For a few years now I’ve been a fan of the infamous Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest, sponsored by the English Department of San José State University in California.
Yes, that would be Bulwer-Lytton, original author of “It was a dark and stormy night…”
The competition challenges writers to compose the opening sentence (preferably a very LONG sentence) to the worst of all possible novels.
A few favorite gems from the contest here—just because they make me smile.
(And of course, I couldn’t resist joining in—with apologies to Emily Dickinson). I discovered that it’s very easy to write a bad sentence, but not so easy to write a very GOOD bad sentence).
Enjoy…or add on! Open forum.
She’d been strangled with a rosary-not a run-of-the-mill rosary like you might get at a Catholic bookstore where Hail Marys are two for a quarter and indulgences are included on the back flap of the May issue of “Nuns and Roses” magazine, but a fancy heirloom rosary with pearls, rubies, and a solid gold cross, a rosary with attitude, the kind of rosary that said, “Get your Jehovah’s Witness butt off my front porch.”~~Mark Schweizer
“Send an ambulance; I’m glistening profusely . . . bosom heaving . . . luscious, ripe orbs threatening to burst the seams of my black lace bodice . . . . pulse galloping apace like a knight’s sleek steed . . . exquisite pain radiating down my graceful, alabaster arm, shooting upward to the finely chiseled jaw . . . I shall swoon—oh, my address?” the romance writer gasped into the phone before collapsing.~~Linda A. Fields
I was in a back alley in Fiji, fighting desperately and silently for my life, fighting desperately for oxygen, clawing at the calm and almost gentle pressure of the fabric held over my face by implacable, ebony thighs when I realized — he was killing me softly with his sarong.~~Karl Scott
She wasn’t really my type, a hard-looking but untalented reporter from the local cat box liner, but the first second that the third-rate representative of the fourth estate cracked open a new fifth of old Scotch, my sixth sense said seventh heaven was as close as an eighth note from Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, so, nervous as a tenth grader drowning in eleventh-hour cramming for a physics exam, I swept her into my longing arms, and, humming “The Twelfth of Never,” I got lucky on Friday the thirteenth.~~Wm. Ocheltree
Paul Revere had just discovered that someone in Boston was a spy for the British, and when he saw the young woman believed to be the spy’s girlfriend in an Italian restaurant he said to the waiter, “Hold the spumoni–I’m going to follow the chick an’ catch a Tory.”~~John L. Ashman
Detective Bart Lasiter was in his office studying the light from his one small window falling on his super burrito when the door swung open to reveal a woman whose body said you’ve had your last burrito for a while, whose face said angels did exist, and whose eyes said she could make you dig your own grave and lick the shovel clean.~~Jim Guigli
Hope is the thing with feathers that perches in the soul, annoints despair with offerings, seeking to cajole—but I gotta tell ya, every time I’ve let it out of its cage it heads straight for my rear and nips my buttock with its jagged little beak, because once it tried to whisper in my ear and I swatted at it, thinking it was one of those big, retarded moths that thumps against the screen door, and crushed its fragile little wing (which it never forgot), so now, every chance it gets, it shits on my head and bites me right in the ass.~~R. Weaver