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  • #1
    Jean-Michel Guenassia
    “Lo más importante en la Tierra Prometida no es la tierra, es la promesa.”
    Jean-Michel Guenassia, Le Club des incorrigibles optimistes

  • #2
    Richard Siken
    “You’re in a car with a beautiful boy, and he won’t tell you that he loves you, but he loves you. And you feel like you’ve done something terrible, like robbed a liquor store, or swallowed pills, or shoveled yourself a grave in the dirt, and you’re tired. You’re in a car with a beautiful boy, and you’re trying not to tell him that you love him, and you’re trying to choke down the feeling, and you’re trembling, but he reaches over and he touches you, like a prayer for which no words exist, and you feel your heart taking root in your body, like you’ve discovered something you didn’t even have a name for.”
    richard siken

  • #3
    Richard Siken
    “Tell me how all this, and love too, will ruin us.
    These, our bodies, possessed by light.
    Tell me we'll never get used to it.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #4
    Richard Siken
    “I'm battling monsters, I'm pulling you out of the burning buildings/ and you say I'll give you anything but you never come through.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #5
    Richard Siken
    “We have not touched the stars,
    nor are we forgiven, which brings us back
    to the hero’s shoulders and the gentleness that comes,
    not from the absence of violence, but despite
    the abundance of it.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #6
    Richard Siken
    “Sorry about the blood in your mouth. I wish it was mine.

    I couldn't get the boy to kill me, but I wore his jacket for the longest time.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #7
    Richard Siken
    “A man takes his sadness down to the river and throws it in the river
                        but then he’s still left
    with the river. A man takes his sadness and throws it away
                                                                            but then he’s still left with his hands.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #8
    Richard Siken
    “The way you slam your body into mine reminds me I’m alive, but monsters are always hungry, darling, and they’re only a few steps behind you, finding the flaw, the poor weld, the place where we weren’t stitched up quite right, the place they could almost slip right into through if the skin wasn’t trying to keep them out, to keep them here, on the other side of the theater where the curtain keeps rising. I crawled out the window and ran into the woods. I had to make up all the words myself. The way they taste, the way they sound in the air. I passed through the narrow gate, stumbled in, stumbled around for a while, and stumbled back out. I made this place for you. A place for to love me. If this isn’t a kingdom then I don’t know what is.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #9
    Italo Calvino
    “The inferno of the living is not something that will be; if there is one, it is what is already here, the inferno where we live every day, that we form by being together. There are two ways to escape suffering it. The first is easy for many: accept the inferno and become such a part of it that you can no longer see it. The second is risky and demands constant vigilance and apprehension: seek and learn to recognize who and what, in the midst of inferno, are not inferno, then make them endure, give them space.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #10
    Italo Calvino
    “Cities, like dreams, are made of desires and fears, even if the thread of their discourse is secret, their rules are absurd, their perspectives deceitful, and everything conceals something else.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #11
    Italo Calvino
    “Falsehood is never in words; it is in things.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #12
    Italo Calvino
    “You take delight not in a city's seven or seventy wonders, but in the answer it gives to a question of yours.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #13
    Italo Calvino
    “Memory's images, once they are fixed in words, are erased," Polo said. "Perhaps I am afraid of losing Venice all at once, if I speak of it, or perhaps, speaking of other cities, I have already lost it, little by little.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #14
    Italo Calvino
    “Your house, being the place in which you read, can tell us the position books occupy in your life, if they are a defense you set up to keep the outside world at a distance, if they are a dream into which you sink as if into a drug, or bridges you cast toward the outside, toward the world that interests you so much that you want to multiply and extend its dimensions through books.”
    Italo Calvino, If on a Winter's Night a Traveler

  • #15
    Italo Calvino
    “Lovers' reading of each other's bodies (of that concentrate of mind and body which lovers use to go to bed together) differs from the reading of written pages in that it is not linear. It starts at any point, skips, repeat itself, goes backward, insists, ramifies in simultaneous and divergent messages, converges again, has moments of irritation, turns the page, finds its place, gets lost. A direction can be recognized in it, a route to an end, since it tends toward a climax, and with this end in view it arranges rhythmic phases, metrical scansions, recurrence of motives. But is the climax really the end? Or is the race toward that end opposed by another drive which works in the opposite direction, swimming against moments, recovering time?”
    Italo Calvino, If on a Winter's Night a Traveler

  • #16
    Italo Calvino
    “Elsewhere is a negative mirror. The traveler recognizes the little that is his, discovering the much he has not had and will never have.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #17
    Italo Calvino
    “There is still one of which you never speak.'

    Marco Polo bowed his head.

    'Venice,' the Khan said.

    Marco smiled. 'What else do you believe I have been talking to you about?'

    The emperor did not turn a hair. 'And yet I have never heard you mention that name.'

    And Polo said: 'Every time I describe a city I am saying something about Venice.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #18
    Italo Calvino
    “There is no language without deceit.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #19
    Phyllis Ann Karr
    “It did not have the makings of a cozy situation for anyone but Mordred, who seems to relish being hated for the love of being hated.”
    Phyllis Ann Karr, The Idylls of the Queen: A Tale of Queen Guenevere

  • #20
    Daphne Gottlieb
    “Fifteen Ways to Stay Alive


    1. Offer the wolves your arm only from the elbow down. Leave tourniquet space. Do not offer them your calves. Do not offer them your side. Do not let them near your femoral artery, your jugular. Give them only your arm.

    2. Wear chapstick when kissing the bomb.

    3. Pretend you don’t know English.

    4. Pretend you never met her.

    5. Offer the bomb to the wolves. Offer the wolves to the zombies.

    6. Only insert a clean knife into your chest. Rusty ones will cause tetanus. Or infection.

    7. Don’t inhale.

    8. Realize that this love was not your trainwreck, was not the truck that flattened you, was not your Waterloo, did not cause massive haemorrhaging from a rusty knife. That love is still to come.

    9. Use a rusty knife to cut through most of the noose in a strategic place so that it breaks when your weight is on it.

    10. Practice desperate pleas for attention, louder calls for help. Learn them in English, French, Spanish: May Day, Aidez-Moi, Ayúdame.

    11. Don’t kiss trainwrecks. Don’t kiss knives. Don’t kiss.

    12. Pretend you made up the zombies, and only superheroes exist.

    13. Pretend there is no kryptonite.

    14. Pretend there was no love so sweet that you would have died for it, pretend that it does not belong to someone else now, pretend like your heart depends on it because it does. Pretend there is no wreck — you watched the train go by and felt the air brush your face and that was it. Another train passing. You do not need trains. You can fly. You are a superhero. And there is no kryptonite.

    15. Forget her name.”
    Daphne Gottlieb

  • #21
    Richard Siken
    “Hello, darling. Sorry about that. Sorry about the bony elbows, sorry we lived here, sorry about the scene at the bottom of the stairwell and how I ruined everything by saying it out loud. Especially that, but I should have known. You see, I take the parts that I remember and stitch them back together to make a creature that will do what I say or love me back.”
    Richard Siken, Crush

  • #22
    Italo Calvino
    “With cities, it is as with dreams: everything imaginable can be dreamed, but even the most unexpected dream is a rebus that conceals a desire or, its reverse, a fear. Cities, like dreams, are made of desires and fears, even if the thread of their discourse is secret, their rules are absurd, their perspectives deceitful, and everything conceals something else.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #23
    Italo Calvino
    “Futures not achieved are only branches of the past: dead branches.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #24
    Italo Calvino
    “I speak and speak,” Marco says, “but the listener retains only the words he is expecting. The description of the world to which you lend a benevolent ear is one thing; the description that will go the rounds of the groups of stevedores and gondoliers on the street outside my house the day of my return is another; and yet another, that which I might dictate late in life, if I were taken prisoner by Genoese pirates and put in irons in the same cell with a writer of adventure stories. It is not the voice that commands the story: it is the ear.”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #25
    Italo Calvino
    “Perhaps, for each of them, I also resembled someone who was dead. I had barely arrived at Adelma and I was already one of them, I had gone over to their side, absorbed in that kaleidescope of eyes, wrinkles, grimaces. ”
    Italo Calvino, Invisible Cities

  • #26
    Angela Carter
    “There is a vast melancholy in the canticles of the wolves, melancholy infinite as the forest, endless as these long nights of winter and yet that ghastly sadness, that mourning for their own, irremediable appetites, can never move the heart for not one phrase in it hints at the possibility of redemption; grace could not come to the world from its own despair, only through some external mediator, so that, sometimes, the beast will look as if he half welcomes the knife that despatches him.”
    Angela Carter, The Company of Wolves

  • #27
    Anne Carson
    “You remember too much,
    my mother said to me recently.
    Why hold onto all that? And I said,
    Where can I put it down?”
    Anne Carson, Glass, Irony and God



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