Quotes From "Shark Dialogues" By Kiana Davenport

1
God not da faddah, he just the spoiled moody child, but you got to go t'rough him to get to da real power, his mama, Mot'er God. She da real Almighty! She run da heavens alone. Original single parent. When somethin' bad happen, usually mean she let God try his hand, and he screw up plenny. You need something important, you go directly Mot'er God. Jesus, Mary, Joseph? Dey just small potatoes, part of the chorus, neh? . Kiana Davenport
2
Does childhood really happen? Do we imagine it? Everyone remembers something else.... Kiana Davenport
3
She was kahuna, creating more life around her than was actually there, heightening the momentousness of each living thing by simply gazing upon it. Kiana Davenport
4
The diaries also revealed a deeply sensitive, intelligent woman, one who had hoped to start a college for Hawaiian women, affording them the 'same education as men.' She had planned to open a bank for women, enabling them to handle their own financial affairs. She recognized the need for more female lawyers and physicians, the need for women's rights over their bodies, and their destinies. And lastly, though she had a fondness for men, she felt women 'basically didn't need them. Kiana Davenport
5
They would no longer be time-bound, that they were free to live in the future, the past, in fantasy. She had been a woman preparing to live, not living. Kiana Davenport
6
You think knowing things will solve your private little griefs? Kiana Davenport
7
Time, the thing we can't beat back... Yet, time is also what it takes to heal, what it takes for certain memory cells to die. Maybe time doesn't heal. Maybe it doesn't even pass. We pass through time, and come out stunned, so rage, and memory, are blurred. Kiana Davenport
8
Everything breaks down but desire. And because we are old, doctors try to shame that out of us. Young punks! Lose one's youth, and doctors take it as axiomatic that you've lost your mind, your balls. Kiana Davenport
9
We love that which we corrupt. Kiana Davenport
10
When you hate something for twenty years, you get to know it well. Kiana Davenport
11
Inside the terminal at Keahole, they sat waiting to board, watching husky Hawaiians load luggage onto baggage ramps. Arriving tourists smiled at their dark, muscled bodies, handsome full-featured faces, the ease with which they lifted things of bulk and weight. Departing tourists took snapshots of them. 'That's how they see us', Pono whispered. 'Porters, servants. Hula Dancers, clowns. They never see us as we are, complex, ambiguous, inspired humans.' 'Not all haole see us that way..' Jess argued. Vanya stared at her. 'Yes, all Haole and every foreigner who comes here puts us in one of two categories: The malignant stereotype of vicious, drunken, do-nothing kanaka and their loose-hipped, whoring wahine. Or, the benign stereotype of the childlike, tourist-loving, bare-foot, aloha-spirit natives. . Kiana Davenport
12
Got something to do with guilt, ' Toro said. 'Her mother, neh?' 'Guilt. Longing. Got something to do with all of us. Kiana Davenport
14
So much easier to give. I detest asking. Kiana Davenport
15
Common sense. Mothers are the last riddle, the worst horror, the only consolation. Kiana Davenport