58 Quotes & Sayings By Helen Oyeyemi

Helen Oyeyemi is a writer of fiction, essays and poetry. She was born in Toronto to Nigerian parents. Her work has been shortlisted for the PEN International Prize, the Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize, and the Man Booker International Prize. The Nightingale: A Memoir of War and Memory was her first novel Read more

She is also the author of Boy, Snow, Bird and Black Swan Green.

He honestly expected her to believe that she could make...
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He honestly expected her to believe that she could make a bad offering and her ancestors wouldn't mind. Helen Oyeyemi
Other things my best friend said to me: That two...
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Other things my best friend said to me: That two years was but a short span. Helen Oyeyemi
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Lucy happily settled down to work. First she sent for papyrus and handmade a book leaf by leaf, binding the leaves together between board covers. Then she filled each page from memory, drew English roses budding and Chinese roses in full bloom, peppercorn-pink Bourbon roses climbing walls and silvery musk roses drowsing in flowerbeds. She took every rose she'd ever seen, made them as lifelike as she could (where she shaded each petal the rough paper turned silken), and in these lasting forms she offered them to Safiye. . Helen Oyeyemi
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I’m never sad when a friend goes far away, because whichever city or country that friend goes to, they turn the place friendly. They turn a suspicious-looking name on the map into a place where a welcome can be found. Maybe the friend will talk about you sometimes, to other friends that live around him, and then that’s almost as good as being there yourself. You’re in several places at once! In fact, my daughter, I would even go so far as to say that the further away your friends, and the more spread out they are the better your chances of going safely through the world…. Helen Oyeyemi
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I think it's swell that there are people you don't have to worry about when you don't see them for a long time, you don't have to wonder what they do, how they're getting along with themselves. You just know that they're all right, and probably doing something they like. Helen Oyeyemi
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She found Safiye leaning against an oil lantern out in the garden and saw for herself that she wasn't the only foolish woman in the world, or even at that party, for Safiye had Lucy's highly polished bangle in her hand and was turning it this way and that in order to catch fireflies in the billowing, transparent left sleeve of her gown. Helen Oyeyemi
With boys there was a fundamental assumption that they had...
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With boys there was a fundamental assumption that they had a right to be there – not always, but more often than not. With girls, 'Why her?' came up so quickly. Helen Oyeyemi
She had to quickly pop back to the fifteenth century...
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She had to quickly pop back to the fifteenth century to find a word for how beautiful he was. The boy was makeless. Helen Oyeyemi
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She retained the opinions of trees: one of them being that it was best not to have anything to do with human folk. "Firstly, they cut us down, " Rowan said. "Secondly they're all insane, though I suppose they can't help that, being rooted in water instead of earth. Helen Oyeyemi
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Young men ... learn practical skills that set is in good stead for lives as the husbands of wealthy and educated women: Strong Handshakes, Silence, Rudimentary Car Mechanics, How to Mow the Lawn, Explosive Displays of Authority, Sport and Nutrition Against Impotance. Helen Oyeyemi
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It was the usual struggle between one who loves by accepting burdens and one who loves by refusing to be one. Helen Oyeyemi
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I remember Mum repeatedly telling us we had good hearts and good brains. When she said that we'd say 'thanks' and it might have sounded as if we were thanking her for seeing us that way but actually we were thanking her for giving us whatever goodness was in us. Helen Oyeyemi
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All through dinner Arturo and I held hands under the table like a couple of kids, and that made the dinner quite wonderful, even though Mrs. Fletcher kept staring at Olivia as though committing her to memory. It got so bad that Olivia turned to her husband and said: "Has it happened at last, Gerald? Have I become a curiosity? Helen Oyeyemi
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So she quit working to make sense of things– we don’t realise it, but it’s hard work we do almost every waking moment, building out thoughts and memories and actions around time, things that happened yesterday, and things that are happening right now, and what’s coming tomorrow, layering all of that simultaneously and holding it in balance. Helen Oyeyemi
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With boys there was a fundamental assumption that they had a right to be there–not always, but more often than not. With girls, Why her? came up so quickly. Helen Oyeyemi
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[i]We were fighting so very hard and achieving so very little aside from staying alive. BUT THAT’S EVERYTHING, my father wrote to me, when I told him that in a letter.[/i] Helen Oyeyemi
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The cards spoke to a suspicion that many whose work is play can never be free of: that you can only flaunt your triviality for so long before punishment is due. Helen Oyeyemi
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Why do people go to these places, these places that are not for them? It must be that they believe in their night vision. They believe themselves able to draw images up out of the dark. But black wells only yield black water. Helen Oyeyemi
