The Bloody Chamber Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to The Bloody Chamber. Here they are! All 100 of them:

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She herself is a haunted house. She does not possess herself; her ancestors sometimes come and peer out of the windows of her eyes and that is very frightening.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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There is a striking resemblance between the act of love and the ministrations of a torturer.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Anticipation is the greater part of pleasure.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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The wolf is carnivore incarnate and he's as cunning as he is ferocious; once he's had a taste of flesh then nothing else will do.
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Angela Carter
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His wedding gift, clasped round my throat. A choker of rubies, two inches wide, like an extraordinarily precious slit throat.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Love is desire sustained by unfulfilment.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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When I saw him look at me with lust, I dropped my eyes but, in glancing away from him, I caught sight of myself in the mirror. And I saw myself, suddenly, as he saw me, my pale face, the way the muscles in my neck stuck out like thin wire. I saw how much that cruel necklace became me. And, for the first time in my innocent and confined life, I sensed in myself a potentiality for corruption that took my breath away.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Like the wild beasts, she lives without a future. She inhabits only the present tense, a fugue of the continuous, a world of sensual immediacy as without hope as it is without despair.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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The invisible is only another unexplored country, a brave new world.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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They will be like shadows, they will be like wraiths, gray members of a congregation of nightmare; hark! his long wavering howl . . . an aria of fear made audible. The wolfsong is the sound of the rending you will suffer, in itself a murdering.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I had the brief notion that his heart, pressed flat as a flower, crimson and thin as tissue paper, lay in this file. It was a very thin one.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Her beauty is a symptom of her disorder, of her soullessness.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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She stands and moves within the invisible pentacle of her own virginity. She is an unbroken egg: she is a sealed vessel; she has inside her a magic space the entrance to which is shut tight with a plug of membrane; she is a closed system; she does not know how to shiver.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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And each stroke of his tongue ripped off skin after successive skin, all the skins of a life in the world, and left behind a nascent patina of shining hairs. My earrings turned back to water and trickled down my shoulders; I shrugged the drops off my beautiful fur.
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Angela Carter
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There was murder, there was rape, there were unspeakable practices, and all of them were for the good, the bloody good, the bloody myth, for the grail, for the Tower.
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Stephen King (The Gunslinger (The Dark Tower, #1))
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For all cats have this particularity, each and every one, from the meanest alley sneaker to the proudest, whitest she that ever graced a pontiff's pillow β€” we have our smiles, as it were, painted on. Those small, cool, quite Mona Lisa smiles that smile we must, no matter whether it's been fun or it's been not. So all cats have a politician's air; we smile and smile and so they think we're villains
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Your thin white face, chΓ©rie; he said, as if he saw it for the first time. Your thin white face, with its promise of debauchery only a connoisseur could detect.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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ordered me a sky from a florist
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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This lack of imagination gives his heroism to the hero.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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See! sweet and sound she sleeps in granny's bed, between the paws of the tender wolf.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I clung to him as though only the one who had inflicted the pain could comfort me for suffering it.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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We keep the wolves outside by living well.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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For the longest time I studied revenge to the exclusion of all else. I built my first torture chamber in the dark vaults of imagination. Lying on bloody sheets in the Healing Hall I discovered doors within my mind that I’d not found before, doors that even a child of nine knows should not be opened. Doors that never close again. I threw them wide.
