en

Elisa Shua Dusapin

  • dianahas quotedlast year
    Pages of azure ink. And the man on the waves, feeling his way through the winter, slipping passively beneath the waves, an afterimage in his wake, a woman’s shoulder, belly, breast, the small of her back, the lines tapering to become a mere stroke of the pen, a thread of ink on the thigh, and on the thigh a long, fine
    scar
    carved with a brush
    on the scales of a fish.
  • dianahas quotedlast year
    It had nothing to do with love, or desire. He was a Frenchman, a foreigner. It was out of the question. But the way he looked at me had changed at some point. When he first arrived, he didn’t see me at all. He sensed my presence, like a snake that coils its way into a dream and lies there in wait. But then I’d felt his hard, physical gaze cut into me, showing me my unfamiliar self, that other part of me, over there, on the other side of the world. I wanted more of it. I wanted to live through his ink, to bathe in it. I wanted to be the only one he saw.
  • dianahas quotedlast year
    I didn’t want to be his eyes on my world. I wanted to be seen. I wanted him to see me with his own eyes. I wanted him to draw me.
  • Рустем Алтынбекhas quoted2 years ago
    People always think they have time.
  • Aida Rodriguezhas quoted2 months ago
    He sounded different, further away, a distant echo from a body left on the other side of the world.
  • Valhas quoted3 months ago
    Why was I bothering to drive him to the border? I was giving up my time for him. I wasn’t sure he deserved it.
  • Valhas quoted3 months ago
    Why was I bothering to drive him to the border? I was giving up my time for him. I wasn’t sure he deserved it.
  • Valhas quoted2 months ago
    told me he missed me but didn’t ask how I was.
  • Valhas quoted2 months ago
    ‘I like it this way, unadorned.’
  • Valhas quoted2 months ago
    That was Sokcho, always waiting, for tourists, boats, men, spring.
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