Martha and Dreyer entered simultaneously from two different rooms as if on a too harshly lit stage. Then he snapped to attention and in this attitude felt himself ascending through the ceiling, through the roof, into the black-brown sky, while, in reality, drained and empty, he was shaking hands with Martha, with Dreyer. He dropped back on his feet out of that dark nonexistence, from those unknown and rather silly heights, to land firmly in the middle of the room (safe, safe!) when hearty Dreyer described a circle with his index finger and jabbed him in the navel; Franz mimicked a gasp and giggled; and as usual Martha was coldly radiant. His fear did not pass but only subsided temporarily: one incautious glance, one eloquent smile, and all would be revealed, and a disaster beyond imagination would shatter his career. Thereafter whenever he entered this house, he imagined that the disaster had happened—that Martha had been found out, or had confessed everything in a fit of insanity or religious self-immolation to her husband; and the drawing room chandelier invariably met him with a sinister refulgence.”
    Vladimir Nabokov

  • #13
    Harold Bloom
    “I am naive enough to read incessantly because I cannot, on my own, get to know enough people profoundly enough.”
    Harold Bloom

  • #14
    John Berger
    “You painted a naked woman because you enjoyed looking at her, put a mirror in her hand and you called the painting “Vanity,” thus morally condemning the woman whose nakedness you had depicted for you own pleasure.”
    John Berger, Ways of Seeing

  • #15
    John Berger
    “english autumn mornings are often like mornings nowhere else in the world.
    The air is cold.
    The floorboards are cold.
    It is perhaps this coldness which sharpens the tang of the hot cup of tea. Outside, steps on the gravel crunch a little more loudly than a month ago because of the very slight frost”
    John Berger, A Fortunate Man: The Story of a Country Doctor

  • #16
    A.S. Byatt
    “Vocabularies are crossing circles and loops. We are defined by the lines we choose to cross or to be confined by.”
    A.S. Byatt

  • #17
    A.S. Byatt
    “Ice burns, and it is hard to the warm-skinned to distinguish one
    sensation, fire, from the other, frost.”
    A.S. Byatt, Elementals: Stories of Fire and Ice
    tags: cold, ice

  • #18
    A.S. Byatt
    “He had been violently confused by her real presence in the opposite inaccessible corner. For months he had been possessed by the imagination of her. She had been distant and closed away, a princess in a tower, and his imagination’s work had been all to make her present, all of her, to his mind and senses, the quickness of her and the mystery, the whiteness of her, which was part of her extreme magnetism, and the green look of those piercing or occluded eyes. Her presence had been unimaginable, or more strictly, only to be imagined. Yet here she was, and he was engaged in observing the ways in which she resembled, or differed from, the woman he dreamed, or reached for in sleep, or would fight for.”
    A. S. Byatt

  • #19
    A.S. Byatt
    “She didn't like to be talked about. Equally, she didn't like not to be talked about, when the high-minded chatter rushed on as though she was not there. There was no pleasing her, in fact. She had the grace, even at eleven, to know there was no pleasing her. She thought a lot, analytically, about other people's feelings, and had only just begun to realize that this was not usual, and not reciprocated.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Children's Book

  • #20
    A.S. Byatt
    “Lists are a form of power.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Virgin in the Garden
    tags: list

  • #21
    A.S. Byatt
    “Everything is surprising, rightly seen.”
    A.S. Byatt

  • #22
    A.S. Byatt
    “Things had changed between them nevertheless. They were children of a time and culture which mistrusted love, 'in love', romantic love, romance in toto, and which nevertheless in revenge proliferated sexual language, linguistic sexuality, analysis, dissection, deconstruction, exposure. They were theoretically knowing: they knew about phallocracy and penisneid, punctuation, puncturing and penetration, about polymorphous and polysemous perversity, orality, good and bad breasts, clitoral tumescence, vesicle persecution, the fluids, the solids, the metaphors for these, the systems of desire and damage, infantile greed and oppression and transgression, the iconography of the cervix and the imagery of the expanding and contracting Body, desired, attacked, consumed, feared.”
    A.S. Byatt, Possession

