Meme for
wellinghall
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I can safely say I can identify none of the books, though I got the feeling, accurately as it transpired, that I should recognise the Beaulieu one.
By way of recompense here are 10 first lines from not entirely randomly selected books to see if this game really is as difficult as we are telling
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1. The sublimity connected with vastness, is familiar to every eye.
2. On Monday January the seventeenth early in the morning it began to snow.
3. I stood in the shadows of a deserted shop front across from The Blood and Brew Pub, trying not to be obvious as I tugged my black leather pants back up where they belonged.
4. The girl screamed once, only the once. -- Knots and Crosses by Ian Rankin. Guessed by
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5. Waterloo ended a long war, but there remained in England a home front on which many battles were to be fought.
6. Rising up into the air, they took to the sky and flew.
7. Simon Boulderstone, aged twenty, came to Egypt with the draft.
8. It was a place of ancient evil. -- The Five Doctors by Terrance Dicks. Guessed by
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9. The world is four thousand years old. -- Learning the World by Ken McLoed. Guessed by
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10. The burnished metal plate outside said 1453 ABC.
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TBH, once you exclude books which mention a famous character in the first sentence you're not left with many that you can hand on heart say "Oh well, everybody will have read this one."
Only one of the above is so obscure I'd be surprised if anyone had read it though.
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No idea with any of the others, but then I suspect you read a lot more science fiction than I do *g*.
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I don't think I've seem much from Grafton or Paretsky recently, although I no longer haunt bookshops they way I did when younger.
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Paretsky's latest book isn't crime fic -- it's looking at the state of America through a small town. I liked it.
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the fact she sets them in the 1980s means they got old quickly, literally and metaphorically.
I remember thinking it a bit of an odd choice when I first noticed that, although the books were appearing at 6 month - yearly intervals they were each set about 3 months apart. It makes Kinsey's life appear unbelievably eventful and makes them seem old-fashioned without, somehow, letting them ride on the nostalgia bandwagon. I would have thought that setting them each a year apart and following her from age 30 - 56 would have been a better choice - but I'm not a best-selling author, so what do I know?
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It's really not that easy!
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Knew I recognised it from somewhere. My brain was in Lovecraft Territory until I saw your comment!
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I vaguely recognised maybe 2 others, but I can't place them. The one about snow is probably a disaster story. And given the fact it started snowing it'll be about someone lost in a snowstorm, or an avalanche or something. (I've not read too many distaster novels, as I prefer to read non-fiction (sic) accounts.)
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You're quite close with the snow one, although its a children's book so fairly gentle for a disaster story.
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I'll post the answer later today.
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Taht's one of Ken McLeod's books - 'Learning the World' maybe?
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