--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Jason Spock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>  
>     Snoopy typing on his typewriter,  "It was a dark and stormy 
night."..... is considered, the world's greatest one-line novel.

Not quite.  :-)

Schultz was just paying homage to one of the most atrocious
first lines of a novel in history:

"It was a dark and stormy night; the rain fell in torrents--except 
at occasional intervals, when it was checked by a violent gust of 
wind which swept up the streets (for it is in London that our scene 
lies), rattling along the housetops, and fiercely agitating the 
scanty flame of the lamps that struggled against the darkness."
 -- Edward George Bulwer-Lytton, Paul Clifford (1830)

Notice that it's all one sentence.  It inspired a contest
that is really a hoot, the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest.
The objective is to write the "first sentence of the worst
novels never printed."  

>From the website:

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." 

Find out more at:

http://www.bulwer-lytton.com/

Some examples from that website, the 2005 winners:

2005 Grand Winner:
As he stared at her ample bosom, he daydreamed of the dual Stromberg 
carburetors in his vintage Triumph Spitfire, highly functional yet 
pleasingly formed, perched prominently on top of the intake 
manifold, aching for experienced hands, the small knurled caps of 
the oil dampeners begging to be inspected and adjusted as described 
in chapter seven of the shop manual.
Dan McKay
Fargo, ND 

Runner-Up: 
When Detective Riggs was called to investigate the theft of a 
trainload of Native American fish broth concentrate bound for 
market, he solved the case almost immediately, being that the trail 
of clues led straight to the trainmaster, who had both the 
locomotive and the Hopi tuna tea.
Mitsy Rae
Danbury, NE 

Grand Panjandrum's Special Award 
India, which hangs like a wet washcloth from the towel rack of Asia, 
presented itself to Tex as he landed in Delhi (or was it Bombay?), 
as if it mattered because Tex finally had an idea to make his mark 
and fortune and that idea was a chain of steak houses to serve the 
millions and he wondered, as he deplaned down the steep, shiny, 
steel steps, why no one had thought of it before.
Ken Aclin
Shreveport, LA 

Winner: Adventure Category 
Captain Burton stood at the bow of his massive sailing ship, his 
weathered face resembling improperly cured leather that wouldn't 
even be used to make a coat or something.
Bryan Semrow
Oshkosh, WI 

Runner-Up 
It was high noon in the jungles of South India when I began to 
recognize that if we didn't find water for our emus soon, it 
wouldn't be long before we would be traveling by foot; and with the 
guerilla warriors fast on our heals, I was starting to regret my 
decision to use poultry for transportation.
Eric Winter
Minneapolis, MN

Dishonorable Mention 
When the great Italian archeologist, Giovanni Battista de Rossi, 
broke through the centuries of choking rubble and rock in the 
abandoned catacombs under Rome and the dust cleared, he held his 
blazing torch high, pickup a flat, dirt-encrusted object with a row 
of teeth, examined it with his educated eye, and exclaimed, "By the 
saints, I do believe I've discovered another ancient kitty comb."
Mitsy Rae
Danbury, NE 

Winner: Children's Literature 
The woods were all a-twitter with rumors that the Seven Dwarves were 
planning a live reunion after their attempted solo careers had 
dismally sputtered into Z-list oblivion and it was all just a matter 
of meeting a ten-page list of outlandish demands (including 700-
threadcount Egyptian cotton bedsheets, lots of white lilies and a 
separate trailer for the magic talking mirror) to get the Princess 
Formerly Known As Snow White on board.
Shelby Leung
Dulwich Hill
NSW, Australia

Runner-Up
When Mr Bilbo Baggins of Bag End announced that he would shortly be 
celebrating his eleventy-first birthday, his children packed his 
bags and drove him to Golden Pastures retirement complex just off 
Interstate 95.
Stephen Farnsworth
Manchester, U.K.

