Tak! quoted City of Pearl by Karen Traviss (The Wess'har Wars, #1)
The bot was immune to the snow, and so was Aras.
— City of Pearl by Karen Traviss (The Wess'har Wars, #1)
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The bot was immune to the snow, and so was Aras.
— City of Pearl by Karen Traviss (The Wess'har Wars, #1)
By the time Professor Richard Lovell found his way through Canton’s narrow alleys to the faded address in his diary, the boy was the only one in the house left alive.
— Babel: Or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution by R.F. Kuang
The bells of the Palace of Stars were barely audible outside its walls.
— At the Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard (Lays of the Hearth-Fire, #2)
Just realized I forgot #OpeningSentence
In Siberia, the thawing ground was a ceiling on the verge of collapse, sodden with ice melt and the mammoth detritus of prehistory.
“Eighteen!” bellowed Viv, bringing her saber around in a flat curve that battered the wight’s skull off its spine.
And so it was that my mother went into labor while sitting astride the donkey that was carrying her from the city to our village.
— Wondrous Journeys In Strange Lands by Sonia Nimr, Marcia Lynx Qualey
A few years back I was running out of money so I volunteered for a research study at the University of Pennsylvania.
She lived where the railway tracks met the saltpan, on the Ahri side of the shadowline.
— The Border Keeper by Kerstin Hall (Mkalis Cycle, #1)
While the sisters of the Our Lady of Impossible Constellations argued themselves in circles, the Reverend Mother sat silently in her chair at the head of the chapel as she always did, listening to the arguments twist and double back on themselves.
— Sisters of the Vast Black by Lina Rather (Our Lady of Endless Worlds, #1)
The first time Isabel heard a voice in her head, she’d tried to talk back.
— The Colours of Death by Patricia Marques (Inspector Reis, #1)
Dr. Bharadwaj told me once that she thought I hated planets because of the whole thing with being considered expendable and the possibility of being abandoned. I told her it was because planets were boring.
— System Collapse by Martha Wells (The Murderbot Diaries, #7)
Basit Deniau's greatest architectural triumph is the house he died in.
— Rose/House by Arkady Martine
Now, standing in front of the tower, it was far too real.
— The Warden by Daniel M. Ford (The Warden, #1)
Her name was Dumai, from an ancient word for a dream that ends too soon.
— A Day of Fallen Night by Samantha Shannon (The Roots of Chaos, #0)
I’m really not supposed to be doing this, but a girl’s gotta get paid.