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Books/book club

Silly game- anyone up for it?

(238 Posts)
gracesmum Fri 27-Sept-13 09:57:06

OK it's not rocket science but hope this runs:
You post the opening line of a book, somebody guesses it and they then post another opening of another book, and so on. Yes?

Sir Walter Elliot of Kellynch Hall, in Somersetshire, was a man who for his own amusement, never took up any book but the Baronetage.

NanKate Mon 03-Mar-14 16:45:23

For anyone who is interested in exciting historical books for confident readers 9+ both boys and girls, I quoted 3 posts above from 'Young Samurai - the way of the warrior'. The series of 8 are set in Japan in the 17th century and are really cracking fast paced adventure stories. The author is Chris Bradford.

As an adult I loved them too !

rosesarered Mon 03-Mar-14 12:05:31

sorry, people, I was going to join in but find this whole thread too confusing! So many comments and quotes that don't relate to one another. hmm

Ariadne Sun 26-Jan-14 17:14:29

Gosh, didn't realise this had been resurrected! Good. (That is a straightforward comment, BTW!)

NanKate Sun 26-Jan-14 16:35:52

The boy snapped awake. He seized his sword. Tenno hardly dared to breathe.

This is a children's book.

lamb Tue 26-Nov-13 18:42:33

well done Zengran but you have stumped me now.

Ian42 Sun 24-Nov-13 17:45:53

The Bell Jar, by Sylvia Plath.

The summer day was drawing to a close and dusk had fallen on ...........

Zengran Sun 24-Nov-13 11:17:54

lamb A Room with a View

It was a queer, sultry summer, the summer they electrocuted the Rosenbergs, and I didn't know what I was doing in New York

lamb Sun 24-Nov-13 10:46:20

The Kite Runner?

lamb Sun 24-Nov-13 10:35:06

NanRuth is this Fay Maschler or Katherine White

horn?

lamb Sun 24-Nov-13 10:27:31

Alice in Wonderland
ANA
"The Signora had no business to do it" said Miss Bartlett "no business at all"

MiceElf Mon 18-Nov-13 15:18:01

Oh dear iPad finger.

Day and Part

MiceElf Mon 18-Nov-13 15:16:49

I suppose he is a little obscure but his books were hugely popular in their ay and well worth a read. For one
Droid of his life he lived in a house not far from me and there is a blue plaque on the wall to say so.

Now, I haven't googled but is

'I'm so busy' the woman who said life was too short to stuff a mushroom?

My other teaser should be easy, but if you google you'll get a very smart clothing company!

NanRuth Mon 18-Nov-13 14:37:01

"It is sweet on awaking in the early morn to listen to the small bird singing on the tree."

Field and hedgerow, the last essays of Richard Jefferies

In full and shameful confession, this avid reader and seasoned librarian not only had to Google the sentence, but still had I still no idea who Richard Jefferies is and had never heard of the book sad

Now I'm working on your next riddle...

NanRuth Mon 18-Nov-13 14:25:53

I was being cheeky I'm afraid, and delving into the non-literary shelves of my bookcase...

It is the first sentence of my favourite English cookbook.

MiceElf Sun 17-Nov-13 14:00:09

Oh, and I agree with Gracesmum. I have no idea. You'll have to reveal a bit more..

MiceElf Sun 17-Nov-13 13:58:57

Good points NanRuth especially about ways of researching.

No one's answered my last one yet so here's a clue, RJ.

Now, taking NR's prod is one from across the channel:

"There lived at Babylon, in the reign of King Moabdar, a young man named Zadig, of a good natural disposition, strengthened and improved by education."

gracesmum Sun 17-Nov-13 13:20:11

Well you have floored me nanruth - any chance of a few more words.....? Or a hint???

Deedaa Sun 17-Nov-13 13:08:06

You are right about us being parochial NanRuth I just had a look at my bookshelves and realised they are about 99.9% British. Most of the foreign books I have read have been pre 20th century too, Tolstoy, Chekov, Jules Verne and Zola and the like. The only modern foreign authors that have come my way have been Andrea Camilleri and Stieg Larssen.

Can't place your opening line at all, but I expect I shall kick myself when you tell us!

NanRuth Fri 15-Nov-13 01:41:08

I was really enjoying this thread (retrospectively - catching up on leisure browsing today) until:

1. I couldn't match answer to quote. For those of us who want to learn rather than show off, this is frustrating. Surely the questioner can take the trouble to put the quote in quotation marks and the answerer take the trouble to copy and paste the quote into their answering comment?

2. I realised how parochial this thread is. Only a few non-British books have appeared. I am an Australian librarian and my favourite writers come from all over the world (though there are many Australians who take the peculiar view that only Australian books are worth reading)

3. Some put-down posts started appearing. Such a shame to criticise ways of finding answers; research is such good fun and a wonderful intellectual exercise, whether it's Googling or hunting through our bookshelves (physical or digital of course). I don't think there are many of us who can recall more than one or two books' opening lines! I so agree with the post about a book's impact on us not being dependent upon us remembering its name, let alone whole sentences!

So can we keep this thread going?

And may I make a contribution from one of my favourite British writers?"

"I'm too busy..."

Maggiemaybe Sun 10-Nov-13 20:10:26

It's well worth a read, broomsticks. I always find Peter Ackroyd's books are great for just dipping in and out of.

broomsticks Sun 10-Nov-13 18:56:31

Yep, mine was Terry Pratchett - Maskerade actually.

Haven't read the river one yet.

Hannoona Sun 10-Nov-13 17:49:58

Gracesmum - I don't know.

Im convinced I saw the first line of Cider With Rosie quoted as a question and |I answered it.

Now I cant find the quote.

I must have been drinking :D

MiceElf Sun 10-Nov-13 17:48:00

Oh, I know that one. It's about Harold Fry. Loved it.

'It is sweet on awakening in the early morn to listen to the small bird singing on the tree",

Maggiemaybe Sun 10-Nov-13 17:45:12

No. Clue - it's been a Gransnet Book Club choice lately.

JessM Sun 10-Nov-13 17:39:31

By.... Galen, I know you know, and the name of the collection...?
And yours is The new testament?

Harry Potter and the PS ? maggie ?