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Mark Lawrence
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His touch both consoles and devastates me; I feel my heart pulse, then wither, naked as a stone on the roaring mattress while the lovely, moony night slides through the window to dapple the flanks of this innocent who makes cages to keep the sweet birds in. Eat me, drink me; thirsty, cankered, goblin-ridden, I go back and back to him to have his fingers strip the tattered skin away and clothe me in his dress of water, this garment that drenches me, its slithering odour, its capacity for drowning.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I shall take two huge handfuls of his rustling hair as he lies half dreaming, half waking, and wind them into ropes, very softly, so he will not wake up, and, softly, with hands as gentle as rain, I shall strangle him with them.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I drew the curtains to conceal the sight of my father's farewell; my spite was sharp as broken glass.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Time was his servant, too; it would trap me, here, in a night that would last until he came back to me, like a black sun on a hopeless morning.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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There is a vast melancholy in the canticles of the wolves, melancholy infinite as the forest, endless as these long nights of winter and yet that ghastly sadness, that mourning for their own, irremediable appetites, can never move the heart for not one phrase in it hints at the possibility of redemption.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I was a young girl, a virgin, and therefore men denied me rationality just as they denied it to all those who were not exactly like themselves, in all their unreason.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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On her eighteenth birthday, my mother had disposed of a man-eating tiger that had ravaged the villages in the hills north of Hanoi. Now, without a moment's hesitation, she raised my father's gun, took aim and put a single, irreproachable bullet through my husband's head.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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And, ah! his castle. The faery solitude of the place, with its turrets of mistly blue, its courtyard, its spiked gate, his castle that lay on the very bosom of the sea with seabirds mewing about its attics, the casements opening onto the green and purple, evanescent departures of the ocean, cut off by the tide from land for half a day . . . that castle, at home neither on the land nor on the water, a mysterious, amphibious place, contravening the materiality of both earth and waves, with the melancholy of a mermaiden who perches on her rocks and waits, endlessly, for a lover who had drowned far away, long ago. That lovely, sad, sea-siren of a place.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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How pleased I was to see I strick the Beast to the heart.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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The end of exile is the end of being.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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The enchantment of that bright, sad, pretty place enveloped her and she found that, against all her expectations, she was happy there.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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The lilies i always associate with him; that are white. And stain you.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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She goes out at night more often now; the landscape assembles itself about her, she informs it with her presence. She is its significance.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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And, in the red firelight, I blushed again, unnoticed, to think he might have chosen me because, in my innocence, he sensed a rare talent for corruption.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber)
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Wearing an antique bridal gown, the beautiful queen of the vampires sits all alone in her dark, high house under the eyes of the portraits of her demented and atrocious ancestors, each one of whom, through her, projects a baleful posthumous existence; she counts out the Tarot cards, ceaselessly construing a constellation of possibilities as if the random fall of the cards on the red plush tablecloth before her could precipitate her from her chill, shuttered room into a country of perpetual summer and obliterate the perennial sadness of a girl who is both death and the maiden.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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He strips me to my last nakedness, that underskin of mauve, pearlized satin, like a skinned rabbit; then dresses me again in an embrace so lucid and encompassing it might be made of water. And shakes over me dead leaves as if into the stream I have become. Sometimes the birds, at random, all singing, strike a chord. His skin covers me entirely; we are like two halves of a seed, enclosed in the same integument. I should like to grow enormously small, so that you could swallow me, like those queens in fairy tales who conceive when they swallow a grain of corn or a sesame seed. Then I could lodge inside your body and you would bear me.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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He has the special quality of virginity, most and least ambiguous of states: ignorance, yet at the same time, power in potentia, and, furthermore, unknowingness, which is not the same as ignorance.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Yet I had not bargained for this, the girl with tears hanging on her cheeks like stuck pearls, her cunt a split fig below the great globes of her buttocks on which the knotted tails of the cat were about to descend, while a man in a black mask fingered with his free hand his prick, that curved upwards like a scimitar he held. The picture had a caption 'Reproof of curiosity.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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And I could believe that it has been the same with him; he was alive from the desire of the woods.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Snowlight, moonlight, a confusion of paw-prints.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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How can she bear the pain of becoming human? The end of exile is the end of being.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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all cats have a Spanish tinge although Puss himself elegantly lubricates his virile, muscular, native Bergamasque with French, since that is the only language in which you can purr.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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My father lost me to the Beast at cards
