Small Town Demons Quotes

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Small Town Demons Small Town Demons by Shannon Celebi
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Small Town Demons Quotes Showing 1-14 of 14
“Let’s call my mood melancholy; let’s call it remembrance. Or maybe let’s call it longing. Yes, let’s call it longing instead.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“All I cared about that summer were suntans, beaches, boys and booze.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“Her mother always told her, “If he hits you, then you leave,” but Jack had never hit her, not with his fists.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“A woman brings so much more to the world than birth, for she can birth discovery, intelligence, invention, art, just as well as any man.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“Because the South can be a dangerous place, especially for those who don’t understand it.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“I hung a picture of him above my bed and learned by hand the internal workings of the female combustion engine.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“It wasn’t as if she’d thought it through or anything, how what a person wanted wasn’t always what they needed, and what a person needed might be the last thing they could ever want.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“Don’t worry if you fall, sweet girl. Youth is made for bruises.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“I think of Ariel, my local neighborhood mermaid, how she only had twenty-four hours to turn her life around...”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“Then the weeks rolled by in a sinister psych ward haze filled with white-coated orderlies and rocking whack-job patients torn straight from some old Jack Nicholson film, all anti-psychotic meds and padded lonely cells...”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“She fantasized sometimes too about killing him a little: a little poison in his pudding, a little flick-flick-flick with a fillet knife at his throat.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“I think first of the children. What the hell am I supposed to tell them? Then I think about money, the house, all those things no widow will tell you ever crossed her mind.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“Using one’s beauty was the only way a smart girl could get by, at least that’s how it was back then, though even for a smart girl there were really only three professions. You could be a nurse or a teacher or a wife.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons
“Once upon a long ago time I was a girl with hopeful halos in my eyes—not unlike you—not a typical beauty but beautiful nonetheless, as all young girls tend to be in their prime, even if they don’t tend to know it.”
Shannon Celebi, Small Town Demons