RE: The Spark + Unbewusstes - Finish The Story Contest - Week #66 @bananafish
The Old Man and the Sea, one of my favorite books, and hands down my favorite by Hemingway.
One of my favorite things about the old man was his reverence for the sea, which I share, and his recognition of the majesty, not only of the giant marlin, but also of the mako shark bent upon its destruction.
And, in his own way, he loved them both.
Yes, the little boy always brought tears to my eyes, because he was clearly one of the few people who bothered to be kind to the old man. And clearly this extended to his mother, who was, after all, the one feeding the old man, whether or not by her son's request.
It is a truly beautiful story, with amazing details about life on the sea, such as the recounting of the old man downing a cup of cod liver oil on the way to his boat each morning, and reflecting on the young fishermen who refused to do so.
While they complained about the glare of the sun on the water, as their eyes began progressively failing, his eyes remained clear and unhazed, as he had been admonished to begin the habit in his youth, and continued it without fail.
No wimpy teaspoons for this old man.
That book has always hit me squarely in my heart.
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Wow, I don't know how I haven't read 'the old man and the sea'. I'm completely in love with the sea and all things beneath the waves. In fact that's how I started on steem, writing scuba scribe articles about my dive experiences and reverence for the marine environment.
I am just finishing a collection of Sci-Fi short stories by Robert Silverberg which I need to return to the library so I now have a title for the next book to get out to read.
Thanks for the recommendation of the old man and the sea 🙂👍
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You will love The Old Man and the Sea, Raj! I don't know if internet archives are sketchy, but if you can't find a copy on ebay or bookfinder.com or amazon, here's a pdf: https://archive.org/stream/oldmansea00hemi_1/oldmansea00hemi_1_djvu.txt
Robert Silverberg!!!!
I reviewed one of his stories for Perihelion Science Fiction. Oh how I love it - said to be the first story he dared to let out some of his Jewish legacy. Quoting myself here:
You're in luck! Galaxy's Edge reprinted the story in 2018, and it's still online:
http://www.galaxysedge.com/magazines/issue-34-september-2018/the-dybbuk-of-mazel-tov-iv/
It opens like this:
But maybe you've already read this one.
@crescendoofpeace, of course you would notice the boy's kindness and the mother's too (who cooks the old man's dinner if not her), AND the cod liver oil!!! Oh yes. Modern science//nutrition backs him up now on that.
Ah, this is why I spend most of my waking hours reading. People in my face-to-face life hardly read much at all. And they rarely want to talk books or hear ME talk about stories I've read.
I love you all, book fiends, er, friends, of Steemit!
It occurs to me now that a short story I wrote had to be me subconsciously seeking to emulate the voice of that Silverberg story. Now, to remember the story...
Well, that took some digging! It was 3 months ago, for another @banafish contest. You commented on the narrator:
(Germans in that story, and in the latest, with Karl the android: I see now that yet another German keeps popping from my head in response to a story prompt.)
OF COURSE I didn't achieve the narrative voice that Silverberg does, least of all in the THE DYBBUK OF MAZEL TOV IV, but when I read something I love, I find myself trying to channel that kind of voice in my own writing. Whenever someone says my purple prose stories remind them of Joyce Carol Oates it's time I try harder to be aware of "appropriating" someone else's voice.
https://steemit.com/tellastorytome/@carolkean/the-visionaires-contest-entry-for-tell-a-story-to-me-the-known-future
I haven't done that in prose, that I know of, although others could probably pick out a lot of my influences if well read.
But I've definitely done that in songwriting, and although sometimes done as homage, I often don't even realize it until after the fact.
The human mind is fascinating in its intricacies.
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Indeed! And I was never conscious of trying to sound like a favorite author whenever I did, and - ironically, or not - when I waxed the most purple, I was chanelling Ardyth Kennelly's Good Morning, Young Lady, a book I dearly loved from age 12 til now, and continue to re-read, even though maybe ten people on the planet agree with me that it's a great story (a Cinderella tale set in the Old West). Kennelly used Deep POV before I'd ever heard of the term. And she trotted out the one-word paragraphs (drama, drama?) at exactly the right time.
The hyperlink above takes you to my book review, in which - coincidentally - I mentioned The Sea Wolf.
Okay, this is a book and author with which I'm entirely unfamiliar, but I like the premise already. I'll have to check it out.
My go-to book that I've loved since childhood, and still re-read, is "A Wrinkle in Time," which I have no doubt you know well.
I still want to see the film they made from it a few years back.
I didn't know' until shortly before they started filming, that the book is actually the first in a trilogy, so one of these days I have to get the other two volumes.
Then I'll disappear for a couple of days. ;-)
Funny though, since we now know that babies can hear in the womb, and my parents were both immersed in music, it has occurred to me that copyright law in music is especially problematic.
In theory at least, songwriters may well include snippets of music they quite literally heard in the womb, which naturally they would have no memory of ever hearing.
An interesting conundrum.
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Wow - wow - wow - what an insight!!!!
I've vaguely thought along these lines as a reader, having "heard" a certain voice, a certain cadence, and my own writing unconsciously "informed" by someone else's influence. This -
babies can hear in the womb
and your parents were both immersed in music, and
it has occurred to me that copyright law in music is especially problematic.
I hear what you mean... see what you mean... Eric Carmen's "All By Myself," though, was a conscious nod to Rachmaninoff. But how often does a familiar riff show up, like Pat Metheny's train song. I keep hearing "Queen Bee, Chasing me" (a playground jumping rope song he must have heard at recess)
Others may not hear it, but I do, starting at 55 seconds in.
Interesting, but I've also never heard "Queen bee chasing me," at least not that I recall.
Maybe it was a regional thing.
So many songs have intentional nods to favorite composers, and sometimes, the homage is what makes the song for me.
Case in point is "Toward the Blue Horizon," by Riverside, when guitarist Piotr Grudzienski breaks into into the opening riff from Porcupine Tree's "Blind House," acknowledging their early influence on the band, and on him.
And Steven Wilson, lead man and primary (often sole) songwriter of Porcupine Tree, has frequently referenced earlier works, from artists as diverse as King Crimson, Dead Can Dance and Prince.
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That is amazing that you reviewed one of Silverberg short stories for perihelion Carol! I haven't read that particular story you mention, it sounds interesting. Here is a pic of the collection I'm just finishing.
My favourite out of this collection has to be either 'this is the road' or 'in the house of double minds' both great Sci-fi bit very different styles.
You're right about having friends on here who can talk about literature of different types with. I'd forgotten how much fun it can be 🙂
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well, I am on a mission now to buy an anthology of his short stories!
I've read others, but none I loved as much as the Dybukk.
It's an amazing book, and a fast read.
It's also the best of Hemingway, in my opinion; his mastery at saying so much by inference, rather than spelling everything out, and of writing with the assumption that his readers were intelligent enough to discern his meaning.
Meanwhile, clearly, I need to seek out some of Robert Silverberg's work!
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It's great swapping recommendations like this over tinterweb 🤣
I have read some Hemingway, but it was over ten years ago when I was in university. I'll look forward to a change of pace from all this Sci-Fi I've been reading 👍
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