First of all, it was October, a rare month for boys. Not that all months aren't rare. But there be bad and good, as the pirates say. Take September, a bad month: school begins. Consider August, a good month: school hasn't begun yet. July, well, July's really fine: there's no chance in the world for school. June, no doubting it, June's best of all, for the school doors spring wide and September's a billions years away.

Something Wicked This Way Comes av Ray Bradbury.

Godt sagt! (6) Varsle Svar

Kanskje Rebecca av Daphne du Maurier?

Edit: We Have Always Lived in the Castle av Shirley Jackson kan muligens også passe.

Godt sagt! (8) Varsle Svar

Jeg hadde kanskje lagt til enda mer av Anne Carson, i alle fall Red Doc>, som jo henger sammen med Autobiography of Red. Siden Sapfo har fått plass, hadde jeg vel også inkludert If Not, Winter.

Godt sagt! (1) Varsle Svar

Remember her hair in the morning before it was pinned, black, rampant, savage with loveliness. As if she slept in perpetual storm.

Godt sagt! (3) Varsle Svar

"Have a drink!?"
"I don't need it," said Halloway. "But someone inside me does."
"Who?"
The boy I once was, thought Halloway, who runs like the leaves down the sidewalk autumn nights.

Godt sagt! (3) Varsle Svar

Like all boys, they never walked anywhere, but named a goal and lit for it, scissors and elbows. Nobody won. Nobody wanted to win. It was in their friendship they just wanted to run forever, shadow and shadow. Their hands slapped library door handles together, their chests broke track tapes together, their tennis shoes beat parallel pony tracks over lawns, trimmed bushes, squirreled trees, no one losing, both winning, thus saving their friendship for other times of loss.

Godt sagt! (1) Varsle Svar

People love to hate themselves, avoiding the
necessary recalibrations. Shame comes from vanity.
Shame means you're guilty, like the rest of us,
but you think you're better than we are. Maybe you
are.

Godt sagt! (0) Varsle Svar

To hide somewhere is not surrender,
it is trickery.

Godt sagt! (1) Varsle Svar

What is alive and what isn't and what should we do
about it? Theories: about the nature of the thing. And
of the soul. Because people die. The fear: that nothing
survives. The greater fear: that something does.

The night sky is vast and wide.

Godt sagt! (5) Varsle Svar

Nonfiction has crept closer to fiction in our time in ways that are not flattering to fiction, in part because too many writers cannot come to terms with the ways in which the past, like the future, is dark. There is so much we don't know, and to write truthfully about a life, your own or your mother's, or a celebrated figure's, an event, a crisis, another culture is to engage repeatedly with those patches of darkness, those nights of history, those places of unknowing. They tell us that there are limits to knowledge, that there are essential mysteries, starting with the notion that we know just what someone thought or felt in the absence of exact information.

Often enough, we don't know such things even when it comes to ourselves, let alone someone who perished in an epoch whose very textures and reflexes were unlike ours. Filling in the blanks replaces the truth that we don't entirely know with the false sense that we do. We know less when we erroneously think we know than when we recognize that we don't. Sometimes I think these pretenses at authoritative knowledge are failures of language: the language of bold assertion is simpler, less taxing, than the language of nuance and ambiguity and speculation.

Godt sagt! (1) Varsle Svar

I think a lot about that obliteration. Or rather that obliteration keeps showing up. I have a friend whose family tree has been traced back a thousand years, but no women exist on it. She just discovered that she herself did not exist, but her brothers did. Her mother did not exist, and nor did her father's mother. Or her mother's father. There were no grandmothers. Fathers have sons and grandsons and so the lineage goes, with the name passed on; the tree branches, and the longer it goes on the more people are missing: sisters, aunts, mothers, grandmothers, great-grandmothers, a vast population made to disappear on paper and in history. Her family is from India, but this version of lineage is familiar to those of us in the West from the Bible where long lists of begats link fathers to sons. The crazy fourteen-generation genealogy given in the New Testament's Gospel According to Matthew goes from Abraham to Joseph (without noting that God and not Joseph is supposed to be the father of Jesus). The Tree of Jesse—a sort of totem pole of Jesus's patrilineage as given in Matthew—was represented in stained glass and other medieval art and is said to be the ancestor of the family tree. Thus coherence—of patriarchy, of ancestry, of narrative—is made by erasure and exclusion.

