Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm
Dothan’s is A Rose for Emily, by Faulkner. Sorry no time to quote!
Another easy one:
“I was cured, all right.”
And yes, I know it’s not the last line of the book.
“The Two Bottles of Relish”, by Lord Dunsany. I love that story.
How about this one:
A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
“The Ash Tree” by M. R. James. I have that in an old Hitchcock anthology which also includes “The Cocoon” by John B. L. Goodwin, one of the creepiest things I’ve ever read in my life.
The real last line: “And all that cal.”
In general, I am not one to discuss religion or politics since people tend to hold deep, and sometimes illogical, beliefs and opinions in regards to both; however, I think this post directed at a present day leader ignores the last 5000 years or so of semi-recorded history. (Let’s not forget the winning side gets to write the history!) To paraphrase Mark Twain: statistics and politicians are the two biggest liars. Not to mention, we need to know what the definition of the word “is” (and its past, present, future, and plural forms) is…
Best regards,
IUchem
PS I regret this response to “rjung” is off the post’s topic; however, I feel this type of discussion needs some levity outside of the “BBQ Pit.”
Simulposted from the Pit thread:
Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72 - Hunter S. Thompson (in re Tricky Dick)?
the author is Roald Dahl, and the story’s name eludes me too, although it’s something like"the Amazing Story-Writing Machine."
Sorry, nope.
I just finished Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail tonight. Don’t recall the last sentence, but yeah, that wasn’t it.
And, considering I’m arachniphobic, that James story is the creepiest thing I’ve so far read. (The “creatures” are horrible demonic spider-like familiars of the witch).
Although there was a really strange horror story I read when I was a kid that I didn’t really understand at the time, but from what I remember of it, I think it was about cannibalism. It was called By the River, Fontainbleu. Anyone else heard of it?
Here’s a really obscure one which has stuck in my mind:
“And my body fell over.”
A few clues:
Author’s a well-known 20th century American writer, whose first novel was about war.
It’s a very short story, and it’s about WWI. Some call it a ghost story.
I presume we’re going from memory here, without looking anything up?
If so, here’s an easy one:
Extra points for nailing this one, from the same very well-known collection:
Doesn’t sound like much, but it’s a great closer for the short story it’s attached to.
And a famous novel (that I read some 33 years ago, so my quote isn’t exact):
The Hunchback of Notre Dame?
Sounded like Wuthering Heights to me, but I don’t think that’s the last line…
“Nightfall” - Isaac Asimov
Oddly enough, though I assume it’s also Asimov, the second one doesn’t ring any bells.
I had to look up the last line to see if it was as creepy as I remembered, and yes, it is:
Daniel