[personal profile] fiefoe
Donna Tartt at least afforded me the pleasure of not finishing a book. Where should I start with my complaints? The prolixity that doesn't serve any purpose? The ersatz Dickensonian charm? The tedium of reading about Theo getting high/out of his mind again and again? And to think back on the overstuffed first chapters, when things held so much promise!
  • a dark edge to the clangor, an inwrought fairy-tale sense of doom.
  • in miniature: whitewash and Protestant probity, co-mingled with deep-dyed luxury brought in merchant ships from the East.
  • when I lost her I lost sight of any landmark that might have led me someplace happier, to some more populated or congenial life.
  • “They really knew how to work this edge, the Dutch painters—ripeness sliding into rot.
  • “Well, the Dutch invented the microscope,”
  • It was a direct and matter-of-fact little creature, with nothing sentimental about it; and something about the neat, compact way it tucked down inside itself—its brightness, its alert watchful expression—made me think of pictures I’d seen of my mother when she was small.
  • “People die, sure,” my mother was saying. “But it’s so heartbreaking and unnecessary how we lose things.
  • Carefully, with his bony old flat-pad fingers, he brushed the hair from my eyes and plucked a thorn of glass from my eyebrow and then patted me on the head. “There, there.” His voice was very faint, very scratchy, very cordial, with a ghastly pulmonary whistle.
  • though she was not beautiful her calmness had the magnetic pull of beauty—a stillness so powerful that the molecules realigned themselves around her when she came into a room.
  • Every new event—everything I did for the rest of my life—would only separate us more and more: days she was no longer a part of, an ever-growing distance between us. Every single day for the rest of my life, she would only be further away.
  • Considerest thou alone the burial of the stars?
  • “Gettysburg? a soldier so mad with shock that he started burying birds and squirrels on the battlefield. You had a lot of little things killed too, in the crossfire, little animals. Many tiny graves.”
  • he’d had no weakness for children to start with.”
  • Just like acoustics, he said. The blast waves are like sound waves—they bounce and deflect.
  • a sense of crowds and static, lonely secretaries and fat guys with bags of carry-out, everywhere the ungainly sadness of creatures pushing and struggling to live.
  • Hobie of my first visit, with his bedraggled aspect of an elegant but mistreated polar bear.
  • “Sure,” said Andy, in his wan, irritating voice. “You remember names, do the eye-contact stuff, shake hands when you’re supposed to. At school they all tie themselves in knots for you.”
  • mahogany, dusty-smelling oak, black cherry with its characteristic tang and the flowery, amber-resin smell of rosewood.
  • They were a pair of white mice, I thought—only Kitsey was a spun-sugar, fairy-princess mouse whereas Andy was more the kind of luckless, anemic, pet-shop mouse you might feed to your boa constrictor.
  • A Lexus? Every day, I was struck by all sorts of matters large and small that I urgently needed to tell my mother.
  • the atmosphere it breathed was like the light-rinsed airiness of a wall opposite an open window.
  • he still had that crazed and slightly heroic look of schoolboy insolence, all the more stirring since it was drifting towards autumn, half-ruined and careless of itself.
  • the change that came over Boris when he was speaking another language—a sort of livening, or alertness, a sense of a different and more efficient person occupying his body.
  • When I looked at the painting I felt the same convergence on a single point: a sunstruck instant that existed now and forever... a freshness like the morning light in my old bedroom in New York which was serene yet exhilarating, a light that rendered everything sharp-edged and yet more tender and lovely than it actually was, and lovelier still because it was part of the past, and irretrievable
  • his happy absorption floated up from the workshop and diffused through the house with the warmth of a wood-burning stove in winter.
  • Somehow the present had shrunk into a smaller and much less interesting place.
  • my father. Chinatown made me think of him in its flash and seediness, its slippery unreadable moods
  • “Always remember, the person we’re really working for is the person who’s restoring the piece a hundred years from now. He’s the one we want to impress.”

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