Patsy Quotes
Patsy
by
Nicole Y. Dennis-Benn12,075 ratings, 3.91 average rating, 1,547 reviews
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Patsy Quotes
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“Maybe that’s how it is—maybe life favors certain people and relegates the rest to living in their shadows.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“She knows that the woman is not in Brooklyn, standing on Flatbush Avenue, but home. She went crazy in America, her mind halting in the loneliness, anxiety, and the soundlessness of things falling apart: a sweet surrender. What a relief it must be, Patsy thinks, to stare into the eyes of sorrow and break without the pretense of holding it together.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“What a relief it must be, Patsy thinks, to stare into the eyes of sorrow and break without the pretense of holding it together.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“Tru's face closes as though she has already figured out that promises are merely sweet lies.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“her body is just a place where their eyes stop and their erections point, while their minds move back to the milk-scented bosoms of their mothers that nursed them into adulthood.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“Dey treat people like dawg if yuh nuh ’ave money like dem,” Mama G said to a very young Patsy, pulling her along. And when Patsy tripped and fell from the sudden force, Mama G shouted at her. “Why yuh suh clumsy? Yuh have two left foot, gyal? You is nothing but a disgrace! Yuh mek me shame! Get up an’ don’t mek me have to drag yuh ’cross dis market!”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“She doesn’t have the heart to question Bernie about what he knows about Jamaican cuisine, much less how he plans to influence it. Neither does she have the heart to disappoint him by telling him that she’s not into Bob Marley; that Bob Marley was forbidden in her household; that she’d rather listen to Peter Tosh, since Uncle Curtis told her he wrote most of Bob’s lyrics anyway. She still thinks it’s unfair that Peter is the lesser known of the two. Maybe that’s how it is—maybe life favors certain people and relegates the rest to living in their shadows.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
“As she waits on Tru, she stares at the high ceiling of the study, feeling small and helpless. Outside, leaves tremble on tree limbs as though fighting to keep a season that has already moved on. The hand holding the telephone shakes. Suddenly there is a burst of sound on the other end. A squeal erupts from a distance, growing louder. When it is close, becoming panting breaths and footsteps, Patsy quickly lowers the phone with a soft click. “I’m sorry,” she says aloud, hoping her apology will carry over the dying autumn landscape across the brooding ocean.”
― Patsy
― Patsy
