Breath

by

Tim Winton

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Eva is Sando’s wife and, eventually, Bruce’s lover. Like Sando, she is a former extreme-sports celebrity (freestyle ski-jumping, in her case), but her career ended abruptly and painfully in a knee injury. She is much younger than Sando (25 to his 36) and, accordingly, she is much more embittered by missing out on skiing at all, let alone professional athletic competition. This bitterness comes through in a consistent unfriendliness to Bruce and Loonie (also partly attributable to her regiment of painkillers) and in her frequent spats with Sando, which betray jealousy of his continued sporting lifestyle. Yet her dissatisfaction is understandable: like Sando and like the boys, she had become addicted to the adrenaline surge in the mortal fear that extreme sports provide, and since her injury, nothing has lived up to that sensation. She tells Bruce plainly, “I miss being afraid.” Meanwhile, Sando—who once coached her into professional shape but now happily surfs and lives off her family trust fund while she can no longer ski—regularly leaves for extended surf trips around the globe without warning. Eva tries to recreate the fear and rush of extreme skiing through autoerotic asphyxiation (being choked during sex to produce an adrenaline rush) and she takes revenge on Sando’s absence and assuages her loneliness by seducing the teenage Bruce. She combines these two pursuits, pressuring Bruce into dangerous sexual experiments far beyond his experience. This affair forces Bruce to mature rapidly—too rapidly, perhaps, and not totally successfully, as he is left with both emotional scars and abnormal sexual leanings throughout his life. As a grown man, Bruce reflects that he resented Eva for a long time over what she put him through, but he ultimately came to appreciate that she was more misguided than malicious, and just as hurt and helpless as anyone else.

Eva Quotes in Breath

The Breath quotes below are all either spoken by Eva or refer to Eva. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Ordinary vs. Extraordinary Theme Icon
).
Pages 37-78 Quotes

More than once since then I’ve wondered whether the life-threatening high jinks that Loonie and I and Sando and Eva got up to in the years of my adolescence were anything more than a rebellion against the monotony of drawing breath.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Loonie , Sando, Eva
Related Symbols: Breath
Page Number: 43
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 78-118 Quotes

I have no doubt that in a later era he’d have been seen as reckless and foolhardy, yet when you consider the period and the sorts of activities that schools and governments sanctioned, Sando’s excursions seem like small beer. We could have been staying back at school as army cadets, learning to fire mortars and machine-guns, to lay booby traps and to kill strangers in hand-to-hand combat like other boys we knew, in preparation for a manhood that could barely credit the end of the war in Vietnam. Sando appealed to one set of boyish fantasies and the state exploited others. Eva was right – we were Sando’s wide-eyed disciples – but in the sixties and seventies when we were kids there were plenty of other cults to join, cults abounding.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Loonie , Sando, Eva
Page Number: 88
Explanation and Analysis:

I am chicken, I said.

Oh, fuck, said Sando. Everyone’s a chicken. That’s why we do this silly shit.

You reckon?

Yeah, to face it down, mate. To feel it, eat it. And shit it out with a big hallelujah.

He laughed. And I laughed because he did, to hide my fear.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Sando (speaker), Loonie , Eva
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 118-161 Quotes

I had the sudden and perilous urge to touch her. I wanted to feel her ruined knee and I didn’t know why. I reached out.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva, Margaret Myers
Page Number: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

And he’s takin you to Java, I said

Who told you that?

Eva, I said with a hot flash of satisfaction.

He grunted and rolled himself a fag and I realized we were no longer friends. At the intersection, where the pub loomed over the servo across the road, we each veered in our own direction without even saying goodbye. Neither of us could have known that we’d never meet again.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Loonie (speaker), Sando, Eva
Page Number: 159
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 161-202 Quotes

When I looked at girls now I compared them to Eva – the shape of their legs, the skinniness of their arms, the way they sheltered their breasts with their shoulders. Their perfumes smelt sugary as cordial. I hated all their rattly plastic bangles, and the way they plastered their zits with prosthetic-pink goo and chewed their lips when they thought no one was looking. Unless every single one of them was lying, they were all going out with older blokes, guys with cars and jobs, men who liked their peroxided fringes and bought them stuff. They suddenly looked so … ordinary.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:

No, Eva was not ordinary. And neither was the form of consolation she preferred. Given my time over I would not do it all again. People talk such a storm of crap about the things they’ve done, had done to them. The deluded bullshit I’ve endured in circled chairs on lino floors. She had no business doing what she did, but I’m through hating and blaming. People are fools, not monsters.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva
Page Number: 172-173
Explanation and Analysis:

I understand you, Pikelet. And I understand Sando. But he’s never had anything precious taken away.

