Entries Tagged as 'Description'
That Old Saying – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 29th, 2012 · Comments Off on That Old Saying – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Love, Quotes, Writing
You nod and watch her. She is an exceptionally beautiful girl. You think of that old saying Show me a beautiful girl and I’ll show you someone who is tired of fucking her. You doubt you would have ever tired of her, though.
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Tags:description·relationships·writing
Falling In Love Over an Expression – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 29th, 2012 · Comments Off on Falling In Love Over an Expression – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Love, Writing
You were at the age where you could fall in love with a girl over an expression, over a gesture.
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Tags:description·relationships
Like Being Inside a Sock – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 28th, 2012 · Comments Off on Like Being Inside a Sock – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Reading Related, Writing
My room is hot and small, overrun by books. You never wanted to be in here (it’s like being inside a sock, you said) and anytime the boys were away we slept in the living room, out on the rug.
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Tags:description·reading
A Mouth LIke Unswept Glass – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 28th, 2012 · Comments Off on A Mouth LIke Unswept Glass – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Writing
The newest girl’s called Samantha and she’s a problem. She’s dark and heavy-browed and has a mouth like unswept glass—when you least expect it she cuts you.
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Tags:description·writing
Heart Plunging – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 27th, 2012 · Comments Off on Heart Plunging – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Love, Writing
Yes—it’s an opposites-attract sort of thing, it’s a great-sex sort of thing, it’s a no-thinking sort of thing. It’s wonderful! Wonderful! Until one June day Alma discovers that you are also fucking this beautiful freshman girl named Laxmi, discovers the fucking of Laxmi because she, Alma, the girlfriend, opens your journal and reads. (Oh, she […]
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Tags:description·relationships·writing
A Fourth Dimension Beyond Jeans – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 27th, 2012 · Comments Off on A Fourth Dimension Beyond Jeans – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Writing
YOU, YUNIOR, HAVE A GIRLFRIEND named Alma, who has a long tender horse neck and a big Dominican ass that seems to exist in a fourth dimension beyond jeans. An ass that could drag the moon out of orbit. An ass she never liked until she met you. Ain’t a day that passes that you […]
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Tags:description·writing
She’s Sensitive – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz
November 26th, 2012 · Comments Off on She’s Sensitive – “This Is How You Lose Her”, Junot Diaz · Description, Writing
She’s sensitive, too. Takes to hurt the way water takes to paper.
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Tags:description·Sensitivity·writing
Translations – “Leaving the Atocha Station”, Ben Lerner
November 11th, 2012 · Comments Off on Translations – “Leaving the Atocha Station”, Ben Lerner · Description, Dialogue, Prose, Writing
she might have described swimming in the lake as a child, or said that lakes reminded her of being a child, or asked me if I’d enjoyed swimming as a child, or said that what she’d said about the moon was childish.
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Tags:Language·poetry·Translation
She Was Always Wrapping or Unwrapping Her Hair or Body – “Leaving the Atocha Station”, Ben Lerner
November 7th, 2012 · Comments Off on She Was Always Wrapping or Unwrapping Her Hair or Body – “Leaving the Atocha Station”, Ben Lerner · Description, Writing
She was always wrapping or unwrapping her hair or body in some sort of cloth, winding or unwinding a shawl or scarf, and whenever I imagined her, I imagined her engaged in one of these activities; I couldn’t picture her standing still, fully dressed or undressed, but only in the process of gracefully entangling or […]
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Tags:description
“A Moveable Feast”, Ernest Hemingway
November 2nd, 2012 · Comments Off on “A Moveable Feast”, Ernest Hemingway · Description, Reading Related, Writing
We would be together and have our books and at night be warm in bed together with the windows open and the stars bright.
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Tags:happiness·reading