Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
I would play this game more often, but I have a terrible memory for the minutiae of a story...as evidenced by my most recent guess, above! - Phil Deputy Moderator | Visit my Bradbury website: www.bradburymedia.co.uk | Listen to my Bradbury 100 podcast: https://tinyurl.com/bradbury100pod | ||||
|
douglasSP, You got it of course. Congradulations. The quote is from Part V of "Frost and Fire", Sim has entered a learning chamber and The Time of Talking: "The dialogue crackled, filled the room. Swift as heartbeats, one thousand, two thousand words a minute. Sim, learned, his head filled. He did not shut his eyes, but lapsed into a kind of dreamiing that was almost intaembryonic in lassitude and drowsy vividness. In the faint background the words were spoken, and they wove a tapestry of knowledge in his head." Wonderful writing! Its your turn douglasSP. Thanks. PS: to philnic. Love your Bradbury website. Learned about Bradbury 13 and was able to (rather inexpensively) track down all tapes through various bookshops on alibris. Thank You! Have not read "Lorelei of the Red Mist". | ||||
|
Okay, here goes. I've chosen a fairly out-of-the-way story: “And they came to a forest that had been like November all through the winter and now, reluctantly, was putting out green flags to welcome the season. Butterflies in great tosses of confetti leaped from the deeps of the forest to ramble drunkenly on the air, their thousand torn shadows following over grass and water.” Two very slight clues: 1. This is one of Bradbury's bittersweet meditations on the way we allow our dreams to end up in the garbage bin. 2. I haven't checked, but I believe there may be a very easy way to cheat on this one! | ||||
|
I just watched it - finally. Now tell me where to look for the thingy before I return it. "Live Forever!" | ||||
|
Let me think...oh yes...reflected in a car window (or was it rearview mirror) you will see The Harryhausen Fog Horn Beast... John King Tarpinian You know what you are, Mr. Bradbury? ... You are a poet! -- Aldous Huxley | ||||
|
Still no takers for the story quote? Not even a wild guess? Let me remind you what I said above. There's a really easy way to cheat on the quote. Which means that the answer must be ... where, do you think? Oh come on,guys! If still no guesses, I'll post another clue this time tomorrow. | ||||
|
I know, but want others to play. "Live Forever!" | ||||
|
I've got it, too, but I've already been rapped over the knuckles once for cheating. Must be one of your favourite passages? | ||||
|
No, not really one of my favourite passages - just one that I'd read at the right time. I loved the theme of the story, which reminded me of "The Pumpernickel", probably my favorite Bradbury story in its weight division (about four pages). | ||||
|
Well, it seems we are divided between those who know all and those who know nothing! As promised, another clue: The story is the final one in a Bradbury collection (not counting afterwords, of course!). | ||||
|
Hi douglasSP, That final clue did it: "The Other Highway" from QUICKER THAN THE EYE. The clue kind of gives it away. I like the quote. A story that reminds us "Don't rush or you'll break an axle." I remember Ray Bradbury promoting this title on THE LATE, LATE SHOW. I miss Tom Snyder.This message has been edited. Last edited by: Linnl, | ||||
|
Well, it certainly used to be one of your "Favorite Passages", douglas SP! ~ tink | ||||
|
Yes, Brother Tarkas has nailed it, and the torch passes right back to him for the next mystery quote! Interestingly, BT does not seem to have used the easy cheat which I hinted at ever so unsubtly, and which tinkerbell and Doug S seem to have tumbled onto right away. So what was the cheat? The answer was on this board! If you used the search function, you'd find it under a seven year old post by yours truly. To search for an entire quote, you simply search by entering a distinctive word - in this case, "confetti" works just fine! | ||||
|
Well, here is the new quote: "Maybe he would plow into the waves and let them churn him, as a washing machine churns a dark rag, and let it spit him out on the sand, gasping to dry and bake in the sun until he lay there like the thin skeleton of some old beast, chalk-white and fresh and clean." Clue: a metamorphosis occurs, but its one of self-acceptance. Good luck! | ||||
|
I would like to announce that I've got the answer, but like some of our champion players, I'll hold off until everybody else has had a chance. Not many Bradbury stories have images of waves or the sea. My first thought was that it might be "And the Sailor, Home from the Sea", and afterwards I thought of "The Lake", but it's neither of those! | ||||
|
Powered by Social Strata | Page 1 ... 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 ... 58 |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |