Pleasing bit of description in Larissa MacFarquhar's Feb. 12 profile of Pat and Paul Churchland, two Canadian philosophy professors who are, at the article's open, wandering at the California seaside:
"It's a little before six in the morning and quite cold on the beach. It's low tide, and the sand is wet and hard-packed and stony."It's almost Hemingwayesque—terse and physical—but he'd have left out the "a little before" and the "quite." I'd prefer it that way, I think, but it still holds up. "Pack" is such a great word.
(Painting: Duane Murrin's "Low Tide.")
(Alf, please skip.)
3 comments:
I thought I was really going to like this piece, but then I didn't . . .
I'm half through, and I think I know what you mean. Ever notice how her descriptions usually come in triads, as in my post? I counted three on the first page.
Holy smokes, you weren't kidding. First article in a long time that I simply gave up on. It felt like a long e-mail.
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