One knows, of course, that sequels never play like the original any more than backlash does, but the original Bad Girls of Literature post here last week seems to have had such a positive and widespread response here and elsewhere that I thought I'd post another ten.
Please note that these are in no way the B team. The original post was in response to a 'Ten Bad Boys' article and I was simply riffing off that, writing down names as I happened to think of them. Same with these. Like the first ten, they are names that came to mind readily without having to be thought about. I have, however, been offered a couple of inspired suggestions that chimed with my own taste (Carter, Clift, Wollstonecraft) and I've added them here AS YOU WILL SEE ...
Simone de Beauvoir
'The body is not a thing, it is a situation: it is our grasp on the world and our sketch of our project.'
Angela Carter
'Mother goddesses are just as silly a notion as father
gods. If a revival of the myths of these cults gives woman emotional
satisfaction, it does so at the price of obscuring the real conditions
of life. This is why they were invented in the first place.'
Charmian Clift
'At night, the water slides over your body warm
and silky, a mysterious element, unresistant, flowing, yet incredibly
buoyant. In the dark you slip through it, unquestionably accepting the
night's mood of grace and silence, a little drugged with wine, a little
spellbound with the night, your body mysterious and pale and silent in
the mysterious water, and at your slowly moving feet and hands streaming
trails of phosphorescence, like streaming trails of stars. Still
streaming stars you climb the dark ladder to the dark rock, shaking
showers of stars from your very fingertips, most marvellously and
mysteriously renewed and whole again.'
Sylvia Plath
'And by the way, everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise. The worst enemy to creativity is self-doubt.'
Dorothy Parker
'There must be courage; there must be no awe. There must be criticism,
for humor, to my mind, is encapsulated in criticism. There must be a
disciplined eye and a wild mind ... There must be a magnificent disregard
of your reader, for if he cannot follow you, there is nothing you can do
about it.'
Dorothy Porter
'Brooding from the reflective fastness of middle age, I wonder if
some of the most deeply passionate experiences of my life have
happened between the covers of a book.'
Jean Rhys
'....one of those long, romantic novels, six hundred and fifty pages of
small print, translated from French or German or Hungarian or something
-- because few of the English ones have the exact feeling I mean. And
you read one page of it or even one phrase of it, and then you gobble up
all the rest and go about in a dream for weeks afterwards, for months
afterwards -- perhaps all your life, who knows? -- surrounded by those
six hundred and fifty pages, the houses, the streets, the snow, the
river, the roses, the girls, the sun, the ladies' dresses and the
gentlemen's voices, the old, wicked, hard-hearted women and the old, sad
women, the waltz music -- everything. What is not there you put in
afterwards, for it is alive, this book, and it grows in your head. "The
house I was living in when I read that book," you think, or "This colour
reminds me of that book."'
Marguerite Duras
'Before they're plumbers or writers or taxi drivers or unemployed or journalists, before everything else, men are men. Whether heterosexual or homosexual. The only difference is that some of them remind you of it as soon as you meet them, and others wait for a little while.'
Anaïs Nin
'I, with a deeper instinct, choose a man who compels my strength, who makes enormous demands on me, who does not doubt my courage or my toughness, who does not believe me naïve or innocent, who has the courage to treat me like a woman.'
Mary Wollstonecraft
'Independence I have long considered as the grand blessing of life, the basis of every virtue; and independence I will ever secure by contracting my wants, though I were to live on a barren heath.'