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Her face. And she smiling. For a moment, just that moment, you would have thought it was May morning.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Sometimes he lays his head on my lap and lets me comb his lovely hair for him; his combings are leaves of every tree in the wood and dryly susurrate around my feet.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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His skin covers me entirely; we are like two halves of a seed, enclosed in the same integument. I should like to grow enormously small, so that you could swallow me, like those queens in fairy tales who conceive when they swallow a grain of corn or a sesame seed. Then I could lodge inside your body and you would bear me.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Kip cleared his throat and gave a brave smile. β€˜We destroyed our world,’ he said, β€˜and left it for the skies. Our numbers were few. Our species had scattered. We were the last to leave. We left the ground behind. We left the oceans. We left the air. We watched these things grow small. We watched them shrink into a point of light. As we watched, we understood. We understood what we were. We understood what we had lost. We understood what we would need to do to survive. We abandoned more than our ancestors’ world. We abandoned our short sight. We abandoned our bloody ways. We made ourselves anew.’ He spread his hands, encompassing the gathered. β€˜We are the Exodus Fleet. We are those that wandered, that wander still. We are the homesteaders that shelter our families. We are the miners and foragers in the open. We are the ships that ferry between. We are the explorers who carry our names. We are the parents who lead the way. We are the children who continue on.’ He picked up his scrib from the podium. β€˜What is his name?
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Becky Chambers (Record of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers, #3))
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What is a woman’s life? Do not think, because she is not a man, she does not fight. The bedchamber is her tilting ground, where she shows her colours, and her theatre of war is the sealed room where she gives birth. She knows she may not come alive out of that bloody chamber. Before her lying-in, if she is prudent, she settles her affairs. If she dies, she will be lamented and forgotten. If the child dies, she will be blamed. If she lives, she must hide her wounds. Her injuries are secret, and her sisters talk about them behind the hand. It is Eve’s sin, the long continuing punishment it incurred, that tears at her from the inside and shreds her. Whereas we bless an old soldier and give him alms, pitying his blind or limbless state, we do not make heroes of women mangled in the struggle to give birth. If she seems so injured that she can have no more children, we commiserate with her husband.
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Hilary Mantel (The Mirror & the Light (Thomas Cromwell, #3))
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Although her father had told her of the nature of the one who waited for her, she could not control an instinctual shudder of fear when she saw him, for a lion is a lion and a man is a man and, though lions are more beautiful by far than we are, yet they belong to a different order of beauty and, besides, they have no respect for us: why should they? Yet wild things have a far more rational fear of us than is ours of them, and some kind of sadness in his agate eyes, that looked almost blind, as if sick of sight, moved her heart.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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step between the gateposts of the forest with the greatest trepidation and infinite precautions, for if you stray from the path for one instant, the wolves will eat you. They are grey as famine, they are as unkind as plague. The
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber And Other Stories)
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To ride a bicycle is in itself some protection against superstitious fears, since the bicycle is the product of pure reason applied to motion.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I fall to the toilette of my hinder parts, my favourite stance when contemplating the ways of the world.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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For now my skin was my sole capital in the world and today I'd make my first investment.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Yet wild things have a far more rational fear of us than is ours of them...
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Live, and be prosperous: and farewell, good fellow. Juliet! ...O my love! my wife! Death, that hath sucked the honey of thy breath, Hath had no power yet upon thy beauty: Thou art not conquered; beauty's ensign yet Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks, And death's pale flag is not advanced there. Tybalt, liest thou there in thy bloody sheet? O, what more favor can I do to thee, Than with that hand that cut thy youth in twain To sunder his that was thine enemy? Forgive me, cousin! Ah, dear Juliet, Why art thou yet so fair? shall I believe That unsubstantial death is amorous, And that the lean abhorred monster keeps Thee here in dark to be his paramour? For fear of that, I still will stay with thee; And never from this palace of dim night Depart again: here, here will I remain With worms that are thy chamber-maids...Eyes, look your last. Arms, take your last embrace. and, lips, O you The doors of breath, seal with a righteous kiss A dateless bargain to engrossing death... Here's to my love!...Thus with a kiss I die.
