DocCarms,
@DocCarms@mstdn.social avatar

There was a poll that stated—Rowling’s opening line in the HP series is one of best in the world. Someone posted about how there are a bunch of other opening statements that are better.

Here’s one of my personal favorites, from Gabriel Garcia Marquez (English translated):
“It is inevitable. The scent of bitter almonds always reminded him of the fate of unrequited love.”

What are some of your favorite opening lines in literature? 😊
@bookstodon

paulcowdell,
@paulcowdell@hcommons.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

Even in her own genre the claim seemed ... implausible. And outside of it, well.

Julian Barnes's Metroland:

There is no rule against carrying binoculars in the National Gallery.

codeyarns,
@codeyarns@mastodon.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon “Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendia was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.” — One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. 👌

mabbymabmab,
@mabbymabmab@mastodon.social avatar

@codeyarns @DocCarms @bookstodon Such an amazing first line.

Greenseer,
@Greenseer@toot.wales avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon The Island of the Day Before - Umberto Eco

'I take pride withal in my humiliation, and as I am to this privilege condemned, almost I find joy in an abhorrent salvation; I am, I believe, alone of all our race, the only man in human memory to have been shipwrecked and cast up upon a deserted ship'

Long time since I first read this book, but it sits there on the shelf, remembered for this opening line that grabbed me and compelled me to dive in 😊

SteveClough,
@SteveClough@metalhead.club avatar

@Greenseer @DocCarms @bookstodon A good book - very deep and esoteric book that makes you think.

I do love Eco. His writing is so - grown up.

Greenseer,
@Greenseer@toot.wales avatar

@SteveClough @DocCarms @bookstodon Yes, but like the brilliant writer he was, captivating stories that can be enjoyed more casually too

SteveClough,
@SteveClough@metalhead.club avatar

@Greenseer @DocCarms @bookstodon I have read some of his academic material as well, and it really helps to see his entire world view.

JMaverickJacks1,
@JMaverickJacks1@mastodon.world avatar

@Greenseer @DocCarms @bookstodon That passage from Umberto Eco sounds like a parody of St. Paul from the Bible: Paul was shipwrecked three times (2 Corinthians 11:25), and amid other calamities, he said, “I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. … [W]hen I am weak, then am I strong.” 2 Corinthians 12:9-10.
I enjoyed Eco’s “In the Name of the Rose,” and one passage in my latest novel is a bit of an homage to a scene in that.

Greenseer,
@Greenseer@toot.wales avatar

@JMaverickJacks1 @DocCarms @bookstodon I'm very impressed that you knew that and thank you for sharing. I know there must be countless references and layers in Eco that pass me by, yet still I am able to appreciate his books at the level I'm at. It's great to learn more, tho' 🙏🏼

JMaverickJacks1,
@JMaverickJacks1@mastodon.world avatar

@Greenseer @DocCarms @bookstodon Thank you. And, yes, Eco was deep. My own novel is an apocalyptic thriller involving secret societies and the hidden, intertwined meanings of (1) ancient prophecies, (2) 1980s rock music and (3) current political propaganda. Please enjoy! Best wishes!❤️😃https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08MWV3TQL

riggbeck,
@riggbeck@mastodon.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

When the bank blew up, I had just got to the part in "Old Macdonald Had a Farm" where it was Oink Oink here and an Oink Oink there (it's easier to grunt on a mouth-harp than do most anything else, so I was stretching it out a little to make up for spoiling it later on when the Gobble Gobbles commenced), and at first I thought I'd busted my eardrums from blowing too hard.
-Tracker, by David Wagoner

The most perfect opening line and run-on sentence in the world.

elsdraeger,

@DocCarms @bookstodon I’ve always loved the first line from Rebecca “Last night I dreamed I went to Manderley again”

epicdemiologist,
@epicdemiologist@wandering.shop avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon "Where's Papa going with that ax?" (Charlotte's Web, E. B. White)

"I could have become a mass murderer after I hacked my governor module, but then I realized I could access the combined feed of entertainment channels carried on the company satellites." (All Systems Red, Book 1 of The Murderbot Diaries, Martha Wells)

dbsalk,
@dbsalk@mastodon.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon
"I’m pretty much fucked." - The Martian by Andy Weir

Not exactly poetic, but it grabs your attention. 😉

"The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed." - The Gunslinger by Stephen King

