Black God's Kiss (1934)
Context: All about her, as suddenly as the awakening from a dream, the nothingness had opened out into undreamed-of distances. She stood high on a hilltop under a sky spangled with strange stars. Below she caught glimpses of misty plains and valleys with mountain peaks rising far away. And at her feet a ravening circle of small, slavering, blind things leaped with clashing teeth.
C. L. Moore: Herring
C. L. Moore was American author. Explore interesting quotes on herring.“She was unbinding her turban…”
"Shambleau" (1933); later published in Shambleau, and Others (1953)
Context: She was unbinding her turban...
He watched, not breathing, a presentiment of something horrible stirring in his brain, inexplicably... The red folds loosened and — he knew then that he had not dreamed — again a scarlet lock swung down against her cheek... a hair, was it? A lock of hair?... thick as a thick worm it fell, plumply, against that smooth cheek... more scarlet than blood and thick as a crawling worm... and like a worm it crawled.
Black God's Kiss (1934)
Context: Now she took the sword back into her hand and knelt on the rim of the invisible blackness below. She had gone this path once before and once only, and never thought to find any necessity in life strong enough to drive her down again. The way was the strangest she had ever known. There was, she thought, no such passage in all the world save here. It had not been built for human feet to travel. It had not been built for feet at all. It was a narrow, polished shaft that corkscrewed round and round. A snake might have slipped in it and gone shooting down, round and round in dizzy circles — but no snake on earth was big enough to fill that shaft. No human travelers had worn the sides of the spiral so smooth, and she did not care to speculate on what creatures had polished it so, through what ages of passage.
Black God's Kiss (1934); p. 23
Short fiction, Jirel of Joiry (1969)
Black God's Kiss (1934); p. 16
Short fiction, Jirel of Joiry (1969)
Black God's Kiss (1934); p. 15
Short fiction, Jirel of Joiry (1969)
Black God's Kiss (1934); pp. 10-11
Short fiction, Jirel of Joiry (1969)
Black God's Kiss (1934); pp. 9-10
Short fiction, Jirel of Joiry (1969)