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Tricksy Compliments

Kurt R.A. GiambastianiI’ve run across a couple of phrases this past week that initially read opposite from their intent.

In an anniversary card, my dad said, “It’s not as easy as you make it seem.” On first reading, I took it to mean that we were making it harder than it should be. A second reading cleared it up, but it was weird that my brain turned it backward.

Yesterday, in a chat conversation, someone said, “If there were more convos like this, I’d be more unreluctant to be online.” Twisted syntax, to be sure, so I don’t blame myself for blinking twice before I was able to winkle the meaning out of this one

But these two instances triggered a memory. I remembered a phrase from a book read years ago.

“I don’t know half of you half as well as I should like, and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve.”

Good old BIlbo Baggins. What a card.

I read The Hobbit and the LotR trilogy when I was in junior/senior high. I do not know every line of the books and I cannot do a scene-to-chapter comparison between Jackson’s movies and the books as a party trick. Still, a few key phrases from the books have stuck with me over the decades, and this was one.

Bilbo says this line during his speech at his eleventy-first birthday. It’s a wonderfully convoluted sentence–intentionally contorted–and I always took it as Bilbo’s tricksy way to slam his less savory relations while not insulting his friends; sort of a backhanded compliment, as it were. But was I correct? The two instances from this week made me wonder.

So, for the first time ever, I parsed it out.

Taking the two clauses separately, and reducing the “half of you” and “less than half of you” obfuscators, I got two relatively clear sentences

  • I don’t know you half as well as I should like.
  • I like you half as well as you deserve.

I was stunned. All this time I thought Bilbo was putting down his rough-side-of-Hobbiton relations, when in fact he was complimenting them. Yes, there is deprecation built into the sentence but it’s self-deprecation, saying that he hadn’t done enough. Tricksy it may have been, yes, but not snide.

I’m not a LotR fanatic, so I’m not very interested in why Tolkien put this bushel of tangled sentence structure into Bilbo’s mouth at that particular time and then pointed out to the reader just how confusing the statement was to his audience. I’m more interested in why I never before parsed it out myself.

As a high-achieving, low-social-skills youth embedded in AP classes and hours of practicing, rehearsals, and concerts, I know I was pretty damned arrogant. Back then, the thought that I could have misinterpreted a sentence, no matter how tangled, just didn’t compute. I read the line, I interpreted its meaning, I moved onward. But obviously there was the seed of doubt buried deep in my consciousness, or it wouldn’t have sprouted to life this week.

Since my youth, I’ve read a lot of classics, and have been slowly ambling through the syntactical forest of Proust’s magnum opus. I’ve read a lot of convoluted syntax and have no qualms about going back and re-reading a sentence if it didn’t click first time through.

I’m glad to know, at last, what Bilbo really meant. I’m also glad I’ve learned enough not to be so damned arrogant as to consider myself infallible. (Yes, that’s right. If you think I’m arrogant now, you should have met me when I was in my prime. Hoooooo-boy!)

Happy Friday.

Onward,

k

Grand Openings

Stephen King has spoken. Again.

This time, he speaks in an interview in The Atlantic (that reads more like an essay) about a topic not covered in his On Writing memoir: Opening lines.

I hope aspiring writers read all of what he said, instead of picking their favorite sound bite.

It’s not that the first line of a book isn’t important–it is–and King discusses what a good opening line can bring to the party. On the other hand, he admits he’s not always done well with them, and stresses (waaay at the end) that an opening line won’t make or break a novel. If the story sucks, a good opener won’t save it.

The discussion prompted me to go back and look at the opening lines from my novels. How well did I do? I wondered. Let’s see.

Continue Reading »

New Contact Form

Just an FYI for regular readers…

I’ve added a “Contact” page and form to the blog; you should be able to see it up there on the menu (far right). Feel free to use it to submit questions, feedback, general comments, requests for topics and/or recipes, and other such.

Thanks,

k

Fasten Your Seatbelts

Stack of BooksThis week I came across two articles for writers that I thought I’d pass along.

The first article comes from my friends over at The Noble Dead website. Barb and J.C. Hendee are bestselling authors with nearly a score of books to their collective credit. J.C. is also their webmaster, and trust me, he knows his stuff. Continue Reading »

In Lieu of Flowers

Gossamer WheelPeople used to send flowers.

My mother died when I was five, so my memories of the house at that time are sketchy and incomplete. I remember with clarity that awful day when I learned the news, a congregation of black in our kitchen and living room, and the nightmares that tormented me through the following months. The house was likely filled with flowers, but I do not recall them.

Since that time, the sending of flowers has fallen out of favor. Death announcements now direct us to send contributions “in lieu of flowers.” How ironic that the “Flower Power” generation has turned this expression of sympathy and grief into a faux pas. Continue Reading »

Y’know…

Y’know, I get really depressed when my recipe for Chicken Noodle Soup a la David Chang continually gets more hits than my current posts on writing, culture, and current events…

…but then a vee of Canadian geese fly in from the south, happy, crossing overhead, cheering each other onward, their chatter echoing across the cul-de-sac until it fades away to the north…

…and I feel better. Chicken noodle soup for everyone. Enjoy.

 

k

Tried and True

Simple LivingSome tips for your kitchen.  (Sorry…best I can do this week.)

Today: dealing with fruit flies, and storing your onions, and potatoes.

Continue Reading »