The power of a single sentence can make a whole book not only
memorable in the short term, but a forever favourite. The perfect
sentence (or paragraph) can be humourous, insightful, frightening,
heartbreaking, or a combination of these and many more. The right
sequence of words can convey a thought process, the whole subtext of a
novel, and/or make the reader look at the world a different way. I've
kept some novels simply because I felt the book contained a perfect
sentence, one that resonated. The writer cannot get too engrossed with
creating the correct phrase, however, because he or she would never
complete any work. Fortunately, for everyone, sometimes the magic
happens anyway, but one sentence that means the world to one reader will
be meaningless to another. All our experiences differ. As unique
individuals what we appreciate and what has meaning varies as much as
our personalities. Life would be boring if the situation were otherwise.
One such perfect sentence for me is toward the end of Poppy Z Brite's, Drawing Blood.
"The art was in learning to spend your life with someone, in having the
courage to be creative with someone, to melt each other's souls to
molten temperatures and let them flow together into an alloy that could
withstand the world."
This is perfect to me
because it reveals the human condition, of the struggle to withstand
and sustain life, and includes a simple but well-presented explanation
of why for many of us we find it important to create and to love. We may
not need books, music, art etc., or even require companionship to
exist, but we need them to 'live'. The above sentence takes something
fundamental to most of us and presents it in an untarnished,
descriptive, and beautiful way.
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