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For those of you who know nothing about Bulwer-Lytton, he was the author of one of the most famous run-on sentences in literature ("It was a dark and stormy night......"), and the contest is devoted to that same, run-on sentence genre of literature, which, in other words, is exactly the sort of thing writers should avoid at all costs.
But I had been writing yesterday about something, and I came up with an entry which I hope would make Bulwer-Lytton happy, and thought the contest would be fun to enter.
So I took that sentence from yesterday, and then wrote another entry this afternoon, so I made two entries. I might even have time to write a third or fourth, ot even more! entry!
Here are my entries. Just remember--it has to be one sentence only, the beginning of a larger work, and lightly convoluted.
"Twenty-four hours passed quickly, like the time you spend on a carousel, and how fast it's over, but you know it should be the length of time you spend in a dentist's chair, which seems to go on forever, and you holler in pain, hoping you could just get out of that chair and never go to the dentist again."
"All I could see were golden fields of grain wafting in the light summer breeze, the cobalt blue sky hanging at noon--the rest of the world near forgotten by the immersion I felt, standing there, trying to figure out why a serial killer would want to despoil this grain filled masterpiece with the reddest of blood, and taint the attraction of a hard-working middle America."
Let me know if they are truly worthy of the Bulwer-Lytton school of writing. :)
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