I have a poor memory, or rather one that seems bent on remembering tons of trivia instead of the poems I love and useful data, lol So when I do remember a line from anything (or its title!), it means something.
In this case it has been years since I touched the book, and yet the moment I saw this topic, among the hundred books I've read, it came right back to me that THIS one had an opening paragraph worth looking around my dusty bookshelves.
Imagine opening the book and coming across the first paragraph, like this.
"Once a thing is known it can never be unknown. It can only be forgotten. And, in a way that bends time, so long as it is remembered, it will indicate the future. It is wiser, in every circumstance, to forget, to cultivate the art of forgetting. To remember is to face the enemy. The truth lies in remembering.
My name is Frances Hinston and I do not like to be called Fanny. I work in the reference library of ...."
Anita Brookner - "Look at me"
A. Brookner is one of these incredible British writers who excel at studying people (I'm not British but I'm biased in their favour, lol. Don't mind me, I like others too
). Here in a few sentences one has the gist of the book: a ordinary story on unrequited love, a study in character, and a few times across the book, a sudden plunge into something much deeper where the main character's suffering is never directly expressed but reaches to you in a very quiet and composed voice.
Not only that, but you know from the start not to be fooled, because this seemingly innocuous story on ordinary people is written by someone with a very sharp eye and mind.
Can you tell I was entirely hooked by that beginning?
Athanasia