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“This is a work of memory -- facts have been altered. Names have been changed.”
Lavinia Greenlaw“This is a work of memory -- facts have been altered. Names have been changed.”
Lavinia Greenlaw, The Importance of Music to Girls“Without war there are no heroes.""What harm would that be?""Oh, Lavinia, what a woman's question that is.”
Ursula K. Le Guin, Lavinia“I caught him by the collar and dumped him into the nearest bin."That's where people like YOU belong!" I spat at him as his legs wiggled in the air. "In the garbage!" - Chapter 2: Miserable Torture”
Aishabella Sheikh, Lavinia“Keith traced my face, traced my hands and traced my body as the crickets chirped a love song and I lost myself in his eyes that stroked my soul and punctured my heart, like a poison arrow in a shooting star”
Aishabella Sheikh, Lavinia“Lavinia has seen this happen, seen how, one day, a girl will raise her head to listen, as if for the first time, to the crying of a child, to the sound of an oar being hauled in, to a man's voice, to the screech of a saw pulling through wood, to some comment one of the women might make. Within a week, the girl will be able to tell at any minute of the day or night, precisely where every soul in the place is. Then - or so Lavinia imagines, for it has never happened to her - one morning before light, before the girl has awakened, a map, new and totally different, will be imprinted behind her closed eyelids.”
Bernice Morgan, Random Passage“This world today makes one by the day a recluse”
Siân Lavinia Anaïs Valeriana, Lavinia - Volume One“Love is indeed its own hallucinogenic affecting the mind, heart and mood”
Siân Lavinia Anaïs Valeriana, Lavinia - Volume One“I have a hundred reasons to dislike this gentleman,” Erica reminded herself aloud. “And a thousand reasons more not to go courting with any man.”Lavinia laughed at that. “Whenever has a woman’s heart listened to her head?”
Davis Bunn, The Solitary Envoy“Aunt Lavinia always had a near-religious belief that it was wicked to inflict one's personal despair on others. Any display of self-pity or self-dissatisfaction she saw as a social cruelty that was very nearly criminal.”
Caroline Blackwood, Great Granny Webster