From John Ford to Kazuo Ishiguro, here are 10 examples of sentences as titles. Got any more?
'Tis Pity She's a Whore, by John Ford
The title of Ford's tragedy of sexual jealousy and incestuous passion is also its closing statement. After a final bloodbath, the Cardinal pronounces judgment on Annabella, who has had carnal relations with her brother and then been killed by him: "Of one so young, so rich in nature's store, / Who could not say, 'tis pity she's a whore?"
He Knew He Was Right, by Anthony Trollope
Trollope found a brilliant title for his tale of male jealousy, stuffed with references to Othello. Louis Trevelyan becomes convinced that his young wife Emily is carrying on with a male admirer (she isn't). He is driven madder and madder by his suspicions, separating from his wife and stealing their son from her.
The Sun Also Rises, by Ernest Hemingway
Having stuck a thoroughly gloomy Gertrude Stein aperçu about a "lost generation" at the head of this story of émigrés in France and Spain in the 1920s, Hemingway balanced it with a passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes which broadly means "life goes on". Its modernised version became the book's title.
The Lady's Not for Burning, by Christopher Fry
Fry's verse drama is the origin of the least understood literary allusion in the history of political rhetoric, Mrs Thatcher's famous declaration "The lady's not for turning" in 1980. Fry's unlikely comedy is set in the late middle ages, its title referring to the beautiful Jennet, who is sentenced to burning for being a witch, but who is fancied by most of the male characters.
I Capture the Castle, by Dodie Smith
Via the teenage Cassandra's journal we get the misadventures of the castle-dwelling but impecunious Mortmain family (Dad is an author with writer's block). The title refers to Cassandra's ambition, as an aspiring writer, to "capture" everything she sees in her journal – and also to her trick of locking her father in a tower to get him to write.
We Never Make Mistakes, by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
In this unconsoling pair of stories, the nightmare of Stalinism (asserted in the title) is treated obliquely. In the first, a "good Communist" army officer has to decide whether to turn a "lost" soldier over to the authorities. In the second, a former political prisoner takes up residence with an impoverished old woman who has been betrayed by the system.
We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea, by Arthur Ransome
Ransome's title parodies the excuse you might make for badly behaved youngsters. The Swallows' mother allows them to go sailing provided they promise not to go out to sea, but, after a series of accidents, their boat drifts out of the mouth of the river ...
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, by Tom Stoppard
Two minor characters from Hamlet become the baffled protagonists of Stoppard's play, which takes its title from an announcement made by the English Ambassador at the end of Shakespeare's tragedy. They have been killed as a result of Hamlet's "commandment", bamboozled victims of a court plot.
We Need to Talk about Kevin, by Lionel Shriver
Why is this title so good? Perhaps because of the grim humour of it. Kevin's mother, Eva, writes letters to her apparently estranged husband about her growing awareness that there is something very wrong with their son.
Never Let Me Go, by Kazuo Ishiguro
You cannot guess the meaning of Ishiguro's title until you read the book. Kathy H recalls her days at a very special school, whose pupils have been selected by criteria that slowly become clear. The title is the refrain of an old pop song with which the narrator becomes obsessed.
The title of Ford's tragedy of sexual jealousy and incestuous passion is also its closing statement. After a final bloodbath, the Cardinal pronounces judgment on Annabella, who has had carnal relations with her brother and then been killed by him: "Of one so young, so rich in nature's store, / Who could not say, 'tis pity she's a whore?"
He Knew He Was Right, by Anthony Trollope
Trollope found a brilliant title for his tale of male jealousy, stuffed with references to Othello. Louis Trevelyan becomes convinced that his young wife Emily is carrying on with a male admirer (she isn't). He is driven madder and madder by his suspicions, separating from his wife and stealing their son from her.
The Sun Also Rises, by Ernest Hemingway
Having stuck a thoroughly gloomy Gertrude Stein aperçu about a "lost generation" at the head of this story of émigrés in France and Spain in the 1920s, Hemingway balanced it with a passage from the Book of Ecclesiastes which broadly means "life goes on". Its modernised version became the book's title.
The Lady's Not for Burning, by Christopher Fry
Fry's verse drama is the origin of the least understood literary allusion in the history of political rhetoric, Mrs Thatcher's famous declaration "The lady's not for turning" in 1980. Fry's unlikely comedy is set in the late middle ages, its title referring to the beautiful Jennet, who is sentenced to burning for being a witch, but who is fancied by most of the male characters.
I Capture the Castle, by Dodie Smith
Via the teenage Cassandra's journal we get the misadventures of the castle-dwelling but impecunious Mortmain family (Dad is an author with writer's block). The title refers to Cassandra's ambition, as an aspiring writer, to "capture" everything she sees in her journal – and also to her trick of locking her father in a tower to get him to write.
We Never Make Mistakes, by Alexander Solzhenitsyn
In this unconsoling pair of stories, the nightmare of Stalinism (asserted in the title) is treated obliquely. In the first, a "good Communist" army officer has to decide whether to turn a "lost" soldier over to the authorities. In the second, a former political prisoner takes up residence with an impoverished old woman who has been betrayed by the system.
We Didn't Mean to Go to Sea, by Arthur Ransome
Ransome's title parodies the excuse you might make for badly behaved youngsters. The Swallows' mother allows them to go sailing provided they promise not to go out to sea, but, after a series of accidents, their boat drifts out of the mouth of the river ...
Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, by Tom Stoppard
Two minor characters from Hamlet become the baffled protagonists of Stoppard's play, which takes its title from an announcement made by the English Ambassador at the end of Shakespeare's tragedy. They have been killed as a result of Hamlet's "commandment", bamboozled victims of a court plot.
We Need to Talk about Kevin, by Lionel Shriver
Why is this title so good? Perhaps because of the grim humour of it. Kevin's mother, Eva, writes letters to her apparently estranged husband about her growing awareness that there is something very wrong with their son.
Never Let Me Go, by Kazuo Ishiguro
You cannot guess the meaning of Ishiguro's title until you read the book. Kathy H recalls her days at a very special school, whose pupils have been selected by criteria that slowly become clear. The title is the refrain of an old pop song with which the narrator becomes obsessed.
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