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Showing posts with label Age of Innocence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Age of Innocence. Show all posts

Wednesday

Great writers, great books: 2. Great descriptions of place

Tree
Tree (Photo credit: Adnan Yahya)

Those of you who read my post last week will be – hopefully – on the edge of their seats for this post about great writers and great books.  Well, at least looking forward to it a little bit!

This time I am sharing wonderful descriptions of place, I make no apologies for including five examples of an Irish playwright, novelist and poet previously totally unknown to me – Sebastian Dunne – the book these are taken from has been described as a truly moving eloquent read –  judge for yourselves in the following extracts:


Sebastian Barry: Annie Dunne
My crab-apple tree seems to watch over their coming, like a poor man forever waiting for alms with cap in hand.  There is soughing in the beech trees and the ash, and the small music of hens. 

The room is bleak, the room is bare.  A tiny hill of brown turf with seams of garnet fire steams in the grate.  The window is as small as an owl and frames the lower clutter of the ash tree outside. 

I can hear over my head in the wooden loft the tiny dance steps of the real mice as they cross and re-cross in a strange regularity, always going to the limits of the loft and heading back across the boards intently, as if drawing a great star in the dusty boards. 

Such water you could not drink.  But to plunge in my two hands and lift it, and bang it against my cheeks – my under-skin sparkles, it feels like. I see things for an instant – things of summer, rooks racketing out of the trees, heavy heated leaves flashing.  Then the room again, the simple wooden room. 

I pass from the wild glass of the sunlight into the familiar blindness of the kitchen. 

Edith Wharton: The Age of Innocence
The day was delectable.  The bare vaulting of trees along the Mall was ceiled with lapis lazuli and arched above snow that shone like splintered crystals 

At the end of the lane was the blue glimmer of the river; to the left, standing in front of a clump of oaks and maples, he saw a long tumble down house with white paint peeling from its clapboards 

Rajarshi Mukhopadhyay: How can I talk if my lips don’t move?
The riches of summer, the cargo of greens and bejewelled lights, hang in the hedges, casual, at ease.  The heat drives everything.  

I believe that if you cared enough to listen, you could hear the sky and earth speaking to each other in the language of blue and brown. 

M C Beaton: The Skeleton in the Close
A newspaper performed an erratic ballet down the street outside and then, after a final entrechat, sailed up over the roofs and disappeared.

O Henry:Telemachus, Friend
The moon was attending to business in the section of sky where it belonged, and the trees was making shadows on the ground according to science and nature, and there was a kind of conspicuous hullabaloo going on in the bushes between the bullbats and the orioles and the jack-rabbits and other feathered insects of the forest.

Lovely pieces of writing aren’t they?  If you enjoyed these you might enjoy the previous post about characters  In my next post I will complete this little series of words I have loved with one single evocative poem that will make you feel as if summer is here – whether or not the sunshine is with us.

In the meantime can you share any little gems with me?


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Great writers, great books 1. Great characters



As a copywriter it’s perhaps not surprising that I love love love reading.  And having a Kindle has opened up a world of great writers and great books to me.  

I had previously read almost none of the following writers but I adore, admire (and envy) their ability to conjure up descriptions of people so well that you can actually see them leap off the page.



Fortunately the “My Clippings” function on the Kindle has allowed me to keep the words that most resonated with me so I can revisit them.  I do hope you’ll enjoy visiting them too…

Edith Wharton: The Age of Innocence
But none of these young men had much hope of really advancing in his profession, or any earnest desire to do so; and over many of them the green mould of the perfunctory was already perceptibly spreading.  

G K Chesterton: Father Brown Mystery Stories
Then came the Great Scandal, by which her friends and enemies were horrified beyond their wildest hopes.

He had perhaps come to specialise too much in the spirit of indignation.

No man knew better than Professor Openshaw the marks of the letter of the crank; the crowded details, the spidery handwriting, the unnecessary length and repetition. 

Along a seaside parade on a sunny afternoon, a person with the depressing name of Muggleton was moving with suitable gloom.

Wilkie Collins: Poor Miss Finch
I made my best curtsey and found myself confronting a large, light haired, languid, lymphatic lady. 

Adam Hyland: Diamond Dove
He’d pulled out a pipe, a beautiful briar, many times repaired.  He fired it up, his cheeks full of wind and his eyes full of questions.

He had a receding hairline, a receding chin and by the look of the creases in his jeans, a receding personality.

 Adam Hyland: Gunshot Road
Albie was an anomaly from go to whoa!

The cadaverous fellow standing alongside him had the rarefied air of someone who’d consecrated his life to the absolute mastery of something very, very small.

M.C. Beaton: Agatha Raisin Omnibus
She often thought in capital letters.

Robert Goddard: Past Caring
He didn’t so much enter a room as invade it.  When it was his own, he didn’t inhabit it so much as infest it.

Her voice and her lecturing style were like a chilled aperitif: enticing you to the main course.

Charles Dickens: A Tale of two Cities
And throwing off sarcastic sparks from the whirling grindstone of his indignation, Mr Cruncher betook himself to his boot cleaning and his general preparation for business.  

O Henry: Heart of the West
A chin-whiskered man in Walla-Walla, carrying a line of hope as excess baggage. 

I‘ll give you a square deal. And that’s more than your parents did when they turned you loose on the world with the sociability of a rattle-snake and the bedside manner of a frozen turnip.

Fay Weldon: Kehua!
And blowsy middle-aged women whose heads leaned forward with the weight of their mascara.

Jerome K Jerome: Three men in a Boat
That’s Harris all over – so ready to take the burden of everything himself, and then put it on the backs of other people.

No man keeps his work in a better state of preservation than I do.

Oh dear, that last quote definitely applies to me today.  My work has been safely preserved whilst I indulged myself if re-visiting these fabulous wordsmiths.  I do hope you enjoyed reading this blog post as much as I enjoyed writing it!  If you did, follow my blog so you can catch my next post on author's wonderful descriptions of places.

And please, do share any similar quotes by commenting -  I would love to hear them

PS: This got such a good reaction that I went on to share great descriptions of people and a lovely quintessentially English poem


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