  • #23
    A.S. Byatt
    “Young girls are sad. They like to be; it makes them feel strong.”
    A.S. Byatt

  • #24
    A.S. Byatt
    “Don't you find it rather heavy, to have everything really in front of you – all the people who are going to matter, whom you haven't met yet, all the choices you are going to have to make, everything you might achieve, and all the possible failures – unreal now? The future flaps round my head like a cloud of midges.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Children's Book

  • #25
    A.S. Byatt
    “The children mingled with the adults, and spoke and were spoken to. Children in these families, at the end of the nineteenth century, were different from children before or after. They were neither dolls nor miniature adults. They were not hidden away in nurseries, but present at family meals, where their developing characters were taken seriously and rationally discussed, over supper or during long country walks. And yet, at the same time, the children in this world had their own separate, largely independent lives, as children. They roamed the woods and fields, built hiding-places and climbed trees, hunted, fished, rode ponies and bicycles, with no other company than that of other children.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Children's Book

  • #26
    A.S. Byatt
    “It is possible for a writer to make, or remake at least, for a reader, the primary pleasures of eating, or drinking, or looking on, or sex. Novels have their obligatory tour-de-force, the green-flecked gold omelette aux fines herbes, melting into buttery formlessness and tasting of summer, or the creamy human haunch, firm and warm, curved back to reveal a hot hollow, a crisping hair or two, the glimpsed sex. They do not habitually elaborate on the equally intense pleasure of reading. There are obvious reasons for this, the most obvious being the regressive nature of the pleasure, a mise-en-abîme even, where words draw attention to the power and delight of words, and so ad infinitum, thus making the imagination experience something papery and dry, narcissistic and yet disagreeably distanced, without the immediacy of sexual moisture or the scented garnet glow of a good burgundy. And yet, natures such as Roland's are at their most alert and heady when reading is violently yet steadily alive. (What an amazing word "heady" is, en passant, suggesting both acute sensuous alertness and its opposite, the pleasure of the brain as opposed to the viscera—though each is implicated in the other, as we know very well, with both, when they are working.)”
    A.S. Byatt, Possession

  • #27
    A.S. Byatt
    “Julian was good at being in love. But he was clever enough to know that what he really liked about being in love was the state of unconsummated tension... One had to believe that these lovely creatures were, in potentia, the longed for intimate friend from whom nothing need be hidden, by whom everything would be understood, forgiven and admired. But Julian was clever and observant enough to see that love was at its most intense before it was reciprocated.”
    A.S. Byatt

  • #28
    A.S. Byatt
    “It was hard for a man and a woman to be fiends with no under thought or glimpsed prospect of sex. They wanted to be friends. It was almost a matter of principle. She was as intelligent as any Fellow of King's - though he thought she did not know it - he was in love with her mind as it followed clues through labyrinths. Love is, among many other things, a response to energy, and Griselda's mind was precise and energetic. He wanted to make love to her too.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Children's Book

  • #29
    A.S. Byatt
    “There was a moment during this time, when his face was on hers, cheek on cheek, brow on brow, heavy skull on skull, through soft skin and softer flesh. He thought: skulls separate people. In this one sense, I could say, they would say, I lose myself in her. But in that bone box, she thinks and thinks, as I think in mine, things the other won't hear, can't hear, though we go on like this for sixty years. What does she think I am? He had no idea. He had no idea what she was.”
    A.S. Byatt, The Virgin in the Garden

  • #30
    A.S. Byatt
    “We are a species of animal which is bringing about the end of the world we were born into. Not out of evil or malice, or not mainly, but because of a lopsided mixture of extraordinary cleverness, extraordinary greed, extraordinary proliferation of our own kind, and a biologically built-in short-sightedness.”
    A.S. Byatt



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