King had a few great ones, but I love The Dark Tower series, so thought that one was as good as any to include in this discussion. 😎

courtcan,
@courtcan@mastodon.social avatar

@dbsalk @DocCarms @bookstodon I was gonna post the Gunslinger line as soon as I finished reading this thread. 😊🖖

dbsalk,
@dbsalk@mastodon.social avatar

@courtcan @DocCarms @bookstodon Clearly we share superior taste in literature. 👍😎

courtcan,
@courtcan@mastodon.social avatar

@dbsalk @DocCarms @bookstodon AFFIRMATIVE. 😁

charles222a249,
@charles222a249@beige.party avatar

@dbsalk @DocCarms @bookstodon Also the opening to Gunslinger just keeps going, its greatness isn't just that first line.

dbsalk,
@dbsalk@mastodon.social avatar

@charles222a249 @DocCarms @bookstodon Agreed! There are plenty of reasons Sai King is one of my favorite authors. The Dark Tower series is one of them.

astrosaur,
@astrosaur@zirk.us avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon i don't remember many, but "it was a bright cold day in april, and all the clocks were striking thirteen." the impact!

stina_marie,
@stina_marie@horrorhub.club avatar

@astrosaur @DocCarms @bookstodon "No live organism can continue for long to exist under conditions of absolute reality; even larks and katydids are supposed, by some, to dream." - The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson

theotherotherone,
@theotherotherone@mastodon.world avatar

@astrosaur @DocCarms @bookstodon This is one of the first I thought of. I love how it tells you 1) it's a world like ours with April and clocks 2) there is such a thing as the thirteenth hour.

Katma,
@Katma@mstdn.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon
Not a novel, but one of my favorite lines in literature:

“I grew up kissing books and bread.” Salman Rushdie from Is Nothing Sacred

Ralph,
@Ralph@hear-me.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

“The great fish moved silently through the night water, propelled by short sweeps of its crescent tail.” -- Jaws (I love the flow)

Also the first paragraph of "A Christmas Carol", by Charles Dickens, is all about the door nails of death.

ningkee,
@ningkee@mstdn.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

"‘To be born again,’ sang Gibreel Farishta tumbling from the heavens, ‘first you have to die. Ho ji! Ho ji! To land upon the bosomy earth, first one needs to fly. Tat-taa! Taka-thun! How to ever smile again, if first you won’t cry? How to win the darling’s love, mister, without a sigh?"

faticake,
@faticake@plasmatrap.com avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon “Ten days after the war ended, my sister Laura drove a car off a bridge.” From The Blind Assassin by Margaret Atwood

rakyat,
@rakyat@hachyderm.io avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon Not a religious person but I like “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.”.

“The empire, long divided, must unite; long united, must divide.” - romance of the three kingdoms

“Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.”

thomasjorgensen,
@thomasjorgensen@eupolicy.social avatar

@rakyat @DocCarms @bookstodon "Jeg havde en farm i Afrika, ved foden af bjerget Ngong"

And of course "In a hole in the ground, there lived a Hobbit"

Daveosaurus,
@Daveosaurus@mastodon.nz avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon "I had this story from one who had no business to tell it to me, or to any other." - Burroughs, being quite direct for the late Edwardian / early Georgian era.

mrgrimm,
@mrgrimm@mamot.fr avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

"A screaming comes across the sky."

Seth,
@Seth@writing.exchange avatar

@DocCarms @mrgrimm @bookstodon
Pynchon! Gravity’s Rainbow!

Burnt_Veggies,
@Burnt_Veggies@mstdn.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

ALL I REALLY NEED TO KNOW about how to live and what to do and how to be I learned in kindergarten. Wisdom was not at the top of the graduate-school mountain, but there in the sandpile at Sunday School. These are the things I learned:

Share everything.

Play fair.

Don’t hit people.

Put things back where you found them.

Clean up your own mess.

Don’t take things that aren’t yours.

Say you’re sorry when you hurt somebody.

Wash your hands before you eat.

anne_twain,
@anne_twain@theblower.au avatar

@Burnt_Veggies @DocCarms @bookstodon "And when you go out into the world, hold hands and stay together".
From the book by Robert Fulghum

Burnt_Veggies,
@Burnt_Veggies@mstdn.social avatar

@anne_twain @DocCarms @bookstodon that's the one. 😊

abrokenjester,
@abrokenjester@mastodon.nz avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon lots of good ones already, but one of my all time faves is probably from Nescio (Dutch writer), which translated goes: "Boys, we were. But nice boys. If I say so myself. "

golgaloth,
@golgaloth@writing.exchange avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

There had been something loose about the station dock all morning, skulking in amongst the gantries and the lines and the canisters which were waiting to be moved, lurking wherever shadows fell among the rampway accesses of the many ships at dock at Meetpoint.
-CJ Cherryh, Pride of Chanur

DocCarms,
@DocCarms@mstdn.social avatar

@bookstodon So many great responses and amazing opening lines 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

Another favorite from CS Lewis:

“There was a boy called Eustace Clarence Scrubb, and he almost deserved it.”

diazona,
@diazona@techhub.social avatar
DocCarms,
@DocCarms@mstdn.social avatar

@bookstodon I should have also labelled this thread as:

“Words I wish I had written myself”

😂

DocCarms,
@DocCarms@mstdn.social avatar

@bookstodon I am going to write everything on this thread in my commonplace notebook 🥹

DocCarms,
@DocCarms@mstdn.social avatar

@bookstodon I’m enjoying the submission of amazing in literature.

Keep em coming! 😊

Seth,
@Seth@writing.exchange avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon
“Call me Ishmael.” - Herman Melville, Moby Dick

courtcan,
@courtcan@mastodon.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon I love the fact that there's someone out there besides me who not only knows what a commonplace book is but also keeps one. 😊🖖

negative12dollarbill,
@negative12dollarbill@techhub.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon
This article is great. It's neither a first line nor a novel, but it argues for one single comma being the author's "favorite comma in all of literature".

https://medium.com/@penguinrandomus/shirley-jacksons-sublime-first-paragraph-in-hill-house-annotated-14834632fc61

gwcoffey,
@gwcoffey@bookstodon.com avatar

@negative12dollarbill @DocCarms @bookstodon This is so great. Thanks for the link!

enno,
@enno@mastodon.gamedev.place avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon
"Wir starteten in La Guardia, New York, mit dreistündiger Verspätung infolge Schneestürmen. Unsere Maschine war, wie üblich auf dieser Strecke, eine Super-Constellation."

enno,
@enno@mastodon.gamedev.place avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon "It Was The Day My Grandmother Exploded" - The Crow Road, Ian Banks.

Montaagge,
@Montaagge@kolektiva.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon "We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold."

Montaagge,
@Montaagge@kolektiva.social avatar

@bookstodon He was a newspaper guy, he knew how to grab you on the first line. There are better first lines than anything he wrote but at the core it gets to the problem of HP fans which is that they only read one book. Twenty years ago I used to argue with people who said "Harry Potter is getting kids to read" with "Then why havent any of them read a real book yet?"

DarkMatterZine,
@DarkMatterZine@mastodon.social avatar

@Montaagge @bookstodon I have a couple of thoughts.
One of my fave opening lines is “The building was on fire but it wasn’t his fault”. Not the best literature but fun IMO. Also I don’t care what gets you reading, anything is a “real” book even comics, just read. And keep reading.
Also kids who grew up with HP are, according to research, more accepting. Definitely more accepting than the author. I guess they missed her promotion of bigotry in the books. #Ableism.

Montaagge,
@Montaagge@kolektiva.social avatar

@DarkMatterZine buddy, the Sorceror's Stone came out when I was in 7th grade and I read it because my beloved English Teacher gifted it to me but I never made it past Goblet because they were bad, boring books. I argued about them not being real literature while they were still coming out. Comics are cool, most comics are real literature. Harry Potter is not. Harry Potter was always a cynical, racist, bunch of trash from day one.

DarkMatterZine,
@DarkMatterZine@mastodon.social avatar

@Montaagge Goblet saw the end of Rowling being edited IMO. However, research shows the kids who love the books weren’t brainwashed by the author’s bad ideology. And I didn’t say “keep reading rowling”, I said “keep reading”.

Montaagge,
@Montaagge@kolektiva.social avatar

@DarkMatterZine @bookstodon but people didnt "keep reading." There is no world where David Foster Wallace, Amy Hempel and Lois Lowry are ignored in favor of the Hogwarts books where people read "other books"

I enjoyed the Hunger Games books, but no one, not even "YA fans" will talk to me about them. I hated Twiight but one of my exes got me to read those and I find each respective fandom less self important and full of shit than the HP fandom and the Twilight fandom produced EL James.

mojala,
@mojala@mastodon.online avatar

@Montaagge @bookstodon @DarkMatterZine One that i keep coming back to: ”It was the day my grandmother exploded.” Iain Banks, The Crow Road

DarkMatterZine,
@DarkMatterZine@mastodon.social avatar

@mojala @Montaagge @bookstodon I’ve read a few Iain Banks but pretty sure not that one. Now I need to.

mojala,
@mojala@mastodon.online avatar

@DarkMatterZine @Montaagge @bookstodon You are in for a treat!

