Maya Reynolds tells me that the results of the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest are in. This year's winner:
My vote for truly bad goes to the winner of the Fantasy Fiction category:
Folks say that if you listen real close at the height of the full moon, when the wind is blowin' off Nantucket Sound from the nor' east and the dogs are howlin' for no earthly reason, you can hear the awful screams of the crew of the “Ellie May," a sturdy whaler Captained by John McTavish; for it was on just such a night when the rum was flowin' and, Davey Jones be damned, big John brought his men on deck for the first of several screaming contests.So what's it all about? This:
An international literary parody contest, the competition honors the memory (if not the reputation) of Victorian novelist Edward George Earl Bulwer-Lytton (1803-1873). The goal of the contest is childishly simple: entrants are challenged to submit bad opening sentences to imaginary novels. Although best known for "The Last Days of Pompeii" (1834), which has been made into a movie three times, originating the expression "the pen is mightier than the sword," and phrases like "the great unwashed" and "the almighty dollar," Bulwer-Lytton opened his novel Paul Clifford (1830) with the immortal words that the "Peanuts" beagle Snoopy plagiarized for years, "It was a dark and stormy night."Some of these are more funny than terrible. It's difficult to consciously write an awful sentence--there's an art to doing it on purpose, and it's clear that more than a few of the entrants have been exposed to Douglas Adams (his "The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't" is the best awful sentence of all time).
My vote for truly bad goes to the winner of the Fantasy Fiction category:
A quest is not to be undertaken lightly--or at all!--pondered Hlothgar, Thrag of the Western Boglands, son of Glothar, nephew of Garthol, known far and wide as Skull Dunker, as he wielded his chesty stallion Hralgoth through the ever-darkening Thlargwood, beyond which, if he survived its horrors and if Hroglath the royal spittle reader spoke true, his destiny awaited--all this though his years numbered but fourteen.Nothing sucks quite as much as Epic Fantasy Suck, because it usually travels in a trilogy.









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