Paradise Rot Quotes

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Paradise Rot Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval
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Paradise Rot Quotes Showing 1-21 of 21
“Her skin was soft, softer than I remembered, as if she was rotten too, a fallen Eve. Under us I could hear the apples rumble. Not a real sound, but a sort of internal buzzing, like how you can imagine hearing nails and hair growing or buds opening.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I suddenly knew nothing about myself, nothing seemed right in English, nothing was true.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“But my dreams are full of apples, and in the dark my body slowly transforms into fruit: tonsils shrinking to seeds and lungs to cores.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I'll tell you the fairy tale of the apple. Eve ate the apple, and then Adam came and did so too. Afterwards the apple was forgotten, and it was assumed that it rolled away in the grass while Adam and Eve were chased out of the garden. But that's not true, because secretly the apple rolled in between Eve's legs, scratched open her flesh and burrowed into her crotch. It stayed there with the white bite marks facing out, and after a while the fruit-flesh started to shrivel, and mould threads grew from the edges of the peel. The mould threads became pubic hair and the bite mark became the slit between the labia. Soon all of Eden followed the apple's example and started to decompose and rot, and since then this has happened in all gardens and everything in nature, and honey mushrooms came into existence, and rot and parasites and beetles arose. But the apple was first, and it never stops rotting, it just gets blacker. The apple has no end, just like this fairy tale.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“The women feast on the poor man’s flesh, And chew each bone whilst it is fresh, So the two women can become one with a kiss.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I’ll finish your fairy tale. You forgot to mention the snake. In the story the apple poisons the snake, and Eve packs her books and moves out of paradise. The End.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I took a bite of a Bloody Ploughman. Even the flesh was red.
'Bloody,' Carral said.
'Nice colour,' I answered.
'It looks sinful. I bet that was the apple Eve ate, you know, in the Bible, the forbidden fruit.'
'Might be. But I've eaten some too now. Does that mean you have to kick me out of your house?'
I held the half-eaten apple out to her. She burst out laughing and pointed out at the factory: 'Does this look like paradise or what?”
Jenny Hval, Perlebryggeriet
“Her face is white, covered in lime, algae skeletons, beer froth, and sea foam. I stroke her head, smooth and bare and shining: a glistening doorknob without a door.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“While I ran the bath, I sat down to read the book. The mushroom leant against my shoulder and read with me in silence.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I cross the bathroom floor and open the door. I stay standing there for a while. Then I go outside. When I walk down the street, it’s a struggle, as if I have roots in the house that are stretched long behind me, and no matter how far I go, no matter how many corners I turn on the way to Franziska’s flat-share by the beach, they are stuck. They stretch, get thinner and thinner until they are as fine as thread Slowly but surely I imagine that the brewery crumbles and follows me, threading itself on my cord as though it’s a house built from small gleaming beads. The front door reaches me first, then the floor panels from the kitchen, the enamel from the bathtub and the steel covering from the taps, glass-splinters from the chandelier and the apple cores from the compost. And Carral follows too. She crumbles in the bathtub. Tooth by tooth, nail by nail, bone by bone. And new beads grow, threading themselves on my roots. The beads appear from her mouth and eyes, her crotch, hip socket and fingertips.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“Carral and Jo, two sets of lips sucking the same man in and out of each other’s mouths. Here lay two Siamese twins, bound together by a thick freckled masculine sinew. And when something pushes in between my labia I’m torn and I scream, blood trickles down my thigh like warm dark fruit juice. Whatever’s in there twists in all the way, crawls up to my black apple and bites, and that’s how we are bound together: Carral and Jo, Carral and Jo together: A black, dead and rotten fruit.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“The women feast on the poor man’s flesh, And chew each bone whilst it is fresh, So the two women can become one with a kiss; The dream of every biologist! To grow together is their pursuit, And his red flesh their forbidden fruit, He stumbles and gasps and finally dies; From his ashes will a four-breasted creature arise.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“Her skin was soft, softer than I remembered, as if she was rotten too, a fallen Eve.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“Every evening she took a bite of an apple as she came home, and left it on the kitchen table or the bench. Sometimes I sat and watched the apple; how the juices dribbled from the bite marks. I wondered what was apple juice and what was her spit, and thought about licking the place where she’d bit to see if I could tell the difference.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I kept going to lectures, and every time I left, it felt like I crossed a threshold between dream and reality, sleep and wakefulness.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I cross the bathroom floor and open the door. I stay standing there for a while.
Then I go outside. When I walk down the street, it’s a struggle, as if I have roots
in the house that are stretched long behind me, and no matter how far I go, no
matter how many corners I turn on the way to Franziska’s flat-share by the
beach, they are stuck. They stretch, get thinner and thinner until they are as fine
as thread. Slowly but surely I imagine that the brewery crumbles and follows
me, threading itself on my cord as though it’s a house built from small gleaming
beads. The front door reaches me first, then the floor panels from the kitchen, the
enamel from the bathtub and the steel covering from the taps, glass-splinters
from the chandelier and the apple cores from the compost. And Carral follows
too. She crumbles in the bathtub. Tooth by tooth, nail by nail, bone by bone. And
new beads grow, threading themselves on my roots. The beads appear from her
mouth and eyes, her crotch, hip socket and fingertips.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I dreamt of two bodies, girls’ bodies, our bodies: our upper bodies had melted together and our necks twisted around each other, thin and long like swans’ necks.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
tags: love
“I’d imagined that I could feel something growing in my belly, something that wouldn’t become a proper foetus, but something much worse: a blackened, dead, and rotten fruit.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“They whispered to me – Jo … Jo … Jo … Jo … – as if I was leaking into the room and dissolving, flowing from my own bloody crotch like black juice from a rotten apple core.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I was sure I heard tiny ripples on the surface of the milk inside its carton.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot
“I hadn't met a lot of girls who talked while they peed, and definitely not a lot of girls who talked about peeing while they did it. There's usually a lull in the conversation even when you're sat in neighbouring cubicles. Maybe peeing and talking is a bit like singing and playing an instrument at the same time, I thought, two sets of muscles having to work side by side.”
Jenny Hval, Paradise Rot