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[personal profile] venta
This lunchtime, I was amusing myself with the first-lines-from-books quiz that [livejournal.com profile] undyingking twittered about: http://blog.oxforddictionaries.com/2012/03/book-quiz-classic-first-lines/

I was doing rather poorly on it at first, partly because it featured first lines from books I hadn't read, but mostly because it was featuring first lines from books which don't appear in quizzes of first lines from books.

By the end, the quiz had caught up with my expectations and asked me about "Call me Ishmael" and It is a truth universally acknowledged....

Ordinarily I reckon there are actually very few books which turn up in such quizzes. Besides those mentioned above there are the usual suspects: 1984, A Tale of Two Cities, The Catcher in the Rye, Little Women, The Da Vinci Code. A frequent guest in the identity parade is “To be born again,” sang Gibreel Farishta tumbling from the heavens, “first you have to die.”, which I have slowly learned is the opening of The Satanic Verses.

Oddly, you never seem to get the opening line from The Go-Between which, while it's not a hugely popular book, has probably been read (or, rather, finished :) by more people than Salman Rushdie's epic. It begins with the beautiful phrase The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.

Which is another problem I encountered with the quiz linked above: some of the opening lines it featured seemed... well, actually not very interesting. A good book can have a not-especially-blinding first line. Authors of a certain era didn't seem to have grasped the idea of grabbing attention in the opening paragraph. The first line a reader sees doesn't have to be snappy (see A Tale of Two Cities for a highly-memorable, attention-grabbing opener which rambles on for about three pages) but many books from a century ago just seem to drift in, trudging interminably through clauses to make no very great point at all.

There are, of course, also books which appear to have been written expressly in the hopes they will wind up in such quizzes. Oy, The Crow Road, I'm looking at you. It was the day my grandmother exploded., indeed.

Some opening lines tell you enough about the story that you can guess. Do you know the openinling to The Wizard of Oz? No?
Dorothy lived in the midst of the great Kansas prairies, with Uncle Henry, who was a farmer, and Aunt Em, who was the farmer's wife.
You'd have worked it out, right?

My personal favourite opening line is, I think, one which features occasionally in quizzes: William Gibson's Neuromancer. The sky above the port was the colour of a television tuned to a dead channel; a metaphor that has now been comprehensively stuffed by the likes of Sky and their lurid-blue "no signal" pages.

Do you have a favourite memorable opening line? For which books that don't usually feature in quizzes can you instantly recall the beginning? (Feel free to post without attribution for the rest of us to guess, if you wish.)

Date: 2012-03-13 02:13 pm (UTC)
lnr: Halloween 2023 (Default)
From: [personal profile] lnr
As soon as I read your paragraph about good-books-with-boring-first-lines my mind had immediately skipped ahead to The Crow Road. Which admittedly I do also like as a book.

I can't think of any more really obviously first lines - but I'm sure there are others I would recognise if I saw them. I do rather like that Neuromancer one.

(On that quiz I got a rather miraculous 8/10 - I'd say 3 or 4 were ones I recognised, 2 or 3 educated guesses, and 2 complete guesses)
Edited Date: 2012-03-13 02:17 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-03-13 02:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
I do also like The Crow Road. I only read it quite recently, and found it really funny - which horrified a friend of mine who said wait, what? That book's about death and trauma and turmoil and is really dark, what do you mean you found it funny? Different approaches to life, I guess :)

I got 6/10, which I thought was a bit rubbish - so presumably I had at least 4 uneducated guesses.
Edited Date: 2012-03-13 02:20 pm (UTC)

Date: 2012-03-13 02:51 pm (UTC)
lnr: Halloween 2023 (Default)
From: [personal profile] lnr
I'm with you on this one: It's *full* of humour, and I loved it. Though I will admit to it being a *little* dark. The TV adaptation was pretty good too, in its own way.

Date: 2012-03-15 08:58 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hjalfi.livejournal.com
Have either of you read The Wasp Factory? It's awesome. It turns the dark up past 11 until it becomes funny, and then turns the funny up past 11 until it becomes dark...

Date: 2012-03-15 11:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
I have read it, and I really didn't like or enjoy it. It didn't strike me as dark so much, more someone setting out to be deliberately shocking to see if it had any effect. Also it ended as if he got bored and couldn't be arsed. Maybe this was just me missing the humour, but it just seemed really juvenile (and not in a good way ;)

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