Frases de Karen Lord

Karen Lord es una escritora barbadense de ficción especulativa.



Su primera novela, Redemption in Indigo , reubica la historia "Ansige Karamba the Glutton" del folklore senegalés y su segunda novela, El mejor de los mundos posibles , es un ejemplo de ciencia ficción social. Lord también escribe sobre la sociología de la religión.[1]​ Wikipedia  

✵ 22. mayo 1968
Karen Lord: 12   frases 0   Me gusta

Karen Lord: Frases en inglés

“Ansige’s outer appearance could be deceptive, but, given enough time, he let everyone know who and what he was.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 1 “Ansige is Delayed on the Road to Makendha” (p. 10)

“That was the nature of chaos; its effects spanned time in ways that were not always immediately discernible, not even by beings outside of time.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 9 “A Stranger is Coming to Makendha” (p. 69)

“His mother had been the daughter of a minor chief, and she had carefully instilled in Ansige an understanding of the importance of importance.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 1 “Ansige is Delayed on the Road to Makendha” (p. 8)

“Women fell into that category of fantasies and dreams that worked well when unfulfilled but presented all kinds of problems when brought out into the real world of trial and failure.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 10 “Paama Among the Sisters, and Alton the Poet Finds His Muse” (p. 82)

“Paama sat up slowly, moving as cautiously as if facing a lion who had just declared his intention not to pounce, but to have a friendly chat instead.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 15 “A Lesson on Chances and Choices” (p. 114)

““Never?” he said, dismayed.
“Never,” she reiterated firmly.
He nodded, pretending to be resigned, but secretly he thought that there were always ways to get around “never.””

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 17 “The Sisters in Charge, and the Trickster in Trouble” (p. 134)

“Ansige unreeled the tale of his tribulations, thoroughly ransacking the truth and then dipping into the bag of embellishment and sprinkling with a free hand.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 2 “Ansige Eats Lamb and Murders a Peacock” (p. 17)

“Besides, for poets it wasn’t lying, it was art.”

Fuente: Redemption in Indigo (2010), Chapter 9 “A Stranger is Coming to Makendha” (p. 72)