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“I’d been listening to men talk since I arrived in New York City. That’s what men like to do. Talk. Profess like experts. When one finally came along who didn’t say much, I listened.”
Rachel Kushner“Gloria was still talking, something about how shooting people was in a sense safer than making art, in terms of avoiding serious lapses in taste.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“A forced contemplation of the heavens, crisp and angelic blue, a classic prelude to death.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“What happens slowly carries in each part the possibility of returning to what came before. In an accident everything is simultaneous, sudden, irreversible. It means this: no going back.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“I thought of the girl in the photo in Ronnie's studio, the one on layaway. She was probably waiting for him this very moment, somewhere downtown. Checking the clock, applying lipstick, concentrating herself into an arrow pointed at Ronnie. Doing the various things women did when they had to wait for something they wanted.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“All you can do is involve yourself totally in your own life, your own moment, Lonzi said. And when we feel pessimism crouching on our shoulders like a stinking vulture, he said, we banish it, we smother it with optimism. We want, and our want kills doom.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“If your parents died suddenly, Sandro understood, your home was wherever you were, and now you were from nowhere. Your parents were your provenance. Dead, you had no provenance.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“A funny thing about women and machines: the combination made men curious. They seemed to think it had something to do with them.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“I was doing that thing the infatuated do, stitching destiny onto the person we want stitched to us.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers“Who knew why they waited, I thought, understanding that I, too, had it in me to wait. To expect change to come from outside, to concentrate on the task of meeting it, waiting to meet it, rather than going out and finding it.”
Rachel Kushner, The Flamethrowers