Dishonorable Mentions 
Because of her mysterious ways I was fascinated with Dorothy and I 
wondered if she would ever consider having a relationship with a 
lion, but I have to admit that most of my attention was directed at 
her little dog Toto because, after all, he was a source of meat 
protein and I had had enough of those damn flying monkeys.
Randy Blanton
Murfreesboro, TN

The children of Hamelin were led away by a pied piper (it's common 
knowledge) to parts unknown; whither they went is now herein 
revealed, however the precise location is cloaked in accordance with 
International Fantasy Regulation IFR.02.3a governing site specifics 
as, for example, in any Harry Potter story the locations are indeed 
identified, but just you try and find them.
P.S.Hamilton 
Pearland, TX 

"What are you doing in my bedroom at this time of night, Ernie, and 
why are you grinning at me with those sharp teeth and how come 
you've been spending so much time with the Count lately, and why has 
Big Bird disappeared, and you should really do something about that 
breath, or my name isn't Bert the muppet."
Vicki Nunn
Gladstone, Queensland, Australia

Winner: Dark and Stormy Night 
It was a dark and stormy night, although technically it wasn't black 
or anything -- more of a gravy color like the spine of the 1969 
Scribner's Sons edition of "A Farewell to Arms," and, truth be told, 
the storm didn't sound any more fierce than the opening to Leon 
Russell's 1975 classic, "Back to the Island."
Kevin Hogg
Cranbrook, BC
Canada

Winner: Detective 
Patricia wrote out the phrase 'It was a dark and stormy night' 
exactly seventy-two times, which was the same number of times she 
stabbed her now quickly-rotting husband, and the same number of 
pages she ripped out of 'He's Just Not That Into You' by Greg 
Behrendt to scatter around the room -- not because she was obsessive 
compulsive, or had any sentimental attachment to the number seventy-
two, but because she'd always wanted to give those quacks at CSI a 
hard time.
Kari A. Stiller
College Station, TX

Winner: Fantasy Fiction 
"Why does every task in the Realm of Zithanor have to be a quest?" 
Baldak of Erthorn, handyman to the Great Wizard Zarthon, asked 
rhetorically as he began his journey to find the Holy Hammer of 
Taloria and the Sacred Nail of Ikthillia so Baldak could hang one of 
Zarthon's mediocre watercolors, which was an art critique Baldak 
kept to himself unlike his predecessor, whom Zarthon turned into the 
Picture Frame of Torathank.
SSG Kevin Craver
Fort Polk, LA

Runner-Up
The dragon cast his wet, rheumy eyes, heavy-lidded with misery, over 
his kingdom-a malodorous, rot-ridden swamp, with moss cloaking 
brooding, gloomy cypresses, tree trunks like decayed teeth rising 
from stagnant ponds, creatures with mildewed fur and scales whom the 
meanest roadside zoo would have rejected--and hoped the 
antidepressants would kick in soon.
Constance Barrett
Ruby, NY 

Winner: Historical Fiction 
Sphincter, the gladiator, girded his loins in preparation for 
today's games, glad to be part of the season opener since he hadn't 
been sure until yesterday that his contract would be renewed, given 
his slump during the Germans-versus-lions series but he knew that 
swatting Germans into the lion's pit was trickier than it looked and 
he told the officials that they should look at his other stats, not 
just Huns batted in.
Robert Peltzer
Baltimore, MD

Runner-Up
A column of five hundred Roman foot soldiers - a column held 
together by the plaster of courage -- advanced on a teeming sea of 
rebellious slaves -- slaves who had, ironically, built most of 
Rome's columns, although they actually used lime and not plaster to 
cement the structures, and though it is perhaps more historically 
precise to describe the soldiers' column as bound by the lime of 
courage, that doesn't really have the same adventurous ring to it.
Mark Hawthorne
Rohnert Park, CA 

Dishonorable Mention 
"Wet leaves stuck to the spinning wagon wheels like feathers to a 
freshly tarred heretic, reminding those who watched them of the 
endless movement of the leafy earth-or so they would have, if only 
those fifteenth-century onlookers had believed that the earth 
actually rotated, which they didn't, which is why it was heretical 
to say that it did-and which is the reason why the wagon held a 
freshly tarred heretic in the first place."
Alf Seegert
Salt Lake City, UT

Winner: Purple Prose 
Horatio Keelhaul sailed buoyantly up Cutter Street ironclad in his 
resolve to torpedo the reviewer of his literary launches who 
threatened his Titanic reputation with accusations of relying solely 
on nautical parlance to propel his gondolaic characters through the 
sinuous canals of his plots.
Rick Holinger
Geneva, IL

Runner-Up
She walked toward him, her dress billowing in the wind -- not a calm 
and predictable billows like the sea, but more like the billowing of 
a mildewed shower curtain in a cheap motel where one has to dance 
around to avoid touching it while trying to rinse off soap.
Kristin Harbuck
Bozeman, MT

