Heaven and Hell…The Collector by John Fowles
Thanks JeffMac for your thoughtful reply. I actually did understand and enjoy your article very much. One of the attributes from which to judge good writing is "is it thought provoking?" or "is it provocative?". At least it is from my point of view. In this regard your article (story?) was up to the standards of this wonderful website. It was very successful.
But please do not think that I was being judgemental in my response to your story "Rod Laver and the Mean Streak". Using words as an artistic form of expression is fun…and in many ways even therapeutic. I am guilty more than any other in this regard. Plus…I am beyond being offended. I have seen too much of life to be so petty.
Ours is a parallel universe…afterall there is our side of the story and then there is the other guy's side. And in the end…there finally is the truth of the matter. It would be funny to also write the story from the perspective of Rod Laver. What was he thinking? What did you look like to him? What personal problems could he have been contemplating on the red eye flight to Los Angeles? Did the sight of your Prince Racquet bag incite him…as it would me? What year was this? The story has a lot of potential in this regard…perhaps even a scene in a movie or a short two act play.
An example of this parallel exercise in artistic use of words is a book called "The Collector" by John Fowles. The story of a kidnapper and his victim is told simultaneously…albeit in separate chapters about the same experience from the different perspectives of the relative characters.
"The Collector becomes a macabre parable about the captivity that we all experience…in that cellar of the mind and heart where we too are unwilling guests."
Most of all JeffMac thanks for your contribution. Judging from the responses we all "enjoyed" your story and it certainly gave me a lot of food for thought. I think however that we all are sort of existing in a place called Purgatory…negotiating for the better of the two possible outcomes. One never knows…do they?
Originally posted by JeffMac
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But please do not think that I was being judgemental in my response to your story "Rod Laver and the Mean Streak". Using words as an artistic form of expression is fun…and in many ways even therapeutic. I am guilty more than any other in this regard. Plus…I am beyond being offended. I have seen too much of life to be so petty.
Ours is a parallel universe…afterall there is our side of the story and then there is the other guy's side. And in the end…there finally is the truth of the matter. It would be funny to also write the story from the perspective of Rod Laver. What was he thinking? What did you look like to him? What personal problems could he have been contemplating on the red eye flight to Los Angeles? Did the sight of your Prince Racquet bag incite him…as it would me? What year was this? The story has a lot of potential in this regard…perhaps even a scene in a movie or a short two act play.
An example of this parallel exercise in artistic use of words is a book called "The Collector" by John Fowles. The story of a kidnapper and his victim is told simultaneously…albeit in separate chapters about the same experience from the different perspectives of the relative characters.
"The Collector becomes a macabre parable about the captivity that we all experience…in that cellar of the mind and heart where we too are unwilling guests."
Most of all JeffMac thanks for your contribution. Judging from the responses we all "enjoyed" your story and it certainly gave me a lot of food for thought. I think however that we all are sort of existing in a place called Purgatory…negotiating for the better of the two possible outcomes. One never knows…do they?
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