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Max Allan Collins

Max Allan CollinsCSI: Kanıt Peşinde - Günah Şehri yazarı
Yazar
9.0/10
20 Kişi
71
Okunma
3
Beğeni
1.104
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Max Allan Collins Sözleri ve Alıntıları

Max Allan Collins sözleri ve alıntılarını, Max Allan Collins kitap alıntılarını, Max Allan Collins en etkileyici cümleleri ve paragragları 1000Kitap'ta bulabilirsiniz.
Usta kriminolog, üçüncü dereceden bilimsel bir yaklaşımla fiziksel delilleri konuşturuyor; kan,silahlar,uyuşturucu,saç,iplik,metal parçalar,lastik izleri,aletlerin bıraktığı işaretler ve mermilerden itiraflar çıkartıyor.
Sayfa 9 - jack webbKitabı okudu
"Aşk , birçok katilin , tercih yapması için motivasyon nedenidir ."
Sayfa 80 - İnkılâp
Reklam
Üzüntü değil ... üzüntüyle başa çıkabilirim . Peki ya ümit ?
Sayfa 85 - İnkılâp
As if searching for escaped prisoners, floodlights swept across a desert dig at Hamanaptra, aiding a starry night whose full moon had already painted the ruins of the City of the Dead with a patina of ivory.
“Baby,” he said tenderly, “you got more guts than sense.”
Bowing to her, but keeping his fiery-eyed gaze on the turbaned intruders, the dark-garbed warrior said, "Perhaps explanations are best saved for later."
Reklam
Rick O'Connell and Ardeth Bay—the former with a shotgun in hand, the latter lugging his cherished Thompson submachine gun—were creeping through the museum's second-floor gallery. A crack of thunder made them both start, and they exchanged small nervous smiles.
Another voice—a deep, sand-papery voice— boomed through the chamber: "I think not!" Alex looked past his mother, who also glanced toward the source of the words, and saw a solemn, dark-robed, dark-garbed, angular-faced, trimly bearded desert warrior—his cheekbones touched with strange puzzle-like tattoos. He had come from somewhere, from anywhere, as if he'd materialized.
.. Evelyn's view of the room, in a flicker of torchlight, changed, fantastically, as if she had been catapulted thousands of years into the past, the small alcove suddenly, gloriously new, the hieroglyphs vivid, golden glittering furnishings adorning what was clearly an elaborate antechamber. A beautiful woman—a shapely young Egyptian princess in headdress and golden jeweled jewelry and clinging gown—moved through a doorway into the antechamber. The woman's head was lowered; Evelyn could not see her face, but did glimpse the larger, even more opulent chamber beyond, where two massive, fearsome warriors with swords and shields stood at either side of a small, ornate, gold-encrusted chest. Closing the door behind her, the princess locked it by twisting a sundial mechanism—twice to the right, once to the left. Strangely, Rick was in this vision of the chamber room as well, a jarring modern-day presence, but apparently oblivious to this manifestation of opulence ... a fact which he confirmed by walking straight through the princess, as if she were a ghost!
Reklam
What the hell is it?” O’Connell asked. “A sarcophagus,” she said. The dust was clearing. “Buried in the shadow of Anubis, at the feet of the god. Whoever this was must have been a personage of great importance.”
Around them the droning chant of the priests continued; the beating of her heart in its canopic jar grew louder, as if the organ were anticipating its own return to the home in her lovely breast, providing a drumbeat to their tuneless song.
"Rise up!" someone was saying in ancient Egyptian. The Curator—reading from The Book of the Dead! Like a minister reading from the Bible to his congregation, the Curator held open in his hands the massive black volume whose obsidian covers were disturbingly similar to the stone imprisoning Imhotep. "Rise up!" the dark little man said, his voice resounding through the room. "Rise up!"
Ardeth Bay sighed dramatically. “You were told to leave, or die. You refused. And now you may have killed us all—and many more. You have unleashed the evil we have held at bay for more than three thousand years.”
The Arab strode forward, approaching the little group; then, planting his feet in the sand, he held out his arm, stiffly, crying out, "Horus!" On the similarly outstretched arm of another of the Med-jai commanders sat a large, regal falcon, who at Ardeth Bay's command, took flight and flew to the Med-jai chieftain, landing nimbly on his waiting arm. Jonathan said to the warrior, "A humanizing touch, that—you having a pet bird." Lovingly, Ardeth Bay stroked the feathers of the falcon. "Horus is no pet. He is my best friend, my most clever friend. It is Horus who will let the commanders know of our progress, so that they may follow, at a distance."
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