Date: 2015
"The memory branded itself on his brain: the gales of laughter, everyone offering him their cookies, the slave woman with her eyes on the floor."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"She knew Lee well, and by heading southeast, she had hidden in the folds of his own cerebral cortex."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"The mind of a child! Children have no hearts (cf. Peter Pan, another story Meg could reproduce fairly accurately), and their minds are rickety towers of surreal detritus."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"His thoughts on his back porch surrounded him like a carpet of mice, immobilizing him via his unwillingness to cause them pain. The mice of introspection were as effective as any buffalo herd."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"She regarded the token male Lee as a dull-witted, penile one-trick pony (to her, consistency was evidence of a mind standing erect), while women were polymath geniuses until proven otherwise."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"'Sorry to disappoint you, but me,' Byrdie said, raising his hand. 'I think I have whiplash of the brain.'"
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)
Date: 2015
"'Yes, our brains are like Swiss cheese,' he added, sort of undermining his compliment after the fact."
preview | full record— Zink, Nell (b. 1964)