Sunday, June 06, 2010

The Blogular Post-It

Christopher Hitchens once described one of those dinner parties that you’d really only want to attend if you hadn’t been invited:

...somebody was complaining not just about the epic badness of the novels of Robert Ludlum but also about the badness of their titles. (You know the sort of pretentiousness: The Bourne Supremacy, The Aquitaine Progression, The Ludlum Impersonation, and so forth.) Then it happily occurred to another guest to wonder aloud what a Shakespeare play might be called if named in the Ludlum manner. At which point Salman Rushdie perked up and started to sniff the air like a retriever. “O.K. then, Salman, what would Hamlet’s title be if submitted to the Ludlum treatment?” “The Elsinore Vacillation,” he replied – and I find I must stress this – in no more time than I have given you. Think it was a fluke? Macbeth? “The Dunsinane Reforestation.” To persist and to come up with The Rialto Sanction and The Kerchief Implication was the work of not too many more moments.

Which is clearly a challenge to the rest of us: Shakespeare plays, or other classics, in whatever medium, relabelled as if written by the King of Epic Badness. Coleridge’s Kubla Khan could be The Mongoloid Truncation; and any of Thomas Hardy’s novels might qualify as The Dorset Mishap. Paradise Lost is inevitably The Eden Project. Your turn; and double points if, as in the case of Rushdie’s later efforts, you’re confident enough not to tell us what the original work is.

13 comments:

  1. What a question! How about 'The Canine Extraction' for 'The Hound of the Baskervilles'? Not that it really requires a worse title.

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  2. The Urchin Redemption (Oliver Twist)

    Rebellion Within (almost any Le Carre novel)

    Death in an attic (The Diary of Anne Frank)

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  3. OK I've got one. The Cetacean Elimination.....Moby Dick.

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  4. These are all on my bookshelf:

    The Marchmain Debacle

    The San Fermin Triangle

    Assignation: Milan

    (Not sure if they're obvious, but let's make it a game)

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  5. Ooh these are good. I'm guessing Hemingway for the second one, Mrs Peel, but the last has me stumped.

    From Facebook, Nicholas Pegg offers:

    The Shandy Digression by Laurence Sterne.

    The Havisham Misunderstanding by Charles Dickens.

    The Quested Molestation by E.M. Forster

    The Beelzebub Pubescence by William Golding

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  6. The Jacobean Fortuitude

    The Astral Perambulation.

    (not sure about that second one, the first is my favourite book)

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  7. Yeah, the third was a stretch for another Hemingway, A Farewell to Arms.

    blackwatertown, please give hints.

    If I may borrow your word, then we can have

    The Fleming Fortitude

    (staying with American lit, but not world-class)

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  8. BWT: with you on the first (Amis Sr); is the second Douglas Adams?

    And Mrs Peel has the better of me once again.

    Meanwhile, from Twitter, Archie_V offers Cervantes' The Castile Perambulation and Kafka's The Arthropod Conversion.

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  9. Tim, Red Badge of Courage (Henry Fleming) by Stephen Crane. Is this world lit, or just for American 7th grade English?

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  10. Don't think Crane's really crossed the Atlantic to the extent than, say, Mark Twain did. I suspect there's a general perception that US fiction didn't really catch up with Europe until Fitzgerald and Hemingway. And by the 60s, of course, Updike and Roth et al were way ahead.

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  11. Tim has got it (as always)
    Lucky Jim - Kingsley Amis
    The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy - Douglas Adams

    But M A Peel - you didn't steal my fortuitude

    But speaking of world litereature:
    The Accra Disintegration
    The Unlachcrymose Infant

    (and your clue is - one's east, the other's west)

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  12. The Jude Transluscence
    The Moribund Avian Mimicry
    The Grain Repository
    The Vital Sincerity

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  13. Now I'm confused, BWT. I'd guess Chinua Achebe for the first, but isn't he Nigerian?

    Nice one Ross; the last one took me a good few hours.

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