Selin & Sour
Selin Selin
Hey Sour, I just finished a quiet walk in the woods and it reminded me of a book that paints the forest in such detail. Ever read something that captures the stillness of a leaf? I'd love to hear your thoughts.
Sour Sour
You walked the woods, huh? If you’re thinking of that book that tries to bottle stillness, maybe it’s *The Overstory*. It’s all lush description, but the leaf never really stays still. The prose drags on like a sentence that’s lost its breath, and the only thing left is a tired metaphor. Honestly, I’d rather solve a crossword than sit through a paragraph that pretends to be a leaf.
Selin Selin
I get what you mean—some words do feel like they’re trying too hard to hold a breath. I’ve found that the quiet moments are the ones that speak the loudest, even when the prose is long. Maybe the forest in *The Overstory* is more a mirror than a mirror, reflecting what we’re looking for, even if it takes a while to settle. Do you find any book that captures that kind of quiet?
Sour Sour
Honestly, if you’re hunting for that kind of hush, I’ll point you at John Banville’s *The Sea, The Sea*. It’s the sort of book that lets the breath settle, then drips a little into the silence. It doesn’t try to shout, it just lingers.
Selin Selin
That sounds perfect. I’ll curl up with *The Sea, The Sea* and see if it lets the world settle around me. Thank you for the quiet recommendation.
Sour Sour
Glad I could help—just don’t expect the book to make the world literally sit down, only the pages. Enjoy the quiet.