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Jess couldn't stop spitting out words, because they were words like blades to hurt, and if she swallowed them, she'd be scraped hollow. Helen Oyeyemi
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The wooden devil got a good laugh out of the ones who passed by, though. They were so funny she couldn't even feel sorry for them. They tried so hard to keep track of time. Whenever they were together they couldn't let sixty of their minutes pass without asking each other what time it was; as if time was a volatile currency that they either possessed or did not possess, when in fact time was more of a fog that rose inexorably over all their words and deeds so that they were either forgotten or misremembered. . Helen Oyeyemi
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Mostly, when Jess didn't want to talk about her ideas in class, Colleen thought that Jess was showing off, making sure that she would be coaxed and pleaded with, but how could Jess have explained in a coherent way that she was scared? Once you let people know anything about what you think, that's it, you're dead. Then they'll be jumping about in your mind, taking things out, holding them up to the light and killing them, yes, killing them, because thoughts are supposed to stay and grow in quiet, dark places, like butterflies in cocoons. Helen Oyeyemi
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But also .. . I have plenty of people around me to talk to, and no one to be honest with. Helen Oyeyemi
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This girl had been looking on with her hair hanging over her face, only partly hiding a cruel-looking scar; her eyes shone with hatred. Not necessarily hatred of your father or of puppets or the other children, but a hatred of make-believe, which did not heal, but was only useful to the people who didn't need it. Helen Oyeyemi
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What do you want, Mary Foxe? My husband?" “I believe in him, " she said slowly. I wondered if she’d ever told him that, and if so, what he had to say about it. Someone you made up turns around and tells you they believe in you– what response could you possibly make? The scenario is just plain weird. And really kind of impertinent on her part, too. If it happened to me I think I’d be speechless for the rest of my life. Helen Oyeyemi
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This was a little house, with a ceiling that kept getting higher and higher, a hot place with no windows. This was anger. Helen Oyeyemi
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She looked at the last thing she had written and she felt calm. Then she crossed the words out vehemently, scribbling until even the shape of the sentence was destroyed. Helen Oyeyemi
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Because he says he can't stand you and you act like you can't stand him, and whenever a man and a woman behave like that toward each other, it usually means something's going on. Helen Oyeyemi
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Life has changed a lot, you know. You didn't used to get all this food inside food inside food when I was a girl. The other day I was eating a mushroom and found it had been stuffed with prawns. I've got so many misgivings over this crazy, Boy. It's flying in the face of nature. A mushroom is a woodland fungus and a prawn comes from the sea. People have got no business stuffing one inside the other. . Helen Oyeyemi
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No, this is pretty much the same version I read, " I said, because it felt too damn late to back down. I imagine that from time to time some similar situation has led governments to declare war." pg.57 Helen Oyeyemi
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She encouraged herself to see her very small presence in the world as a good thing, a power, something that a hero might possess. Helen Oyeyemi
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I've come to think that there's an age beyond which it is impossible to lift a child from the pervading marinade of an original country, pat them down with a paper napkin and then deep-fry them in another country, another language like hot oil scalding the first language away. Helen Oyeyemi
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Whenever they were together they couldn't let sixty of their minutes pass without asking each other what time it was; as if time was a volatile currency that they either possessed or did not possess, when in fact time was more of a fog that rose inexorably over all their words and deeds so that their were either forgotten or misremembered. Helen Oyeyemi
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With growing disbelief, Jess yet again felt herself slipping into the gap - that gap of perception between what is really happening to a person and what others think is happening. Helen Oyeyemi
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I collected pictures and I drew pictures and I looked at the pictures by myself. And because no one else ever saw them, the pictures were perfect and true. They were alive. Helen Oyeyemi
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I think her favorite thing about our . collaboration was her actor and musician friends rubbing shoulders with my academic colleagues, she liked the atmosphere of challenge, the way anything that came under discussion could be claimed or rejected by either side. Time and time again the power of an idea or a piece of art was assessed by either its beauty or its technique or its usefulness, and time and time again my wife was surprised by how rarely anything on earth satisfies all three camps. . Helen Oyeyemi
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School is one long illness with symptoms that switch every five minutes so you think it's getting better or worse. But really it's the same thing for years and years. Helen Oyeyemi
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First you try to find a reason, try to understand what you've done so wrong so you can be sure not to do it anymore. After that you look for signs of a Jekyll and Hyde situation, the good and the bad in a person sifted into separate compartments by some weird accident. Then, gradually, you realize that there isn't a reason, and it isn't two people you're dealing with, just one. The same one every time. . Helen Oyeyemi
