tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7119990365479009764.post4740893809534142765..comments2024-03-14T18:09:09.667-05:00Comments on Do Some Damage: Sensawonder: Can Mystery Have It?Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7119990365479009764.post-84931448193239055362012-02-18T11:18:15.810-05:002012-02-18T11:18:15.810-05:00I think it's possible, though it's difficu...I think it's possible, though it's difficult. I got a bit of a similar sensation while reading John Connolly's THE BLACK ANGEL. <br /><br />Much of it has to do with setting, and the settings of mysteries are, often of necessity, not the kinds of places where a sense of wonder kicks in.<br /><br />As for real life, I still get it. Standing outside with binoculars watching a lunar eclipse, during thunderstorms, and after last summer's earthquake, when I had time to think of how far away the actual event had taken place and what had to happen for it to shake my house as it did. (This was after I changed by shorts, of course.)Dana Kinghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01350344882342624735noreply@blogger.com