DarkMatterZine,
@DarkMatterZine@mastodon.social avatar

@Montaagge @bookstodon Fifty shades of excrement, yeah I get it. I think you’re underestimating people though. Sure, some are too fixated to broaden their horizons but try going to a cosplay event eg supanova, see the HP cosplayers asking different authors to sign other books.

negative12dollarbill,
@negative12dollarbill@techhub.social avatar

@Montaagge @bookstodon
I read an article once which said research showed that Harry Potter books had kids reading LESS. They would read one, then wait a year for the next one.

Kay,
@Kay@mastodon.nz avatar

@negative12dollarbill @Montaagge @bookstodon Yes and No. We read book one in the Potter series to our kid. This was before JKR went evil. Subsequently our kid read the rest of the series in ten days. It was a thing.

These days the kid - now an adult - mainly reads online so not as many actual books.

Other kids moved on to other books and other series. Finding the next book is important.

negative12dollarbill,
@negative12dollarbill@techhub.social avatar

@Kay @Montaagge @bookstodon

Surely if they read all the books in a row then all the books had been published already?

Montaagge,
@Montaagge@kolektiva.social avatar

@Kay @negative12dollarbill @bookstodon will you please talk to me about the Hunger Games?

aintist,
@aintist@mstdn.social avatar

@Montaagge @Kay @negative12dollarbill @bookstodon

Hunger games final book was so disappointing- there were some amazing moments but so much illogical crap in between.

Having the trek though the capital basically be another hunger game style battle made no sense at all. The hunger games were meant to be won by one the the tributes, it makes no sense to set up the cities defenses the same way.

Also my kids read HP, hunger games, Percy Jackson and never stopped.

shaedrich,
@shaedrich@mastodon.online avatar

@negative12dollarbill @Montaagge @bookstodon That's how it works for other series of books just as well. Do you expect the next book in the series to spawn just on the predecessor's publication date? Consequentially, you'd have to say, kids shouldn't read book series that are not finished yet. Writing a book takes time. That's only natural.

negative12dollarbill,
@negative12dollarbill@techhub.social avatar

@shaedrich @Montaagge @bookstodon I think you're missing the point a little? If you want kids to eat fruit and they love only one type — they will only eat mangoes when they're in season — your kids eat less fruit overall.

shaedrich,
@shaedrich@mastodon.online avatar

@negative12dollarbill @Montaagge @bookstodon I'm not sure if I'm the one missing the point here. Your observation is right - and so is what I said about book series, however, as I said, this is about J. K. Rowling. And at least in that point, she's not that special and for once, it's not her fault but ist how things work

Montaagge,
@Montaagge@kolektiva.social avatar

@shaedrich @negative12dollarbill @bookstodon when I was little and even today if I'm reading a series and the next book isnt out yet I read other books in the meanwhile but thanks for explaining why people are so mad about Winds of Winter. I cant imagine getting so tunnel visioned that I had to wait for George to finish before I reax anything else but I guess some people do live that way.

seav,
@seav@en.osm.town avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon

Not the best, but epic for me:

"The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist. The wind was not the beginning. There are neither beginnings nor endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time. But it was a beginning."

phoenixashes76,
@phoenixashes76@nerdculture.de avatar

@seav @DocCarms @bookstodon Epic. I see what you did there lmao

diazona,
@diazona@techhub.social avatar

@seav @DocCarms @bookstodon That might be my favorite as well. Or at least I'd put it above the HP opening line, not so much because of how intrinsically good it is, but because of how it gets reused in every book (with the location swapped out). It really sets the right tone for epic fantasy.

#WheelOfTime

Katma,
@Katma@mstdn.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon
Mother died today. Or maybe yesterday. I don’t know - Camus

124 was spiteful. Full of a baby’s venom - Morrison, Beloved

I’m pretty much fucked. That’s my considered opinion - Weir, The Martian

I decided Orion Lake had to die the second time he saved my life - Novik, Deadly Education

If you are interested in stories with happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book - Lemony Snickett, Series of Unfortunate Events

(So many others)

monicarooney,
@monicarooney@mstdn.ca avatar

@Katma @DocCarms @bookstodon I loved that Scholomance trilogy by Novik

Katma,
@Katma@mstdn.social avatar

@bookstodon @monicarooney @DocCarms
Me too! It’s a great story, creative, and super well written

Did you also read Spinning Silver? Very different but I loved that too.

monicarooney,
@monicarooney@mstdn.ca avatar

@Katma @bookstodon @DocCarms I haven’t! I’ll put it on the list

Katma,
@Katma@mstdn.social avatar

@DocCarms @bookstodon @monicarooney
I’d love to hear what you thought of it, when you get to it

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