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William Shakespeare
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He grudgingly admitted what she had already guessed, that he disliked the presence of servants because, she thought, a constant human presence would remind him too bitterly of his otherness [...]
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Next I prayed to Allah, whose ears are deaf; then did I beseech his fallen twin, the Devil Hornprick, who sits upon his thorn of fire, gloating upon his constellations and counting his bloody seeds. In Baclava it is said Hornprick once caught a glimpse of the First Woman, as she sat singing to her snake in her chamber of sacred mud. Dazzled by her sight, the light of love and lust, he fell. He is still falling. For all eternity her breasts orbit his dreams.
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Rikki Ducornet (Contemporary Surrealist Prose Volume 1)
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I watched with the furious cynicism peculiar to women whom circumstances force mutely to witness folly
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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eldritch ways,
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber And Other Stories)
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We abandoned our short sight. We abandoned our bloody ways. We made ourselves anew.
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Becky Chambers (Record of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers, #3))
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Nothing about him reminded me of humanity.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Angela Carter who started bringing me back to fairy tales. Her revisionist stories, in The Bloody Chamber (1979),
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Samantha Ellis (How to Be a Heroine: Or, What I've Learned from Reading too Much)
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I know it must seem a curious analogy, a man with a flower, but sometimes he seemed to me like a lily. Yes. A lily. Possessed of that strange, ominous calm of sentient vegetable, like one of those cobra-headed, funereal lilies whose white sheaths are curled out of flesh as thick and tensely yielding to the touch as vellum. When I said that I would marry him, not one muscle in his face stirred, but he let out a long, extinguished sigh. I thought: Oh! how he must want me! And it was as though the imponderable weight of his desire was a force I might not withstand, not by virtue of its violence, but because of its very gravity...and I began to shudder, like a race horse before a race, yet also with a kind of fear, for I felt both a strange, impersonal arousal at the thought of love and at the same time a repugnance I could not stifle for his white, heavy flesh that had too much in common with the armfuls of arum lilies that filled my bedroom in great glass jars, those undertakers' lilies with the heavy pollen that powders your fingers as if you had dipped them in turmeric. The lilies I always associate with him; that are white. And stain you.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Her voice is filled with distant sonorities, like reverberations in a cave: now you are at the place of annihilation, now you are at the place of annihilation. And she is herself a cave full of echoes, she is a system of repetitions, she is a closed circuit.' Can a bird sing only the song it knows or can it learn a new song?' She draws her long, sharp fingernail across the bars of the cage in which her pet lark sings, striking a plangent twang like that of the plucked heartstrings of a woman of metal. Her hair falls down like tears.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Already, every day, millions of us are needled and outraged by the hysterically stated views of those with whom we don’t agree. Our irritation pushes us into a place of fiercer opposition. The more emotional we become, the less rational we become, the less able to properly reason. In an attempt to quieten the stress, we begin muting, blocking, de-friending and unfollowing. And we’re in an echo chamber now, shielded from diverse perspectives that might otherwise have made us wiser and more empathetic and open. Safe in the digital cocoon we’ve constructed, surrounded by voices who flatter us with agreement, we become yet more convinced of our essential rightness, and so pushed even further away from our opponents, who by now seem practically evil in their bloody-minded wrongness
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Will Storr (Selfie: How We Became So Self-Obsessed and What It's Doing to Us)
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He carries on his frail shoulders a weird burden of fear; he is cast in the role of the corpse-eater, the body-snatcher who invades the last privacies of the dead. He is white as leprosy, with scrabbling fingernails, and nothing deters him. If you stuff a corpse with garlic, why, he only slavers at the treat: cadavre provençale. He will use the holy cross as a scratching post and crouch above the font to thirstily lap up holy water.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Spilt, glistering milk of moonlight on the frost-crisped grass; on such a night, in moony, metamorphic weather, they say you might easily find him, if you had been foolish enough to venture out late, scuttling along by the churchyard wall with half a juicy torso slung across his back. The white light scours the fields and scours them again until everything gleams and he will leave paw-prints in the hoar-frost when he runs howling round the graves at night in his lupine fiestas.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Although so young, he is also rational. He has chosen the most rational mode of transport in the world for his trip round the Carpathians. To ride a bicycle is in itself some protection against superstitious fears, since the bicycle is the product of pure reason applied to motion. Geometry at the service of man! Give me two spheres and a straight line and I will show you how far I can take them. Voltaire himself might have invented the bicycle, since it contributes so much to man's welfare and nothing at all to his bane. Beneficial to the health, it emits no harmful fumes and permits only the most decorous speeds. How can a bicycle ever be an implement of harm?
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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She looked down at the letter she had clutched in her hand. It could wait until tomorrow. Silently she turned and went to get something soothing to drink. Or, at the very least, some hard ale. She needed something to help her sleep because the last image she’d witnessed before turning away from the chamber would have her awake and obsessing for hours. The image of Annwyl the Bloody, known terror of the Dark Plains, lovingly running her hand down Fearghus’s snout . . . and Fearghus the Destroyer letting her.
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G.A. Aiken (Dragon Actually (Dragon Kin, #1))
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You must not think my father valued me at less than a king's ransom; but, at no more than a king's ransom.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Sea; sand; a sky that melts into the sea--a landscape of misty pastels with a look about it of being continiously on the point of melting.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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My father, of course, believed in miracles; what gambler does not?
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Erl-King lives
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber And Other Stories)
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he might have chosen me because, in my innocence, he sensed a rare talent for corruption.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I was so unaccustomed to nakedness. I was so unused to my own skin that to take off all my clothes involved a kind of flaying.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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He knew it was too late to turn back and brusquely reminded himself he was no child, now, to be frightened of his own fancies.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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You never saw such a wild thing as my mother.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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I will vanish in the morning light; I was only an invention of darkness. And I leave you as a souvenir the dark, fanged rose I plucked from between my thighs, like a flower laid on a grave.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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The secret prayer chamber is a bloody battleground. Here violent and decisive battles are fought out. Here the fate of souls for time and eternity is determined, in quietude and solitude.
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Ole Hallesby
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There's a special madness strikes travellers from the North when they reach the lovely land where the lemon trees grow. We come from countries of cold weather; at home, we are at war with nature but here, ah! you think you've come to the blessed plot where the lion lies down with the lamb. Everything flowers; no harsh wind stirs the voluptuous air. The sun spills fruit for you. And the deathly, sensual lethargy of the sweet South infects the starved brain; it gasps: 'Luxury! more luxury!' But then the snow comes, you cannot escape it, it followed us from Russia as if it ran behind our carriage, and in this dark, bitter city has caught up with us at last, flocking against the windowpanes to mock my father's expectations of perpetual pleasure as the veins in his forehead stand out and throb, his hands shake as he deals the Devil's picture books.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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Just because there’s no one living on a planet does not mean it’s yours for the taking. Do you not see how dangerous that mindset is? Do you not think that treating the galaxy as if it is something to be endlessly used will always, always end in tragedy? You think you’ve broken the cycle. You haven’t. You’re in a less violent period of the exact same cycle, and you don’t see it. And the line of what you find to be justifiable cause is going to keep slipping and slipping until you end up right back where you started. You haven’t fixed anything. You put a stamp and a permit and a shiny coat of paint on an idea that has been fundamentally damaged from day one. You engaged in bloody theft and you called it progress, and no matter how much better you think you’ve made things, no matter how good your intentions are, that will always be the root of the GC. You cannot divorce any of what you do from that. Ever.
