Vertel uw vrienden over dit artikel:
Bunker Bean Harry Leon Wilson
Bunker Bean
Harry Leon Wilson
A rustling of papers from the opposite side of the desk promised a diversion of his thoughts. Bean was a hireling and the person who rustled the papers was his master, but the youth bestowed upon the great man a look of profound, albeit not unkindly, contempt. It could be seen, even as he sat in the desk-chair, that he was a short man; not an inch better than Bean, there. He was old. Bean, when he thought of the matter, was satisfied to guess him as something between fifty and eighty. He didn't know and didn't care how many might be the years of little Jim Breede. Breede was the most negligible person he knew. He was nearly nothing, in Bean's view, if you came right down to it. Besides being of too few inches for a man and unspeakably old, he was unsightly. Nothing of the Gordon Dane about Breede. The little hair left him was an atrocious foggy gray; never in order, never combed, Bean thought. The brows were heavy, and still curiously dark, which made them look threatening. The eyes were the coldest of gray, a match for the hair in colour, and set far back in caverns.
| Media | Boeken Paperback Book (Boek met zachte kaft en gelijmde rug) |
| Vrijgegeven | 29 augustus 2017 |
| ISBN13 | 9781975755041 |
| Uitgevers | Createspace Independent Publishing Platf |
| Pagina's | 200 |
| Afmetingen | 152 × 229 × 11 mm · 272 g |
| Taal en grammatica | Engels |
Meer door Harry Leon Wilson
Alles tonenMeer uit deze serie
Bekijk alles van Harry Leon Wilson ( bijv. Paperback Book , Hardcover Book en Book )