Novel openings with weather
Jochen Stremmel
jstremmel at gmail.com
Tue Mar 28 23:58:28 CDT 2017
If you wanna be the heart of midnight
You've gotta be either cynical or dead
All those you hold in estimation
You can no longer count among your friends
Your friends look to surprise you
As friends they always will
So hold on to the extraordinary - hold on to the skill
And start the easy listening, we're coming home again
Stab the back of hell and heroes until we meet again
Listen for the slamming doors
Listen on the ship to shore
Listen hard
Everytime the dogs bark
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yc9Us6qX-Ic
2017-03-29 6:00 GMT+02:00 Laura Kelber <laurakelber at gmail.com>:
> It has no meaning ... unless the person hearing it is David Berkowitz.
>
> On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 11:40 PM, Becky Lindroos <bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net>
> wrote:
>
>> LOL! - the “barking dog(s)” is an old trope without meaning - (the
>> meaninglessness is the meaning).
>> http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/culturebox/2010/06/somewh
>> ere_a_dog_barked.html
>> (many examples and very funny)
>>
>> Becky
>>
>>
>> > On Mar 28, 2017, at 8:05 PM, John Bailey <sundayjb at gmail.com> wrote:
>> >
>> > I was on a panel for a local book prize last year and the winner of the
>> fiction section was a novel that abused the weather rule so much I was
>> flabbergasted. The weather was literally a reflection of how any character
>> was feeling at the time, and not ironically or knowingly so. At one point
>> someone has a dramatic realisation and the incessant rain suddenly stops
>> outside as they ponder its ramifications. Then someone says something dark
>> and it starts pissing down again.
>> > Also I think five of the seven category winners included a variation of
>> "somewhere in the distance, a dog barked."
>> >
>> > On Wed, Mar 29, 2017 at 1:53 PM, Becky Lindroos <
>> bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>> > No one has mentioned:
>> > “It was a dark and stormy night …”
>> > From Edward Bulwer-Lytton’s Paul Clifford - (1830)
>> >
>> >
>> > "There was no possibility of taking a walk that day. We had been
>> > wandering, indeed, in the leafless shrubbery an hour in the morning;
>> > but since dinner (Mrs. Reed, when there was no company, dined early)
>> > the cold winter wind had brought with it clouds so sombre, and a
>> > rain so penetrating, that further out-door exercise was now out of
>> > the question.”
>> > Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte (1847)
>> >
>> > I believe Ruskin called it the “pathetic fallacy” or something - not
>> because it was pathetic as we understand the term, but because the
>> weather use used to set an emotional tone - empathetic/sympathetic/patheti
>> c.
>> >
>> > Becky
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > > On Mar 28, 2017, at 1:18 PM, Mark Kohut <mark.kohut at gmail.com> wrote:
>> > >
>> > > Perhaps only a few geniuses, one of them Pynchon, could open a story,
>> Entropy, with an epigraph about weather---
>> > > Miller from Tropic of Cancer--check it out--- and end the story with
>> weather (or the lack of it, so to speak).
>> > >
>> > > On Tue, Mar 28, 2017 at 8:46 AM, Jochen Stremmel <jstremmel at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>> > > "The madness of an autumn prairie cold front coming through. You
>> could feel it: something terrible was going to happen. The sun low in the
>> sky, a minor light, a cooling star. Gust after gust of disorder. Trees
>> restless, temperatures falling, the whole northern religion of things
>> coming to an end."
>> > >
>> > > Jonathan Franzen: The Corrections.
>> > >
>> > > That's more like it. Thrown snowballs that carry hats into the wind
>> and star sides of cousins – I wouldn't call that opening with weather.
>> > >
>> > > 2017-03-28 8:24 GMT+02:00 Kai Frederik Lorentzen <
>> lorentzen at hotmail.de>:
>> > >
>> > > "Snow-Balls have flown their Arcs, starr'd the Sides of the
>> > > Outbuildings, as of Cousins, carried Hats away into the brisk Wind off
>> > > Delaware, --- (...)."
>> > >
>> > > Thomas Pynchon: Mason & Dixon
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > > ... Elmore Leonard, who was a very successful novelist, had said,
>> > > "Never open a book with weather." This is also advice found in a lot
>> of
>> > > writing guides ... <
>> > >
>> > > -
>> > > Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>> > >
>> > >
>> >
>> > "One ought not to allow oneself the luxury of losing one’s head."
>> > —Vita Sackville-West
>> >
>> > -
>> > Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>> >
>>
>> "One ought not to allow oneself the luxury of losing one’s head."
>> —Vita Sackville-West
>>
>> -
>> Pynchon-l / http://www.waste.org/mail/?listpynchon-l
>>
>
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://waste.org/pipermail/pynchon-l/attachments/20170329/cd0f20ec/attachment.html>
More information about the Pynchon-l
mailing list