"Jocelyne clicked her barbell on her teeth. I was watching her closely for signs of collapsing romance. Her tongue was pierced, (a process, she had elaborated, that had taken two weeks of painful healing) and it put me in mind of the tongue-piercing ceremony endured on October 28, 709 AD by the principal wife of Shield Jaguar, Blood Lord of Yaxchilan (Lintel 24); i.e. to my eye, pointless, but if it's good enough for the Mayans ..."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Novelists from EnglandUniversity of Cambridge alumniSocial criticsShort story writers from EnglandFellows of the Royal Society of Literature
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Tibor_Fischer
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Tibor Fischer
6 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Tibor Fischer →
Related Quotes
"Opening the fridge door, I found a rat eating the cheese. My dealings with rodents, particularly those tagged vermino…"
"Methods Used 1. Marxist: You decide you're the vanguard of the proletariat and then you can do whatever you want beca…"
"Best of things symbolised by Jocelyne's barbell: "It's a symbol of the need for symbols." "How life shrapnels us." "A…"
"You've got to try everything once, except those things you don't like, or that involve a lot of effort and getting up…"
"The impossible lives next door to the possible; people ring its door bell by accident all the time."
"The more I thought about it, the more obsessed I became with the idea of a swimming journey. I started to dream ever …"
"From water level, I observed the mating joined in flight like refuelling aircraft, and the random progress of the clo…"
"It is through trees that we see and hear the wind: woodland people can tell the species of a tree from the sound it m…"
"Waterlog (1999), Roger's now-classic account of swimming through Britain, published twenty years ago this year, opens…"
"In 1973, Roger Deakin, a British writer and environmental activist, acquired a tumbledown sixteenth-century farmhouse…"