16 Quotes & Sayings By Kirsty Logan

Kirsty Logan was born in Scotland and raised in various Scottish islands, following her family's move from Glasgow to the Isle of Tiree. She holds a degree in psychology and has worked in various jobs including as a teacher, a chef and a waitress. Kirsty is the author of The Panic Room, The Last Caravan and The Murder Room, and is currently working on her third novel. She's married with two children and lives in Cumbria.

1
When people are cruel it's often said that they have no heart, only a cold space or lump of ice in their chest. This was never true of Avalon. She had no heart, everyone knew, but there was nothing cold about her. In her chest burned an enormous coal, white-hot, brighter than the North Star. North knew the truth about Avalon: she was made of fire, and she would burn them all. Kirsty Logan
2
It began with the Christmas tree lights. They were candy-bright, mouth-size. She wanted to feel the lightness of them on her tongue, the spark on her tastebuds. Without him life was so dark, and all the holiday debris only made it worse. She promised herself she wouldn't bite down. Kirsty Logan
3
The graces are restless today. They pweet and muss, shuddering their wings so that the feathers stick out at defensive angles. I feel that restlessness too. When the sea is fractious like this — when it chutters and schwaks against the moorings, when it won't talk but only mumbles — it's difficult to think. Kirsty Logan
4
Once upon a time there was an empress, trapped as a ghost in the ruins of a jewelled palace, cursed to find another soul to take her place. At least, that's what the empress heard. But, as it turned out, stories can have any ending you like. Kirsty Logan
5
The Cruellest things do not hide in the dark. Kirsty Logan
6
I've thought and thought, but there's no other way to give you the truth except to hide it in a story and let you find your own way inside. All stories contain a truth if you look hard enough - but it might not be a good truth. Kirsty Logan
7
I met Baba Yaga at the end of childhood — past pigtails and fairytales, but not quite ready to give up on make-believe. Kirsty Logan
8
Daniel first kisses his brother in a town where no-one knows them, a no-account place that's barely even a town, just some buildings clustered around the highway: a smoky bar, an empty motel, a convenience store that only sells candy and condoms and beer. The nearest gas station is twenty miles away. The nearest bus station is fifty. Kirsty Logan
9
She used to be all right, Una, when we were kids. I liked that she wasn't fussed about her antlers. Kirsty Logan
10
Walking out of the office, her nervous fingers made an ear out of the tissue in her pocket — luckily the thin sheets wouldn't hold the shape, and unfurled as she threw it on the pavement. On the journey home, her bus ticket became a tongue. Kirsty Logan
11
That August, Elodie Selkirk became the latest lady in Paris to order a coin-operated boy. Kirsty Logan
12
Momma was with the pony last night. Lily and me have him in the mornings, and we give him a wash with the shammy cloths and a soapy bucket so he's ready for Jade to look after him the next night. I think Momma must ride him too rough because he's always sweating and white-eyed when we get him, pulling tight at his rope and spreading his wide beige lips. He won't settle forever and ever, he just turns circles around the stake. Me and Lily get nervy watching him paw scoops out of the backyard soil. Kirsty Logan
13
It’s a grace feather. See how its colors shift from green to blue, like the sea? It means remembrance. It shows that no distance, no amount of water between two people, will make them forget. Someone gave it to say that they remembered you. Kirsty Logan
14
But life is not a fairy tale. It's brighter and darker, longer and briefer, duller and more magical. It's full of contradictions, but one thing it's not is neat. Kirsty Logan
15
We grab handfuls of bottles and climb up onto the roof of the house. She stumbles and her foot slips into the gutter sopped with dead leaves. I grab her wrists and pull her clear — sure, she's not the person I'd choose to do this with, but she's my only option so I might as well be nice. Plus I don't want her to drop the vodka. Kirsty Logan