I only have one. I almost stopped reading Pat Conroy’s “The Prince of Tides” because every five pages or so a character was described as ‘feckless’.
Just once I wanted someone to be fecked.
mmm
I only have one. I almost stopped reading Pat Conroy’s “The Prince of Tides” because every five pages or so a character was described as ‘feckless’.
Just once I wanted someone to be fecked.
mmm
The adventure of the Feckled band.
Dan Simmons has used the phrase “Lapis Lazuli” to describe the color of things in various books. When I read Hyperion for the first time, I didn’t have the slightest idea what the hell he was talking about. Apparently, (now that the net is a thing and I can look it up) it’s a blue-ish/purple rock. As to why the hell he couldn’t just say “the sky was dark blue with a hint of purple”, I will never know.
SR Donaldson had some words he overused in the Gap series, but I don’t want to slog through 2,000 pages again just to find them.
Check this out The Well-Tempered Plot Device: Nick Lowe
"The rules are simple. Each player takes a different volume of The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, and at the word “go” all open their books at random and start leafing through, scanning the pages. The winner is the first player to find the word “clench”. It’s a fast, exciting game – sixty seconds is unusually drawn-out – and can be varied, if players get too good, with other favourite Donaldson words like wince, flinch, gag, rasp, exigency, mendacity, articulate, macerate, mien, limn, vertigo, cynosure… It’s a great way to get thrown out of bookshops. Good racing!
"
[quote=“vontsira, post:52, topic:680731”]
Assorted Turtledove stuff – I’m a fan, though a sometimes reluctant one…
Harry Turtledove – an admirer of de Camp, I gather – borrows and makes much use of “futter”, in his Darkness novel series, of which I am among the apparently relatively few lovers. The Darkness universe has a medieval-type feel to it, so the word seems to “fit” there.
According to Wiktionary, Richard F. Burton coined it. I’ve probably run across it in my readings of Burton (especially the Arabian Nights, which seems prime ground for this word), but I can’t recall him using it.
Everyone needs to be fecked once in a while. Going about feckless for too long is just reckless.
Hahah. That’s awesome. I wonder if there’s a Game room thread in here somewhere.
That’s it! THAT’S IT!! That’s the guy I remember using “roil” so much!
The Illearth War: “His expression was constantly roiled”
Chaos and Order: “Holt’s aura roiled with agitation”
The Wounded Land: “Apprehension roiled in her”
And now everybody seems to be using the word, at least in similar literary genres. What has Donaldson unleashed upon the world?
Anyway, thanks SDMB for solving my “what was that book” mystery!
Patrick O’Brian – all of these were overused more and more as time went on, until at the end of his life they could be found on nearly every other page –
dear (an Irishism which eventually bled into everyone’s speech no matter the nationality, plus the narrator’s – ‘the dear breeze’, ‘the dear carriage’. This annoyed me more because he wasn’t Irish.
*absurd * used as, apparently, an idiosyncratic intensifier ‘absurdly white’, ‘absurd beauty’
important where most people would use something like ‘severe’, or ‘large’ – “important holes”, “important fractures”
Maybe he just stopped rewriting.
Diana Gabaldon uses the word “susurrus” at least once per book. In one of the later Outlander books she loses control and uses it at least seven times.