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Becky Chambers (The Galaxy, and the Ground Within (Wayfarers, #4))
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He strips me of my last nakedness, that underskin of mauve, pearlized satin, like a skinned rabbit; then dresses me again in an embrace so lucid and encompassing it might be made of water. And shakes over me dead leaves as if into the stream I have become.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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We destroyed our world,’ she said, β€˜and left it for the skies. Our numbers were few. Our species had scattered. We were the last to leave. We left the ground behind. We left the oceans. We left the air. We watched these things grow small. We watched them shrink into a point of light. As we watched, we understood. We understood what we were. We understood what we had lost. We understood what we would need to do to survive. We abandoned more than our ancestors’ world. We abandoned our short sight. We abandoned our bloody ways. We made ourselves anew.
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Becky Chambers (Record of a Spaceborn Few (Wayfarers, #3))
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Bone of my bone. Flesh of my flesh. To remember you it’s my own body I touch. Thus she was, here and here. The physical memory blunders through the doors the mind has tried to seal. A skeleton key to Bluebeard’s chamber. The bloody key that unlocks pain. Wisdom says forget, the body howls.
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Jeanette Winterson
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Do not fear the ghosts in this house; they are the least of your worries. Personally I find the noises they make reassuring. The creaks and footsteps in the night, their little tricks of hiding things, or moving them, I find endearing, not upsettling. It makes the place feel so much more like a home. Inhabited. Apart from ghosts nothing lives here for long. No cats no mice, no flies, no dreams, no bats. Two days ago I saw a butterfly, a monarch I believe, which danced from room to room and perched on walls and waited near to me. There are no flowers in this empty place, and, scared the butterfly would starve, I forced a window wide, cupped my two hands around her fluttering self, feeling her wings kiss my palms so gentle, and put her out, and watched her fly away. I've little patience with the seasons here, but your arrival eased this winter's chill. Please, wander round. Explore it all you wish. I've broken with tradition on some points. If there is one locked room here, you'll never know. You'll not find in the cellar's fireplace old bones or hair. You'll find no blood. Regard: just tools, a washing-machine, a drier, a water-heater, and a chain of keys. Nothing that can alarm you. Nothing dark. I may be grim, perhaps, but only just as grim as any man who suffered such affairs. Misfortune, carelessness or pain, what matters is the loss. You'll see the heartbreak linger in my eyes, and dream of making me forget what came before you walked into the hallway of this house. Bringing a little summer in your glance, and with your smile. While you are here, of course, you will hear the ghosts, always a room away, and you may wake beside me in the night, knowing that there's a space without a door, knowing that there's a place that's locked but isn't there. Hearing them scuffle, echo, thump and pound. If you are wise you'll run into the night, fluttering away into the cold, wearing perhaps the laciest of shifts. The lane's hard flints will cut your feet all bloody as you run, so, if I wished, I could just follow you, tasting the blood and oceans of your tears. I'll wait instead, here in my private place, and soon I'll put a candle in the window, love, to light your way back home. The world flutters like insects. I think this is how I shall remember you, my head between the white swell of your breasts, listening to the chambers of your heart.