Dishonorable Mentions
"The night resembled nothing so much as the nose of a giant Labrador 
in excellent health: cold, black, and wet."
Devery Doleman
Brooklyn, NY

After months of pent-up emotions like a caffeine-addict trying to 
kick the habit, Cathy finally let the tears come, at first dripping 
sporadically like an old clogged percolator, then increasing slowly 
like a 10-cup coffeemaker with an automatic drip, and eventually 
pouring out and noisily wailing like a cappuccino maker complete 
with slurping froth.
Chris Bui
Pensacola, FL

After she realized the man she had fallen in love with was her long 
lost twin brother and they must break up immediately, they shared 
one last kiss that left a bitter yet sweet taste in her mouth--kind 
of like throwing up after eating a junior mint. 
Tami Farmer
Rome, GA 

The rising sun crawled over the ridge and slithered across the hot 
barren terrain into every nook and cranny like grease on a Denny's 
grill in the morning rush, but only until eleven o'clock when they 
switch to the lunch menu.
Lester Guyse
Portland, OR

Mitzi's wet T-shirt clung to her torso like paint on the nose cone 
of a jumbo jet.
James Macdonald
Vancouver, B.C., Canada 

Coincidentally, just as Rose hung out the third sheet out to dry, it 
started to rain down in sheets and not the soft kind like a fine 400-
count Egyptian cotton, but more harsh like a cheap poly blend but 
even so, Rose didn't notice as she was three sheets to the wind.
Barbara Bridges
Sierra Madre, CA 

The golden-haired dawn curled back the fading face of night in a 
perpetual coiffure like an Ace comb in God's hand parting the day, 
making pompadours of mountains, crew cuts of Kansas wheat fields, 
and trendy cuts of the oceans' rolling waves.
Gordon Grant
Savannah, GA

As the sun sank low beyond the glistening horizon, even that far 
into the dusk, the violent rays shot up from below, lighting up the 
undersides of the clouds in magnificent oranges and golds, turning 
the owls and bats and starlings black against the sky and sending 
chills through Myrna, who paused from squeezing the last lactic acid 
from the dripping curds inside the cheesecloth.
Ed Buhrer
Louisa, VA

Our fearless heroine (well, mostly fearless: she is deathly afraid 
of caterpillars, not the fuzzy little brown ones but the colossal 
green ones that terrorized her while she was playing in her 
grandmother's garden when she was just five or six years old, which, 
coincidentally, was also when she discovered that shaving cream 
really does not taste like whipped cream) awakened with a start.
Alison Heft
Lititz, PA

Winner: Romance 
Billy Bob gushed like a broken water main about his new love: "She's 
got long, beautiful, drain-clogging hair, more curves than an under-
the-sink water trap, and she moves with the ease of a motorized 
toilet snake through a four-inch sewer line, but what she sees in 
me, a simple plumber, I'll never know."
Glenn Lawrie
Chung-buk, South Korea

Runner-Up
"Oh my God!" Amber whispered as the compressor throbbed to life, 
shuddered rhythmically towards its inevitable conclusion, and shot 
ninety pounds of sultry air through custom-bored, cold-drawn, boss-
lock-fitted crimp-couplings as Chuck Key glanced up with a smile 
that only tire shop guys can smile.
Jere Hudson
Ashland, OR

Dishonorable Mentions
Sandra had waited and wished for Gary to come sweep her off her 
feet, feeling just like Lois Lane waiting for her handsome, 
masculine Superman to come fly her away from the humdrum of everyday 
life, but Gary had never come, and so she'd ended up with Herman, a 
man as bald as Lex Luthor with worse eyesight than Clark Kent and 
the maturity level of Jimmy Olsen.
Mary P. Potts
Bradenton, FL

Looking sideways at Thomas, Mireille slowly removed her scarf, 
waiting . . . hoping . . . praying that when he came close enough to 
smell the delectable fragrance of her long, luscious waves that he 
wasn't going to start sneezing or sniffling or rubbing his eyes, 
because those were tell-tale signs of his allergies acting up, and 
if they did, he would know that she had been out rolling around in 
the lavender fields with Luc again.
Keriann Noble
Murray, UT

Garwood dearly loved his time spent in the goat-house, where he 
could court Thordia-- regaling her with his prowess at treating goat-
udder growths, shoveling manure like a nuclear chemist trying to 
bottle the Christmas spirit, and making the precious fermented 
limburger of the lactate goat secretions.
Brendan Wright
Portland, OR 