Eva —

But you, she said taking my hand. You’re different. I can see it in your face. You’ve got this look. Like you’re expecting to lose something – everything – every moment.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva (speaker)
Page Number: 189
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 203-218 Quotes

I started, despite myself, to fool with electricity. A couple of times I came to on the tile floor at work, down beneath the sinks and benches where the odours of agar and disinfectant and formaldehyde brewed like some obscene secret, and the return of consciousness brought with it a sad blankness like the lingering melancholy after sex.

I didn’t understand this behaviour. I had no special interest in electricity. Granted, it’s a potent, tangible presence in a world that’s cast off presences. It was just a moment of righteous sensation, like a blow to the head. It knocked me down. It hurt like hell. But it was something I could feel.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva
Page Number: 207
Explanation and Analysis:
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Eva Quotes in Breath

The Breath quotes below are all either spoken by Eva or refer to Eva. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Ordinary vs. Extraordinary Theme Icon
).
Pages 37-78 Quotes

More than once since then I’ve wondered whether the life-threatening high jinks that Loonie and I and Sando and Eva got up to in the years of my adolescence were anything more than a rebellion against the monotony of drawing breath.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Loonie , Sando, Eva
Related Symbols: Breath
Page Number: 43
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 78-118 Quotes

I have no doubt that in a later era he’d have been seen as reckless and foolhardy, yet when you consider the period and the sorts of activities that schools and governments sanctioned, Sando’s excursions seem like small beer. We could have been staying back at school as army cadets, learning to fire mortars and machine-guns, to lay booby traps and to kill strangers in hand-to-hand combat like other boys we knew, in preparation for a manhood that could barely credit the end of the war in Vietnam. Sando appealed to one set of boyish fantasies and the state exploited others. Eva was right – we were Sando’s wide-eyed disciples – but in the sixties and seventies when we were kids there were plenty of other cults to join, cults abounding.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Loonie , Sando, Eva
Page Number: 88
Explanation and Analysis:

I am chicken, I said.

Oh, fuck, said Sando. Everyone’s a chicken. That’s why we do this silly shit.

You reckon?

Yeah, to face it down, mate. To feel it, eat it. And shit it out with a big hallelujah.

He laughed. And I laughed because he did, to hide my fear.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Sando (speaker), Loonie , Eva
Page Number: 90
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 118-161 Quotes

I had the sudden and perilous urge to touch her. I wanted to feel her ruined knee and I didn’t know why. I reached out.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva, Margaret Myers
Page Number: 139
Explanation and Analysis:

And he’s takin you to Java, I said

Who told you that?

Eva, I said with a hot flash of satisfaction.

He grunted and rolled himself a fag and I realized we were no longer friends. At the intersection, where the pub loomed over the servo across the road, we each veered in our own direction without even saying goodbye. Neither of us could have known that we’d never meet again.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Loonie (speaker), Sando, Eva
Page Number: 159
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 161-202 Quotes

When I looked at girls now I compared them to Eva – the shape of their legs, the skinniness of their arms, the way they sheltered their breasts with their shoulders. Their perfumes smelt sugary as cordial. I hated all their rattly plastic bangles, and the way they plastered their zits with prosthetic-pink goo and chewed their lips when they thought no one was looking. Unless every single one of them was lying, they were all going out with older blokes, guys with cars and jobs, men who liked their peroxided fringes and bought them stuff. They suddenly looked so … ordinary.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva
Page Number: 167
Explanation and Analysis:

No, Eva was not ordinary. And neither was the form of consolation she preferred. Given my time over I would not do it all again. People talk such a storm of crap about the things they’ve done, had done to them. The deluded bullshit I’ve endured in circled chairs on lino floors. She had no business doing what she did, but I’m through hating and blaming. People are fools, not monsters.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva
Page Number: 172-173
Explanation and Analysis:

I understand you, Pikelet. And I understand Sando. But he’s never had anything precious taken away.

Eva —

But you, she said taking my hand. You’re different. I can see it in your face. You’ve got this look. Like you’re expecting to lose something – everything – every moment.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva (speaker)
Page Number: 189
Explanation and Analysis:
Pages 203-218 Quotes

I started, despite myself, to fool with electricity. A couple of times I came to on the tile floor at work, down beneath the sinks and benches where the odours of agar and disinfectant and formaldehyde brewed like some obscene secret, and the return of consciousness brought with it a sad blankness like the lingering melancholy after sex.

I didn’t understand this behaviour. I had no special interest in electricity. Granted, it’s a potent, tangible presence in a world that’s cast off presences. It was just a moment of righteous sensation, like a blow to the head. It knocked me down. It hurt like hell. But it was something I could feel.

Related Characters: Bruce (speaker), Eva
Page Number: 207
Explanation and Analysis: