The Damnation Game Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
The Damnation Game The Damnation Game by Clive Barker
21,234 ratings, 3.81 average rating, 905 reviews
Open Preview
The Damnation Game Quotes Showing 1-30 of 31
“It was as though in these last minutes together--when they had so much to say--they could say nothing of the least significance, for fear it open the floodgates.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Hell is reimagined by each generation. Its terrain is surveyed for absurdities and remade in a fresher mold; its terrors are scrutinized and, if necessary, reinvented to suit the current climate of atrocity; its architecture is redesigned to appall the eye of the modern damned.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“The Devil is by no means the worst that there is; I would rather have dealings with him than with many a human being. He honours his agreements much more promptly than many a swindler on Earth. To be true, when payment is due he comes on the dot; just as twelve strikes, fetches his soul and goes off home to Hell like a good Devil. He’s just a businessman as is right and proper. —-J.N. NESTROY, Hollenangst”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“I'm not afraid," he said. "What's the use of fear? You can't buy it or sell it, you can't make love to it. You can't even wear it if they strip off your shirt and you're cold.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
tags: fear
“Indifference was the best remedy. Once you conceded defeat, life was a feather bed.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“You cut up a thing that’s alive and beautiful to find out how it’s alive and why it’s beautiful and before you know it, it’s neither of those things, and you’re standing there with blood on your face and tears in your sight and only the terrible ache of guilt to show for it.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Winning is beauty. It is like life itself.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Every man is his own Mephistopheles, don’t you think?”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Every man is his own Mephistopheles, don’t you think? If I hadn’t come along you’d have made a bargain with some other power. And you would have had your fortune, and your women, and your strawberries. All those torments I’ve made you suffer.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“I feel things other people don’t. I don’t think it’s particularly clever of me, or anything like that. I just do it.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“You know, as a child I thought somebody came and took the world away in the night and then came back and unrolled it all again the following morning.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“though she hurried him on, he dawdled, his head back, squinting at the stars. There were no revelations to be had there. Just pinpricks of light in a plain heaven. But he saw for the first time how fine that was. That in a world too full of loss and rage they be remote: the minimum of glory. As she led him across the lightless ground, time and again he could not prevent his gaze from straying skyward.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“The Deluge wasn’t a wave, was it? It was blind men with axes; it was the great on their knees begging not to die at the hands of idiots; it was the itch of the irrational grown to an epidemic.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Houses weren’t haunted, only human minds.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“There was a primitive power in naming someone. It gave you a handle on a person.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“...Ili je pakao možda jedna soba, jedan krevet i večno uzbuđenje i želja, i ja sam bio u njemu, video sam njegovu lepotu, i ako stvari krenu najgorim tokom izdržaću.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“This was the nadir, surely. They had no further to fall.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Muck held the whip hand.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“She got up and crossed to the window. Like father like daughter, he thought: window freaks, both of them.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Not a whisper of flatulence would dare this man’s bowels.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Besides, he guessed she wouldn’t have thanked him for delaying his purchase. She needed dope more than she needed him.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Was that what made him a European? To want to have his story told once more, passed down the line to another eager listener who would, in his time, disregard its lesson and repeat his own suffering? Ah, how he loved tradition.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Experience was made up of endless ambiguities—of motive, of feeling, of cause and effect—and if he was to win under such circumstances, he had to understand how those ambiguities worked.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“Once you conceded defeat, life was a feather bed. In”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“was enough to know they had no Devil on their backs. Just old humanity, cheated of love, and ready to pull down the world on its head.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“It was enough to know they had no Devil on their backs. Just old humanity, cheated of love, and ready to pull down the world on its head.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“For a time he had tried to forget her; it was more convenient that way. Now he clung to thoughts of that face, bereft. He wondered if he would see her again.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“You hear stories all the time, about how some lucky man escaped death because he sneezed, or died for the same reason. Tales of benign providence, or fatal bad fortune. And after a while you begin to look at the world a little differently: you begin to see chance at work everywhere. You become alive to its mysteries. And of course to its flip side; to determinism. Because take it from me there are men who make their own luck. Men who can mold chance like putty. You talked yourself of feeling a tingle in your hands. As though today, whatever you did, you couldn't lose.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“They were one indivisible thought, imagining each other.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game
“In this maelstrom his feelings for her had the purity of mathematics. Its equations—complex, but elegant in their proofs—offered a nicety that was like truth. He had to hold on to this recognition. If he once relinquished it he was lost.”
Clive Barker, The Damnation Game

« previous 1