Winner: Science Fiction
Long, long ago in a galaxy far away, in General Hospital born I was, 
and quite happy were my parents, but when a youngling still I was, 
moved we did. 
Mary Potts
Oneco, Fl

Spy: Winner 
The double agent looked up from his lunch of Mahi-Mahi and couscous 
and realized that he must escape from Walla Walla to Bora Bora to 
come face-to-face with his arch enemy by taking out his 30-30 and 
shooting off his nemesis' ear-to-ear grin so he could wave bye-bye 
to this duplicitous life, but the chances of him pulling this off 
were only so-so, much less than 50-50. 
Charles Jaworski
North Pole, AK

Winner: Vile Puns 
Falcon was her name and she was quite the bird of prey, sashaying 
past her adolescent admirers from one anchor store to another, past 
the kiosks where earrings longed to lie upon her lobes and 
sunglasses hoped to nestle on her nose, seemingly the beginning of a 
beautiful friendship with whomsoever caught the eye of the mall 
tease, Falcon.
Jay Dardenne
Baton Rouge, LA

Runner-Up: 
Max thought the night-time burglary at the California surfing museum 
would be a safe caper, but that was before he spotted the security 
cop riding a bull mastiff, blond hair blowing in the wind, and 
noticed the blue-and-white sign wired to the cyclone fence, "Guard 
dude on doggy."
Jim Dehn
Clovis, CA

Winner: Western 
As soon as Sherriff Russell heard Bradshaw say, "This town ain't big 
enough for the both of us," he inadvertantly visualized a tiny chalk-
line circle with a town sign that said 'population 1,' and the two 
of them both trying to stand inside of it rather ineffectively, 
leaning this way and that, trying to keep their balance without 
stepping outside of the line, and that was why he was smiling when 
Bradshaw shot him.
Keriann Noble
Murray, UT

Runner-Up: 
It was high noon as Dusty rode into town, slumped low in the saddle 
on a horse so blinded by thirst from their long days in the desert 
that you could follow their slow shuffle to the local tavern by the 
hollow sound of a horse head against the worn clapboard buildings 
that lined the town's only road.
Chip Haynes
Clearwater, FL

Miscellaneous Dishonorable Mentions 
For the fifteenth time that evening my narcoleptic lover opened his 
eyes, smiled at me, and said, "Good morning!" 
Becca Mallary
Bradford, VT 

The assassin drew his dagger - a simple line drawing in black ink on 
rose-tinted vellum. 
Mike Bender
Portland, OR 

Inside his cardboard box, Greg heated a dented can of Spaghetti-O's 
over a small fire made from discarded newspapers, then cracked open 
his last can of shoplifted generic beer to celebrate the 10th 
anniversary of his embarkation on a career as a freelance writer. 
Lawrence Person
Austin, TX 

Derwin Thoryndike vowed to place a 14-carat engagement ring on the 
finger of Glenda-Sue Ellington, so now all he had to do was save up 
enough money to buy the ring, get it inscribed, and then locate a 
person named Glenda-Sue Ellington and convince her to marry him. 
Harvey McCluskey
Vancouver WA 

James found "Spider-Man 2" to be quite an average movie, like a 
superhero episode of "Dawson's Creek," but not from the excellent 
first season, nor from the horrible final seasons, but rather from 
somewhere in the mid-run of the show, when it wasn't as good as it 
used to be but it didn't totally suck yet. 
Edo Steinberg
Beer-Sheva, Israel

Rocko Gallante was as slick as a broken egg on a linoleum floor and 
as polished as a Washington apple that had been spit on and rubbed 
to a gleaming finish on the tail of a very clean shirt. 
Claudia Fields
Santa Barbara, CA 

I peeled my body off the alcohol-soaked carpet, spat the cigarette 
butts out of my mouth, licked my lips with a tongue that felt and 
tasted like a rat that had been lightly sauteed in lighter fluid, 
and after struggling to what a quick visual inspection confirmed 
were apparently my feet, decided that the next time a seven- foot-
tall Lebanese fisherman called Bottomless Mary challenged me to an 
ouzo-drinking contest I wouldn't wear suede shoes.
Geoff Blackwell
Bundaberg QLD Australia

