Olivia Sudjic

Asylum Road

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  • b9373520097has quoted3 years ago
    It made my skin prick – something about the inevitability of the tracks, taking me as far as they could before land fell into sea
  • b9373520097has quoted3 years ago
    could have switched – there were empty forward-facing seats – but I hated doing this. I couldn’t stand the tension when the train arrived at each station and new passengers got on, their eyes boring into me as they moved along the aisle. And I couldn’t bear the shame of being told to move if I’d taken a place that did not belong to me
  • b9373520097has quoted3 years ago
    sky turned a pink
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    I found myself wishing to be like her. Bedford. Hedonistic. Denying my own hunger for security
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    Every place, person and meal she described sounded like a secret language of sophistication. I
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    From survivable it became tolerable. And from tolerable, gradually, something else
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    He would greet me with a bemused expression, to remind me I did not own him.
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    I told myself this was not a sign of anything. I was reading into things again. This was simply absence. Absence with an absence of meaning
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    My eyes rested on a title about survival. I drew it out. On closer inspection, a survival A–Z. The novelty kind with illustrations. I’d owned something like it as a child, or perhaps even the same one. Dangers were illustrated in a way that felt calming, like the sedate line drawings of airline safety manuals. I’d remembered one instruction, in particular, that if you fell down a waterfall you were supposed to close your legs to prevent internal rupturing
  • Laura Sánchezhas quoted3 years ago
    Our arguments were mostly silent, or silent on his side. Often in the dark, lying in bed so neither face could see the other. Not an argument then, but a pressure. A malignant quiet that sank into the mattress until I couldn’t bear to lie there. I would get up in a dramatic fashion, go down to the sofa, then crawl back in a few hours later when he was sound asleep
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