ellenkushner: (book swords music)
[personal profile] ellenkushner
from [livejournal.com profile] eegatland who got it from [livejournal.com profile] sovay

Grab the book nearest you. Right now. Turn to page 56. Find the fifth sentence. Post that sentence along with these instructions in your LiveJournal. Don't dig for your favorite book, the coolest, the most intellectual. Use the CLOSEST.

"Poor things, I thought, sweltering in their robes and veils!"
-- Mary Doria Russell, Dreamers of the Day

It's too bad I'm so scrupulously honest, as both the 4th & 6th sentences on p. 56 are much more interesting.

Actually, the whole reason this book was sitting on my desk so long after I finished it was that I was planning to type out a couple of passages for you here. Clearly, it is meant to be This passage is set in 1921; the narrator, Agnes Shanklin, a schoolteacher from Cleveland (whose sister, a missionary, was a friend of "Lawrence of Arabia"), observes some chitchat amongst British players in the Cairo Peace Conference:

"Arnold," Miss Bell was telling Colonel Wilson, "when we have made Mesopotamia a model state, there won't be an Arab in Syria or Palestine who won't want to be part of it, but they will never accept direct rule...."
"Gertrude," he countered, "You cannot simply draw a line around Mosul, Baghdad, and Basra and declare everything inside it a nation! It won't matter whom you use as the figurehead."

"Well, of course," Miss Bell said airily, "we'll have to take Kurdish sentiments into account." . . . .

"It will cost more in the long run," Colonel Wilson insisted. "What do you propose to do about the Shi'a in Karbala and Najaf? The level of religious bigotry in those regions is staggering! ...."

Miss Bell's first line comes directly from Gertrude Bell's actual writings - and I bet a lot else here does, too!

I also loved Mary's narrator ruminating on p. 137:
"Why do we travel, really? If we are of a thoughtful nature, we may wish to improve our minds, to examine the manners and customs of others . . . But is it really an education that we yearn to acquire when we travel? Or - be honest, now - do we more sincerely desire souvenirs? What tourist returns with lighter bags than those he packed at home?"

Ouch. She's got me there, dead to rights.

Well, now I can put the book away.

meme

Date: 2009-01-17 02:51 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Okay, I had to immediately grab the book closest to me and find out what the 5th sentence on page 56 would be. Alas, page 56 is a picture. So on to page 57, where the 5th sentence is:

"At some stage in our occupation, someone - probably Maynard - had the extravagant idea of buying a barrel of oysters."

- Quentin Bell and Virgina Nicholson,
Charleston: A Bloomsbury House and Garden

Any line with oysters and Maynard Keynes in it is fine by me.

Re: meme

Date: 2009-01-17 04:18 pm (UTC)

Date: 2009-01-17 02:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] t-windling.livejournal.com
The above note is from me. Didn't realize I wasn't logged in. Doh.

Date: 2009-01-17 04:18 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ellen-kushner.livejournal.com
And yet, somehow, I might have guessed....!

Date: 2009-01-18 03:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] handworn.livejournal.com
I did not cheat. I did not grab the most intellectual or most interesting or most appropriate book. Just the one literally right in front of me.

"Smiling sympathetically at her, Diane said, "I wonder if we could get them to cooperate on 'Our City of Light'?"

Hi there!

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