The Immigrant Quotes

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The Immigrant The Immigrant by Manju Kapur
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The Immigrant Quotes Showing 1-6 of 6
“When one was reinventing oneself, anywhere could be home.”
Manju Kapur, The Immigrant
“Marry me, love me, above all, look after me. somebody had to be responsible for her, besides herself. That was what women had been led to expect and hardly any price was too high. Loneliness, heartache, denial, all grist to the mill.”
Manju Kapur, The Immigrant
“Anchors. You had to be your own anchor. By now there was no escaping this knowledge. Still she had been trained to look for them and despite all that had happened, she had not got over the habit.”
Manju Kapur, The Immigrant
“but the habits of frugality ingrained during years of perpetual worry about money, and daily, hourly, weighing of cost and benefit, meant she could never take an auto, not on her birthday, not ever.”
Manju Kapur, The Immigrant: A Novel
“Perhaps that was the ultimate immigrant experience. Not that any one thing was steady enough to attach yourself to for the rest of your life, but that you found different ways to belong, ways not necessarily lasting, but ones that made your journey less lonely for a while. When something failed it was a signal to move on. For an immigrant there was no going back.”
Manju Kapur, The Immigrant
“The immigrant who comes as a wife has a more difficult time. If work exists for her, it is in the future and after much finding of feet. At present all she is, is a wife, and a wife is alone for many, many hours. There will come a day when even books are powerless to distract. When the house and its conveniences can no longer completely charm or compensate. Then she realizes she is an immigrant for life.”
Manju Kapur, The Immigrant