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Neil Gaiman (Fragile Things: Short Fictions and Wonders)
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When he combs his hair that is the colour of dead leaves, dead leaves fall out of it; they rustle and drift to the ground as though he were a tree and he can stand as still as a tree, when he wants the doves to flutter softly, crooning as they come, down upon his shoulders, those silly, fat, trusting woodies with the pretty wedding rings round their necks. He makes his whistles out of an elder twig and that is what he uses to call the birds out of the air--all the birds come; and the sweetest singers he will keep in cages.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
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He is the butcher who showed me how the price of flesh is love; skin the rabbit, he says! Off come my clothes. He makes his whistles out of an elder twig and that is what he uses to call the birds out of the air - all the birds come; and the sweetest singers he will keep in cages. He could thrust me into the seed-bed of next year's generation and I would have to wait until he whistled me up from my darkness before I could come back again. His skin is the tint and texture of sour cream, he has stiff, russet nipples ripe as berries. Like a tree that bears bloom and fruit on the same bough together, how pleasing, how lovely. I feel your sharp teeth in the subaqueous depths of your kisses. You sink your teeth into my throat and make me scream. His embraces were his enticements and yet, oh yet! they were the branches of which the trap itself was woven. I shall take two huge handfuls of his rustling hair as he lies half dreaming, half waking, and wind them into ropes, very softly, so he will not wake up, and, softly, with hands as gentle as rain, I shall strangle him with them.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
β€œ
My heart is racing like I’ve run from here to Inverness,” he said. β€œOr just beaten an opponent who had a great, bloody axe.” β€œMine too. He’s determined.” β€œAnd wily too. He knew you were in here. I think he set you up.” β€œAye. Tricky bastard.” β€œNot tricky enough.” A wee smile cracked her face. She tried to hold it back, but it broke through, and they both burst out laughingβ€”in relief, but also at the absurdity of it, at what had almost happened. How he, a grown man and laird, a warrior and defender of good people, had been running from chamber to chamber trying to outwit a decrepit, interfering old man.
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Alyson McLayne (Highland Conquest (The Sons of Gregor MacLeod #2))
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Hullo,” he said sleepily, rubbing a hand along his jaw. He’s here in my room, right in the middle of the afternoon. Great God, there’s a boy in my bed in my room- I came to life. β€œGet out!” He yawned, a lazy yawn, a yawn that clearly indicated he had no intention of leaving. In the moody gray light his body seemed a mere suggestion against the covers, his hair a shaded smudge against the paler lines of his collar and face. β€œBut I’ve been waiting for you for over an hour up here, and bloody boring it’s been, too. I’ve never known a girl who didn’t keep even mildly wicked reading material hidden somewhere in her bedchamber. I’ve had to pass the time watching the spiders crawl across your ceiling.” Voices floated up from downstairs, a maids’ conversation about rags and soapy water sounding horribly loud, and horribly close. I shut the door as gently as I could and pressed my back against it, my mind racing. No lock, no bolt, no key, no way to keep them out if they decided to come up… Armand shifted a bit, rearranging the pillows behind his shoulders. I wet my lips. β€œIf this is about the kiss-β€œ β€œNo.” He gave a slight shrug. β€œI mean, it wasn’t meant to be. But if you’d like-β€œ β€œYou can’t be in here!” β€œAnd yet, Eleanor, here I am. You know, I remember this room from when I used to live in the castle as a boy. It was a storage chamber, I believe. All the shabby, cast-off things tossed up here where no one had to look at them.” He stretched out long and lazy again, arms overhead, his shirt pulling tight across his chest. β€œThis mattress really isn’t very comfortable, is it? Hark as a rock. No wonder you’re so ill-tempered.” Dark power. Compel him to leave. I was desperate enough to try. β€œYou must go,” I said. Miraculously, I felt it working. I willed it and it happened, the magic threading through my tone as sly as silk, deceptively subtle. β€œNow. If anyone sees you, were never here. You never saw me. Go downstairs, and do not mention my name.” Armand sat up, his gaze abruptly intent. One of the pillows plopped on the floor. β€œThat was interesting, how your voice just changed. Got all smooth and eerie. I think I have goose bumps. Was that some sort of technique they taught you at the orphanage? Is it useful for begging?” Blast. I tipped my head back against the wood of the door and clenched my teeth. β€œDo you have any idea the trouble I’ll be in if they should find you here? What people will think?” β€œOh, yes. It rather gives me the advantage, doesn’t it?” β€œMrs. Westcliffe will expel me!” β€œNonsense.” He smiled. β€œAll right, probably she will.” β€œJust tell me that you want, then!” His lashes dropped; his smile grew more dry. He ran a hand slowly along a crease of quilt by his thigh. β€œAll I want,” he said quietly, β€œis to talk. β€œThen pay a call on me later this afternoon,” I hissed. β€œNo.” β€œWhat, you don’t have the time to tear yourself away from your precious Chloe?” I hadn’t meant to say that, and, believe me, as soon as the words left my lips I regretted them. They made me sound petty and jealous, and I was certain I was neither. Reasonably certain.
