Abha Dawesar
Born
in India
January 01, 1974
![]() |
Babyji
24 editions
—
published
2005
—
|
|
![]() |
That Summer in Paris: A Novel
14 editions
—
published
2006
—
|
|
![]() |
Madison Square Park
5 editions
—
published
2016
—
|
|
![]() |
L'Inde en héritage
by
2 editions
—
published
2009
—
|
|
![]() |
Miniplanner: A Novel
by
3 editions
—
published
2000
—
|
|
![]() |
Family Values
2 editions
—
published
2009
—
|
|
![]() |
Sensorium
|
|
![]() |
L'agenda des plaisirs
2 editions
—
published
2013
—
|
|
![]() |
Anglais 1e toutes séries
|
|
![]() |
ABC du bac, anglais niveau terminales toutes séries
|
|
“I spread my arms to encircle her till my elbows were firmly against the back of her rib cage. I wanted to fuse myself with her. I wanted to bite into her like an apple and then eat her, digest her, absorb her into my bloodstream, my hemoglobin, my ESR. “What are you thinking?” she asked. “I don’t know what to do. It’s a problem. I can’t have you.” “But I am yours,” she said simply. “I know, I know, but, I mean, I want to possess you like an apple,” I said. “An apple?” she burst out laughing. I didn’t know how to explain what I meant. I didn’t appreciate that someone who belonged to me could just laugh at what I had said. It was not permissible. It was against the rules. I rolled over forcefully so that she was on her back and I was on top. Then I bit her cheek as if I were biting an apple. It held none of the satisfaction I had imagined. I needed to bite her and swallow. I bit her round shoulders as if they were apples, then her stomach and her knees, her toes and her back, the round lobes of her bottom. I bit them harder than everything else because they were the roundest and most applelike. But she squealed, so I stopped. I noticed that my biting had caused her to start breathing heavily, so I replaced my teeth with my lips. I gathered different parts of her flesh between my lips and kissed her all over, in the opposite order in which I had bitten. In her breathless moans and her cries of pleasure I owned her more than I owned myself and was immersed in her more than I had ever been immersed in my own self. Me, I had not yet discovered. I was an unknown quantity, a constantly unraveling mystery. But India was absolutely and completely known both carnally and otherwise. I rolled off of her with the sweet exhaustion of a man who has just hunted his dinner animal.”
― Babyji: Stonewall Book Award Winner
― Babyji: Stonewall Book Award Winner
“I thought about dying. It seemed like the rational thing to kill myself. I thought of my parents. I knew I couldn't do it as long as they were alive. I thought of Rani needing me. I couldn't do it if someone needed me or loved me. Love was the only thing in my life. Everything else had already proven itself hollow and meaningless.”
― Babyji
― Babyji
Topics Mentioning This Author
topics | posts | views | last activity | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aussie Readers: What's happening - New Aussie book releases - Latest Publishing News - Awards | 194 | 280 | Feb 07, 2012 02:49AM | |
Reading with Style:
![]() |
1067 | 199 | Dec 02, 2012 10:09AM | |
The Seasonal Read...:
![]() |
2291 | 756 | Dec 28, 2012 03:29PM | |
Indian Readers: Mini-Readathon Challenge-2020 | 141 | 141 | Nov 23, 2020 08:46PM | |
Libri dal mondo: India: autori | 1 | 9 | Jul 03, 2024 12:50PM | |
Around the World ...: India | 77 | 1723 | Jun 16, 2025 10:08PM |
Is this you? Let us know. If not, help out and invite Abha to Goodreads.