Book Beginni

Here's mine from the beginning of the short story "The Supper at Elsinore" found in Seven Gothic Tales by Isak Dinesen:
Upon a corner of a street of Elsinore, near the harbor, there stands a dignified old gray house, built early in the eighteenth century, and looking down reticently at the new times grown up around it. Through the long years it has been worked into a unity, and when the front door is opened on a day of north-north-west the door of the corridor upstairs will open out of sympathy. Also when you tread upon a certain step of the stair, a board of the floor in the parlor will answer with a faint echo, like a song.

*Grab a book, any book.
*Turn to page 56.
*Find any sentence that grabs you.
*Post it.
*Link up at Freda's site.
Here's mine from "The Deluge at Norderney," the first short story in Seven Gothic Tales by Isak Dinesen:
Miss Malin had been prepared for an ingenious argument, but at this speech she was shocked, and for a moment held her little hands to her ears.
Hello! Thanks for visiting my blog!
ReplyDeleteLove the sound of Seven Gothic Tales! Thanks!
I'd like to read more "gothic" stuff like this. I love the creation of mood.
ReplyDeleteI like these excerpts...they pique my interest in the book. Thanks for sharing...and for visiting my blog.
ReplyDeleteI love gothic stories! Thanks for the heads up about this, and thanks for stopping by my blog!
ReplyDeleteGothic is not something I'd normally read but this line makes me wonder: what arguement? what did she have planned? thanks for visiting me.
ReplyDeleteooo, that sentence oozes eerie.
ReplyDeleteHi Bev,
ReplyDeleteSounds really eerie. I'll have to check this one out. Have a great day!
Sherrie
Just Books
Elsinore is Hamlet's hometown,no? So this will be a ghost story? Is it?
ReplyDeleteI didn't know that Dinesen wrote gothic short fictions. Looking forward to reading your thoughts when you've read them!
Interesting 56! Thanks for participating!
ReplyDeleteSounds interesting!
ReplyDelete@Laurie: Very sharp. Yes, indeed, this particular short story is a ghost story!
ReplyDeleteIts very interesting post..so thanks a lot...
ReplyDeleteSounds like a good book. I like the opening for "The Deluge at Norderney."
ReplyDeleteThis was similar advice he gave when we were starting One Stop Poetry. It rings true.
ReplyDeleteWe borrowed the book from the Philippines on Friday at the Philippine bloggers and turn it into a weekly meme weeks prior to ReaderCon.
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ReplyDeleteEvery Friday I write an amusing limerick and haiku about a given theme and invite readers to write haiku and/or limericks about the same topic.
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ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing such a historical post.nice stuff really.
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