Author: Isak Dinesen
Cited by
- Jennifer Donnelly (2)
- IN: Sea Spell (2016) Fantasy, Young Adult Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The cure for anything is salt water: sweat, tears, or the sea.
FROM: The Deluge at Norderney, (1934), Short Story, Denmark
- Betsy Cornwell (1)
- IN: Tides (2013) Fiction, Young Adult Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The cure for everything is salt water: sweat, tears, or the sea.
FROM: The Deluge at Norderney, (1934), NULL, Denmark
- Nnedi Okorafor (1)
- IN: Lagoon (2014) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The cure for anything is salt water – sweat, tears, or the sea
FROM: The Reader's Digest, (1934), Article, Danish
- Alan Warner (1)
- IN: Morvern Cellar (1995) Fiction, British
EPIGRAPH: Mr Clay in the same hesitating manner told him that he had in mind books and accounts, not of deals and bargains, but of other things which people at times had put down, and which other people did at times read. The clerk reflected on this matter and repeated, no, he had never heard of such books.
FROM: The Immortal Story, (1958), Short story, Denmark
- Martha Southgate (1)
- IN: The Taste of Salt (2011) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The cure for anything is salt water -- sweat, tears, or the sea.
FROM: Reader's Digest (April 1964), (1964), Article, Denmark
- Julia Keller (1)
- IN: Sorrow Road (2016) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The thin grey line of a road, winding across the plain and up and down hills, was the fixed materialization of human longing, and of the human notion that it is better to be in one place than another.
FROM: Sorrow Acre, (1942), Short Story, Denmark
- Aimee Friedman (1)
- IN: Sea Change (2009) Fiction, American
EPIGRAPH: The cure for everything is salt water -- sweat, tears, or the sea.
FROM: The Deluge at Norderney, (1934), Short Story, Denmark