aina > aina's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “I was forced to acknowledge too late, much too late, that I too had loved, that I was capable of suffering, and that I was human after all.”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #2
    Daphne du Maurier
    “I suppose sooner or later in the life of everyone comes a moment of trial. We all of us have our particular devil who rides us and torments us, and we must give battle in the end.”
    Daphne Du Maurier, Rebecca

  • #3
    Lisa Tuttle
    “There’s something about a book you find by accident, a book no one else seems to have heard of, a book that thrills and then becomes a part of you, when it’s one you so easily might never have read at all—it seems like it found you.”
    Lisa Tuttle, My Death

  • #4
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “Being beautiful, was that for men?'
    'Yes. Some women say that it is for ourselves. What on earth can we do with it? I could have loved myself whether I was hunchbacked or lame, but to be loved by others, you had to be beautiful.”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #5
    Susan Abulhawa
    “I colonized the colonizer’s space of authority. I made myself free in chains and held that courtroom captive to my freedom.”
    Susan Abulhawa, Against the Loveless World

  • #6
    Susan Abulhawa
    “It amazed me to see how quickly they got comfortable in the new apartment and settled into a routine, as if their lives had simply been excised and replaced elsewhere, intact, with just a dusting of grief they shook off before returning to the business of living. Maybe it was easier because the trauma of forced displacement was already well-known to them, and they understood how idleness and purposelessness could dull the mind, droop the eyelids, and seep too much sleep and despair into the day. They were experienced refugees, better equipped to handle recurring generational trauma.”
    Susan Abulhawa, Against the Loveless World

  • #7
    Susan Abulhawa
    “But I know now that going from place to place is just something exiles have to do. Whatever the reason, the earth is never steady beneath our feet.”
    Susan Abulhawa, Against the Loveless World

  • #8
    Susan Abulhawa
    “Music is like spoken language, inextricable from its culture. If you don't learn a language early in life, its words will forever come out wrinkled and accented by another world, no matter how well you memorize or love the vocabulary, grammar, and cadences of a new language. This is why foreign "belly dancers" have always bothered me. The use of our music as a prop to wiggle and shimmy and jump around offends me. Eastern music is the soundtrack of me..”
    Susan Abulhawa, Against the Loveless World

  • #9
    Daphne du Maurier
    “They are not brave, the days when we are twenty-one. They are full of little cowardices, little fears without foundation, and one is so easily bruised, so swiftly wounded, one falls to the first barbed word. To-day, wrapped in the complacent armour of approaching middle age, the infinitesimal pricks of day by day brush one but lightly and are soon forgotten, but then—how a careless word would linger, becoming a fiery stigma, and how a look, a glance over a shoulder, branded themselves as things eternal.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca

  • #10
    Ruben Reyes Jr.
    “The cruel thing about grief is that it doesn’t care where you are or how you’re feeling. Out of nowhere, a random memory descends, even if your mind has been running a hundred miles an hour over the hundred things on your to-do list. The memory could be of the most mundane, ordinary day, and still, it’ll send an ancient sadness through you. The sort of sadness you imagine humans have felt since creation, but that you never imagined you could experience so deep inside.”
    Ruben Reyes Jr., There Is a Rio Grande in Heaven: A Collection of Short Stories of Fantasy, Migration, and Central American Identity

  • #11
    Daphne du Maurier
    “If only there could be an invention that bottled up a memory, like scent. And it never faded, and it never got stale. And then, when one wanted it, the bottle could be uncorked, and it would be like living the moment all over again.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca

  • #12
    Daphne du Maurier
    “Happiness is not a possession to be prized, it is a quality of thought, a state of mind.”
    Daphne Du Maurier, Rebecca

  • #13
    Daphne du Maurier
    “I am glad it cannot happen twice, the fever of first love. For it is a fever, and a burden, too, whatever the poets may say.”
    Daphne duMaurier, Rebecca

  • #14
    Daphne du Maurier
    “Men are simpler than you imagine my sweet child. But what goes on in the twisted, tortuous minds of women would baffle anyone.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca

  • #15
    Daphne du Maurier
    “I wondered why it was that places are so much lovelier when one is
    alone.”
    Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca



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