Last Lines…

I blogged about opening lines of novels a while back, but the endings are just as interesting, if not more so. The Huffington Post recently gathered together some of their favourites, and it’s an article worth a look. There are some fantastic last lines, I think my favourites from this list would have to be either from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby; "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past." Or from George Orwell’s Big Brother; "He loved Big Brother". The latter is so wonderfully bleak – something that contemporary film studios could learn from – whatever happened to the brutal, unhappy endings?
Another that pushes those two close is this one; “The offing was barred by a black bank of clouds, and the tranquil waterway leading to the uttermost ends of the earth flowed sombre under an overcast sky – seemed to lead into the heart of an immense darkness.” Where else could that come from but The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad?
What about you, any favourite last lines?
This is also a good moment to fess up to a guilty secret. I lifted the last line of my first novel, The Defector, from my favourite book. It fitted perfectly - ‘Sometimes you just know these things’ - and it seemed like a suitable tribute to pay to a book that kinda changed the path of my life. So can anyone out there guess which book it comes from, and does anyone have a copy on their real or virtual shelf?
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Published on March 28, 2014 05:00
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message 1: by Lars (new)

Lars Trodson I've always been fascinated by opening lines. They're like the opening shot in a movie; it sets the tone, the expectation. Don't waste it. But I have never really given much thought to the last line of a book. One of my favorite books is "Mister Roberts" by Thomas Heggen, published in 1946 and of course made into a famous movie with Henry Fonda. Because of the movie, the last line of the novel has perhaps lost some of its impact, but when you read the book it is perfectly earned, perfectly phrased, perfectly satisfying. Ensign Pulver has just committed an act of justified larceny aboard the cargo ship "Reluctant." — "Captain," he said easily, "I just threw your damn palm trees over the side." Rarely has such a small act of revenge seemed so sweet.


message 2: by Mark (new)

Mark Chisnell I'd better go check it out...


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