Friday Feedback with a Twist: A Gorgeous Sentence or Two?

Rather than posting an excerpt, I'm going to just roll around in some gorgeous sentences here, and maybe toss up one or two nice ones (?) of my own. Because that's where my head is at this week.
You can put up a gorgeous sentence of your own, too, or put up a whole excerpt for feedback... your choice, and I'll give the usual feedback.
In case you don't know the rules, THEY ARE SIMPLE and HERE. Remember the limit is 3 -5 paragraphs.
Anyway, back to the rolling.
I am definitely a "writing over story" person. In the books I read, and the books I write.
I'm not sure this is a good thing (it's certainly led to a million rejections that read: "The writing is beautiful, but..."), and, it's not to say I don't try my hardest to write an interesting story, or that I don't want the same as a reader, because I do!
It's just that, I cannot force myself to read a crappily-written story, no matter how brilliant the plot twists may be. And, I don't care so much about a story's lack of high stakes if the words are filling me, speaking to me where I live.
Certainly, judging from book sales at large, I am in the minority: Most people will opt for a big story any day over craft. I mean, I haven't read them myself, but I hear the Twilight books (or the Davinci Code) didn't sell on the strength of their gorgeous writing.
A good story is obviously not overrated.
And yet.
I long for them, the words that, strung together, amaze you.
The sentences that steal your breath away.
It happened to me again today. I am reading A Happy Marriage by Rafael Yglesias, which I've been trying to get to for two years. A few pages in, I stumble upon this:

I suppose, if you are a young adult -- my main audience here -- and/or have not experienced the inherent love-hate vicissitudes of a long-term marriage, and the fear of losing a spouse -- those words might not accost you, eviscerate you, kick you in the gut, like they do me. I suppose they may not stay with you forever, as you wonder if you will ever write a sentence with such impact.
But, such gorgeous sentences pepper my favorite YA novels, as well. Take Marcelo in the Real World, by Francisco X. Stork; The Miles Between, by Mary E. Pearson; or, of course, The Book Thief, by Marcus Zusak.
Here's a little gem from the YA novel I'm reading now, Please Ignore Vera Dietz, by A.S. King. It's just such a simple concept, a whole novel in a few brief sentences if you ask me:
"The thing you don't see while you're still here on Earth is how easy it is to change your mind. When you're in it, and you're mixed up with feelings, assumptions, influences, things seem completely impossible to change. From here, you see that change is as easy as flicking a light switch in your brain."
Or this little tidbit from one of my favorite YA's, OyMG, by my pal Amy Fellner Dominy, as the protagonist is talking to her father about identity and fitting in:
"I wish we were more like flowers." I traced a finger over an orange petal shot through with a curl of yellow. "Zinnias and marigolds are different but look how nice they are in the same pot."
He sighed. "Amen to that."
I mean, I read that book more than a year ago, but the moment created by those few sentences have stayed with me...
Here's a small section from my manuscript out on submission Frankie Sky that I like:


*if you're looking for my women's blog, you can find it here: http://gpolisner.blogspot.com/** follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/gaepol
Published on March 09, 2012 04:44
No comments have been added yet.