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A library at night is full of sounds: the unread books can't stand it any longer and announce their contents, some boasting, some shy, some devious. Helen Oyeyemi
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I would like to have nothing to do with you for hours on end and then come back and find you, come back with things I’ve thought and found all on my own– on my own, not through you. Helen Oyeyemi
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Imagine having a mother who worries that you read too much. The question is, what is it that's supposed to happen to people who read too much? How can you tell when someone's crossed the line. Helen Oyeyemi
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I know of witches who whistle at different pitches, calling things that don't have names. Helen Oyeyemi
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In Narnia a girl might ring a bell in a deserted temple and feel the chime in her eyes, pure as the freeze that forces tears. Then when the sound dies out, the White Witch wakes. It was like, I want to touch you, and I can touch you, now what next, a dagger? Helen Oyeyemi
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Aside from infrequent comments ("Cheer up, love, " or "It's not Hallo'ween"), no one wondered why a teenager was dressed up as a chic governess. Sylvie approved of Miri, even at the same time as she was confused by her. "It's a style at least, " she said, and took off her rope of pearls and looped them around Miri's neck. Helen Oyeyemi
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In Egypt, like everywhere, the land is made to fit the sky; but here it is more so. Here it is possible to say, “This is land, " and point, and “This is sky, " and point, but the eyes can’t discover the dividing line. Helen Oyeyemi
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… there’s a difference between having no one because you’ve chosen it and having no one because everyone has been taken away. Helen Oyeyemi
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It was snowing when I got off the bus at Flax Hill. Not quite regular snowfall, not exactly a blizzard. This is how it was: The snow came down heavily, settled for about a minute, then the wind moved it - more rolled it, really - onto another target. One minute you were covered in snow, then it sped off sideways, as if a brisk, invisible giant had taken pity and brushed you down. Helen Oyeyemi
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I was born, and then I was quietly resentful of that fact for a few years...but then I went to a library and it was okay. Helen Oyeyemi
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And without further argument he unsheathed the sword and cleaved Miss Foxe's head from her neck. He knew what was supposed to happen. He knew that this awkward, whispering creature before him should now transform into a princess - dazzlingly beautiful, free, and made wise by her hardship. That is not what happened. Helen Oyeyemi
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And I think I decided not to love Charlie because I thought I had to be rescued. For practical reasons but also as a proof of love. It's better that Charlie and I didn't make an automatic transaction, love exchanged for rescue. All you can do after that is put the love and the rescue up on the shelf, moving them farther and farther back as you make room for all the other items you acquire over the years. This way a ragged stem still grows between us, almost pretty. Though really we should crush it now, before the buds bloom skeletal. Helen Oyeyemi
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Please tell a story about a girl who gets away.” I would, even if I had to adapt one, even if I had to make one up just for her. “Gets away from what, though?”“ From her fairy godmother. From the happy ending that isn’t really happy at all. Please have her get out and run off the page altogether, to somewhere secret where words like ‘happy’ and ‘good’ will never find her.”“ You don’t want her to be happy and good?”“ I’m not sure what’s really meant by happy and good. I would like her to be free. Now. Please begin. . Helen Oyeyemi
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I drew a chair up beside her and sang. All I do is dream of you the whole night through .. . It was a horrible rendition, and I quite enjoyed attempting it, setting the notes free from the song as each one went farther and farther astray. Helen Oyeyemi
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It was one of those ones they call screwball comedies, where people mislead and ill-treat each other in the most shocking and baffling way possible, then forgive and forget about it because they happen to like the look of each other. Only they call it falling in love. Helen Oyeyemi
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But then, maybe “I don’t believe in you” is the cruelest way to kill a monster. Helen Oyeyemi
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I tend to prioritize emotional realism above the known laws of time and space, and when you do that, it's inevitable that strange things happen. Which can be quite enjoyable, I think. Helen Oyeyemi
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Dickinson is my hero because she was a joker, because she would never explain, because as a poet she confronted pain, dread and death, and because she was capable of speaking of those matters with both levity and seriousness. She's my hero because she was a metaphysical adventurer. Helen Oyeyemi
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The way that people feel changes everything. Feelings are forces. They cause us to time travel. And to leave ourselves, to leave our bodies. I would be that kind of psychologist who says, 'You're absolutely right - there are monsters under the bed.' Helen Oyeyemi
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I remember that I used to get lots of books from the library, and 'Little Women' was one of them. And I used to just cross out the parts of it that really upset me because it's such a sad book in so many ways. I'd cross out the parts that upset me, and I would rewrite new endings. Helen Oyeyemi