Godt sagt! (1) Varsle Svar

Richard Siken - War of the Foxes

Godt sagt! (2) Varsle Svar

Crush av Richard Siken! Jeg ser allerede nå, bare en måneds tid etter at jeg leste den, at dette er en sånn bok jeg ikke kommer til å bli ferdig med. Den er vakker og trist og voldsom og så, så rå. Jeg skal lese den og lese den igjen, fylle den med notater, bruke den så flittig og elske den så mye at den blir helt frynsete.

Ellers:

A Streetcar Named Desire av Tennessee Williams. Blanche DuBois er et monster av en karakter. Ikke fatter jeg at en mann i første halvdel av forrige århundre kunne skrive en kvinneskikkelse som er så kompleks - av tvilsom moralsk karakter og full av hjerteskjærende svakhet.

Franny and Zooey av J. D. Salinger. Jeg elsker Salinger - alt jeg leser av fyren fungerer for meg. Og Franny, hun er ei sånn dame jeg antakeligvis hadde forelsket meg i på videregående.

Mystery & Manners av Flannery O'Connor. Hvorfor leser ikke flere denne dama? Hun er en litterær superhelt - alt hun skrev er helt enormt.

Slouching Towards Bethlehem av Joan Didion. Verdens beste essaysamling.

The Bloody Chamber av Angela Carter. Carter skriver eventyr. Blodige, voldelige, sensuelle eventyr. Og hun gjør det helt hinsides godt. Hundre bonuspoeng for den mest interessante vampyrnovellen jeg har lest.

Godt sagt! (2) Varsle Svar

All cat stories start with the statement: "My mother, who was the first cat, told me this..."

Godt sagt! (0) Varsle Svar

We eat the year away. We eat the spring and the summer and the fall. We wait for something to grow and then we eat it.

Godt sagt! (0) Varsle Svar

A pretty sight, a lady with a book.

Godt sagt! (2) Varsle Svar

I have often thought that with any luck at all I could have been born a werewolf, because the two middle fingers on both my hands are the same length, but I have had to be content with what I had.

Godt sagt! (0) Varsle Svar

His teacher at med
school called him a
minotaur who swallows
other people's labyrinths.
Good I'll do psychiatry he
said.

Godt sagt! (0) Varsle Svar

Jeg ønsket meg fire bøker i år, og jammen fant jeg ikke fire bøker under treet!

Ruth Lillegraven - Urd
Steffen Kverneland - Munch
Vincent van Gogh - Å skrive livet
Knut Ødegård - Edda-dikt band II: Gudedikt

Godt sagt! (3) Varsle Svar

To feel anything
deranges you. To be seen
feeling anything strips you
naked. In the grip of it
pleasure or pain doesn't
matter. You think what
will they do what new
power will they acquire if
they see me naked like
this.
If they see you
feeling. You have no idea
what. It's not about them.
To be seen is the penalty.

Godt sagt! (7) Varsle Svar

Sist sett

FindusGrete AastorpTore HalsaBeathe SolbergTherese HolmEgil StangelandMads Leonard HolvikG LEivind  VaksvikElinBeHegeWencheHanne Cathrine AasKirsten LundLilleviBritt ElinPiippokattaIngunn SFrank Rosendahl SlettebakkenTove Obrestad WøienAvaAkima MontgomeryJulie StensethMcHempettVariosaBjørg L.oforbordVibekeritaolineLene AndresenmarithcIdaIreneleserChristofferHeidiKaren PatriciaTine SundalJan-Olav SelforsVannflaskeAnne Berit Grønbech