A is for Brian: A 65th Birthday Present for Brian W. Aldiss from His Family, Friends, Colleagues and AdmirersFrank Hatherley, Margaret Aldiss, Malcolm Edwards Avernus, 1990 - 126 sider |
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Side 29
... passed . His glance dropped to the book that lay open and ne- glected in his lap . Even the titles of his own ... passing , dismissing it as " an automated example of the pathetic fallacy " . We know better . We have Class Three brains ...
... passed . His glance dropped to the book that lay open and ne- glected in his lap . Even the titles of his own ... passing , dismissing it as " an automated example of the pathetic fallacy " . We know better . We have Class Three brains ...
Side 57
... passed the sign , breathless and hot and with the wind ice - cold on my face , turned around , and there was nothing . There was never anything behind me , there was only myself running after me , reaching out arms in a mute and futile ...
... passed the sign , breathless and hot and with the wind ice - cold on my face , turned around , and there was nothing . There was never anything behind me , there was only myself running after me , reaching out arms in a mute and futile ...
Side 83
... passed over . It should not have been : it is the kind of novel that serves as a focal point on a major writer's corpus . Nor was it even mentioned in dis- patches as a wrongful omission ... a perennial feature of , e.g. , the Booker ...
... passed over . It should not have been : it is the kind of novel that serves as a focal point on a major writer's corpus . Nor was it even mentioned in dis- patches as a wrongful omission ... a perennial feature of , e.g. , the Booker ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
admire alien arrived asked Author became began birthday body bored Brian Aldiss called convention course Dako dark daughter dead don't door Dranitzk drink Elizabeth English explain face figures friends gave give gone hand happened hard head hope human idea imagination interested It's knew lady late later laughed least Leor less letter literary lives look machine Margaret mean memories mention mind myths never night novel once Oxford passed past present published remember science fiction seemed seen sense short smiled sound started stop story sure surprised talk tell thing thought tion told took true turned understand voice waiting watched woman wonderful write written young