"The valley ran from the northwest to the southeast, out of tumbled choppy loess hills, and into the scree and badlands that ran down to the river."
-The Forge, CHAPTER FOURTEEN, p. 249.
("Badlands" is one of those words that I read, get some very loose idea of its meaning from the context, then google and learn that it has a geographically precise meaning.)
"...the load of the flame-fougasse; liquid bitumen, tar, naphtha, sulphur, and the thick green vile-smelling oil rendered down from the greasy flesh of the avocat fish." (p. 254)
(Flame-fougasse is not to be confused with fougasse which would have belonged on our Food Thread.)
The avocat fish earns its keep as a pungent background detail. See Avocati and, in particular, its combox discussion
Addendum a few minutes later: Here is a term that I had never encountered before - "'...quaker cannon.'" (p. 256)
1 comment:
Kaor, Paul!
I had not known, before I clicked on the link, that "badlands" had such a precise technical meaning.
It was interesting to find out the flame-fougasse used by Raj Whitehall went back to WW II Britain.
And somehow I missed "quaker cannon" yet again!
Sean
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