They ask me if it was dark that night the hyenas showed up and ate 
the little beagle as he sat typing away on his dog house and then 
ate all the little round-faced kids, and I tell 'em, "no," it was 
not even stormy, kind of a calm, half-moon lit night where you'd sit 
on your deck having some peanuts, until the hyenas arrived of course 
and then it got so noisy you had to go in the house.
Bill Crowley
Santa Rosa, CA

It was Angela's 96th birthday party, and as she leaned over to blow 
out the candles on her cake and thought back on her long, long life, 
the children she'd given birth to, the man she had married and then 
sadly buried, she thought to herself, well no matter what at least 
I've grown old with dignity, then the nursing home attendant pointed 
out that her breasts were dipping in the trifle bowl again.
Micheal Rossiter
Usworth, Washington, Tyne and Wear
England

A warning to the reader: Tom dies in the end of the story so don't 
get too attached to him.
Sam Gerring
Lexington, KY 

"So you see" concluded Lance "there are certain things that every 
woman regardless of personal situation should do at least once in 
their lives and I am foremost amongst these things."
Hywel Curtis
Abercarn, Caerphilly
Wales

During the entire exhilarating, bright and lively day in the summer 
of the year, when the clouds passed like cotton puffs high in the 
heavens, I had been passing alone, in my Alfa Romeo, through 
exceptionally appealing countryside; and finally found myself, in 
the gloaming of the day, within view of the cheery prospect of the 
House of Sol Asher, my old friend and haberdasher. (Apologies to 
E.A.P.)
Gordon Grant
Savannah, GA 

Charles stuck his head out the window, not fully realizing that the 
salt air and warm breeze would have no beneficial effect on a head 
severed and shrunk in Borneo and sold on a stick to tourists in 
Bali, and with little thought of the irony of the former 
missionary's vacant gaze on a nude beach with at least two couples 
in the missionary position.
Mark D. Harmon
Knoxville, TN 

Anyone with a less refined air of unabashed insouciance would not 
have been able to so easily slip through the security cordon, charm 
their way past the armed guards, breeze through the marbled 
reception area and blithely enter the inner sanctum of the UN 
Security Council and there successfully negotiate an end to all 
conflict in the Middle East, but that was the sort of man Nigel 
Simpkins was.
David Lindley 
Sheffield
England

We crossed America that week, the red states melding into the blue 
states like stomped grapes along our route, leaving our tires with a 
stain not unlike the stains on Lucy Ricardo's feet when she stomped 
grapes during the "I Love Lucy" episode in which the Ricardos and 
the Mertzes visited Italy.
Audrey Jordan
Hope, IN

You could tell it was going to be a perfect beach day, maybe the 
best one all summer -- when the air is the temperature of a 
gymnasium locker room and the sea sways over the dunes like a yoga 
instructor doing the downward facing dog.
Rita Kasperek
Oakland, CA 

She was standing weepily at her father's grave in the old family 
cemetery, where the ancient headstones tipped and tumbled like a 
flock of spring lambs, when she raised her weary eyes to see a 
shirtless man, his mighty thighs clutching the loins of a raging 
steed whose breath came hot as a desert wind, and made a mental note 
to get her hairdryer repaired.
Nancy Lee
Chapel Hill, NC

The wheel of love had left its treadmarks in his chest once too 
often, like a knobby mud tire on a monster truck, or like a really 
big ponce wheel, the kind that tailors use to punch little holes in 
patterns and that would leave lots of nasty little welts if you were 
to run it up and down your arm.
Peter Loughlin
Santa Rosa CA 

She was independent and impetuous and winning her heart would be 
like capturing lightning in a bottle, not the plastic kind that is 
prevalent everywhere today but the glass kind that I used to buy 
crème soda in at the service station, when they were actually 
SERVICE STATIONS, two blocks from my house back in the 50's and 
early 60's and I would return them for two cents deposit which was a 
quick source of income back then because my allowance was only ten 
cents a week. 
Mario Martinez
San Jose, Ca.

In considering the wisdom of entering upon an affair of the heart 
with the redoubtable Miss Ffiona Sensuosa, MacFadden Perfidy weighed 
the undeniable erotic advantages of such a confluence of 
physiologically coinciding characteristics against the demonstrably 
unfortunate fact of her exhibiting pronounced advantages over him in 
terms of wealth, intelligence and personality, and concluded that 
their union could possibly be inadvisable.
Stuart K. Allison
Driffield, East Riding of Yorkshire
England







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