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Shana Abe (The Sweetest Dark (The Sweetest Dark, #1))
β€œ
I know it must seem a curious analogy, a man with a flower, but sometimes he seemed to me like a lily. Yes. A lily. Possessed of that strange, ominous calm of sentient vegetable, like one of those cobra-headed, funereal lilies whose white sheaths are curled out of flesh as thick and tensely yielding to the touch as vellum. When I said that I would marry him, not one muscle in his face stirred, but he let out a long, extinguished sigh. I thought: Oh! how he must want me! And it was as though the imponderable weight of his desire was a force I might not withstand, not by virtue of its violence, but because of its very gravity...and I began to shudder, like a race horse before a race, yet also with a kind of fear, for I felt both a strange, impersonal arousal at the thought of love and at the same time a repugnance I could not stifle for his white, heavy flesh that had too much in common with the armfuls of arum lilies that filled my bedroom in great glass jars, those undertakers' lilies with the heavy pollen that powders your fingers as if you had dipped them in turmeric. The lilies I always associate with him; that are white. And stain you.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
β€œ
There can be no supernatural elements, no secret passages, no imaginary poisons, no Chinamen, no twins, no mystical intuitive powers, and the detective himself can’t have done it. To them I would add several further moratoria: no more alcoholic policemen with dead wives, no autistic idiot-savant crime-scene specialists, no oppressed female detectives derided by sexist colleagues, no overweight computer nerds in dimly lit rooms, no erudite killers arranging corpses in tableaux reminiscent of medieval paintings, no renegade detectives sharing a psychic bond with the killer, no cryptic messages hidden in museums by victims, no opera-loving loners who solve crimes because without them their lives would have no meaning, and absolutely no more reinventions of Sherlock Bloody Holmes
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Christopher Fowler (Wild Chamber (Bryant & May #14))
β€œ
The Bloody Chamber by Angela Carter.
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Bella Mackie (How to Kill Your Family)
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Dresses me again in an embrace as lucid and encopassing it might be made of water.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
β€œ
Agnes Amaranth is the strong sister, steady as a stone and twice as hard; she walks second into the tower. She's never liked mother-stories much. They make her think of her own mother and wish she'd been someone else, someone who would've sent their daddy running for the hills the first time he raised a hand against her. Someone like the Mother herself. Mothers are supposed to be weak, weepy creatures, women who give birth to their children and drift peacefully into death, bur the Mother is none of those things. She's the brave one, the ruthless one, the witch who traded the birthing-chamber for the battlefield, the kitchen for the knife. She is bloody Boadicea and heartless Hera, the mother who became a monster. None of the stories mention the oiled brown of her skin or the smooth lines of scars along her cheeks, but Agnes knows her by the iron set of her jaw, the unyielding line of her spine. A black python wraps around one arm, heavy-bodied and red eyed. Agnes bows her head and the Mother bows back to her, like two soldiers meeting in battle.
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Alix E. Harrow (The Once and Future Witches)
β€œ
Mothers are supposed to be weak, weepy creatures, women who give birth to their children and drift peacefully into death, but the Mother is none of those things. She’s the brave one, the ruthless one, the witch who traded the birthing-chamber for the battlefield, the kitchen for the knife. She is bloody Boadicea and heartless Hera, the mother who became a monster.
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Alix E. Harrow (The Once and Future Witches)
β€œ
Now the crows drop winter from their wings, invoke the harshest season with their cry.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)
β€œ
She herself is a haunted house. She does not possess herself, her ancestors sometimes come and peer out of the windows of her eyes and that is very frightening.
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Angela Carter (The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories)