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Claude Monet
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  • He told me and Jessica about it during our Monet's Garden Café period.†   (source)
  • I'm afraid to look, but I wonder if people in Monet's are staring at me.†   (source)
  • I head to the back of Monet's, toward the closed door that leads to the patio.†   (source)
  • That afternoon at Monet's was a relief for all three of us.†   (source)
  • Like the two women pictured on the flyer at Monet's.†   (source)
  • But there, at Monet's, no one knew where that meeting would lead.†   (source)
  • But we got to know each other at Monet's.†   (source)
  • But Monet's truly filled whatever void needed filling at the time.†   (source)
  • With all the time Hannah spent at Monet's, maybe she wrote something in here.†   (source)
  • I've only been to Monet's a few times, but I think it's on the street the bus is going down now.†   (source)
  • I open the patio door at Monet's, careful not to spill any more of my coffee.†   (source)
  • On that first day at Monet's, he had been checking one of us out.†   (source)
  • Fifteen minutes later, a bus drives by the front door of Monet's and the waiting is over.†   (source)
  • I push open the heavy wood-and-glass door to Monet's.†   (source)
  • The first boy she kissed kissing the girl who slapped her at Monet's.†   (source)
  • She didn't say where or why, but I knew she meant Monet's ... and I thought I knew why.†   (source)
  • If one of us had a hard time fitting in or meeting people, we'd go to Monet's.†   (source)
  • Tyler put it in the scribble book at Monet's.†   (source)
  • At Monet's, they serve them with tiny marshmallows floating on top.†   (source)
  • Just knowing I'd be going to Monet's to write poetry made the days more bearable.†   (source)
  • Across the room, Monet's bookshelf is loaded with old books.†   (source)
  • Sometimes I would stop by Monet's for a hot chocolate on my way home.†   (source)
  • A couple days a week, after school, I'd go to Monet's and write a poem or two.†   (source)
  • But those first few weeks, until we each peeled away, Monet's Garden was our safe haven.†   (source)
  • In the photo at Monet's, Hannah's hair was long.†   (source)
  • They looked at Monet and decided that he needed to get to a hospital.†   (source)
  • Monet and his friend had a flashlight, and they walked back into the cave to see where it went.†   (source)
  • Monet and his friend stopped at the park gate to pay their entrance fees.†   (source)
  • We made a camp in the same meadow where Charles Monet had camped.†   (source)
  • Monet has been transformed into a human virus bomb.†   (source)
  • It was as if Monet had become a corpse before his death.†   (source)
  • A life form had acquired Charles Monet as a host, and it was replicating.†   (source)
  • We sat at a small table, and he told me about the Monet and Musoke cases.†   (source)
  • Monet and his friend wandered through the cave, shining their lights on the petrified rain forest.†   (source)
  • Monet's coma deepened, and he never regained consciousness.†   (source)
  • Charles Monet returned to his job at the pump house at the sugar factory.†   (source)
  • Monet's stomach feels a little better now.†   (source)
  • Charles Monet had been an Exocet missile that struck the hospital below the water line.†   (source)
  • Monet's friend dropped out of sight for several years after that trip to Mount Elgon.†   (source)
  • Monet maintains silence, waiting to receive attention.†   (source)
  • The airsickness bag is brimming with black vomit, so Monet closes the bag and rolls up the top.†   (source)
  • Meanwhile, something was making copies of itself inside Monet.†   (source)
  • That might be the neighborhood where Charles Monet's girlfriends had lived, who knows.†   (source)
  • The black vomit blew up around the scope and out of Monet's mouth.†   (source)
  • Monet and his friend spent the whole of New Year's Day there.†   (source)
  • Extreme amplification has occurred in Monet, and the sign of it is the black vomit.†   (source)
  • Perhaps Monet and Cardinal were bitten by spiders.†   (source)
  • Thurmont, Maryland, nearly four years after the death of Charles Monet.†   (source)
  • Charles Monet and the life form inside him had entered the net.†   (source)
  • Monet's Water Lilies.†   (source)
  • For Jessica, it was easier to think of me as Bad Hannah than as the Hannah she got to know at Monet's.†   (source)
  • Then Jessica stopped going, and though I went to Monet's a few more times hoping one of them might wander in, eventually I stopped going, too.†   (source)
  • When Tyler heard this, was he sitting here at Monet's, trying to look calm while sweating up a storm?†   (source)
  • And we got to know Alex at Monet's.†   (source)
  • After peeling away from our oily-oily-oxen free group at Monet's, Alex started hanging out with Marcus.†   (source)
  • Monet's Garden Cafe & Coffeehouse.†   (source)
  • And after Monet's?†   (source)
  • I reach Monet's.†   (source)
  • Back to Monet's?†   (source)
  • Monet and his friend continued deeper into the cave, descending a slope, until they came to a pillar that seemed to support the roof.†   (source)
  • He found Monet lying on the gurney.†   (source)
  • On the seventh day after his New Year's visit to Kitum Cave—January 8, 1980—Monet felt a throbbing pain behind his eyeballs.†   (source)
  • When the crow was hungry, it would land on the veranda and walk in- doors, and Monet would feed it scraps of food from his table.†   (source)
  • Did Monet put his hand in the ooze?†   (source)
  • Monet stared redly at Dr. Musoke, but there was no movement in the eyeballs, and the pupils were dilated.†   (source)
  • Monet worked hard in the pump house during the week, and on his weekends and holidays he would visit forested areas near the sugar factory.†   (source)
  • It could be said that the who of Charles Monet has already died while the what of Charles Monet continues to live.†   (source)
  • The Marburg in his blood had come from Charles Monet's black vomit and perhaps originally from Kitum Cave.†   (source)
  • He leaned down until his face was a few inches away from Monet's face, and he looked into Monet's mouth in order to judge the position of the scope.†   (source)
  • Perhaps Monet stood on the grass at the stroke of midnight and looked at the stars—neck bent backward, unsteady on his feet from the champagne.†   (source)
  • Monet has crashed and is bleeding out.†   (source)
  • The doctors at the hospital examined Monet, and could not come up with any explanation for what had happened to his eyes or his face or his mind.†   (source)
  • Monet's history is a little obscure.†   (source)
  • (Presumably reactive against the Kitum Cave strain, which had started with Charles Monet and jumped into Dr. Musoke's eyes in the black vomit.)†   (source)
  • This crow was a friendly, intelligent bird that liked to perch on the roof of Monet's bungalow and watch his comings and goings.†   (source)
  • I was the woman with Charles Monet."†   (source)
  • When Monet failed to show up for work, his colleagues began to wonder about him, and eventually they went to his bungalow to see if he was all right.†   (source)
  • Not long after Charles Monet died, it was established that the family of filoviruses comprised Marburg along with two types of a virus called Ebola.†   (source)
  • After erupting in Charles Monet and Dr. Shem Musoke, Marburg dropped out of sight, and no one could say where it had gone.†   (source)
  • Monet suddenly jerked and thrashed.†   (source)
  • The paths of Charles Monet and Peter Cardinal had crossed at only one place on earth, and that was inside Kitum Cave.†   (source)
  • Then he slid the scope over Monet's tongue and pushed the tongue out of the way so that he could see down the airway past the epiglottis, a dark hole leading inward to the lungs.†   (source)
  • Nurses and aides came running, pushing a gurney along with them, and they lifted Charles Monet onto the gurney and wheeled him into the intensive care unit at Nairobi Hospital.†   (source)
  • A Kenyan doctor who had investigated the Monet case happened to be drinking a beer in the bar, and he struck up an idle conversation with her and mentioned Monet's name.†   (source)
  • A monkey or perhaps a baboon—no one seems to remember—used to hang out around the gate, looking for handouts, and Monet enticed the animal to sit on his shoulder by offering it a banana.†   (source)
  • It turned out that a large part of the hospital's staff had had direct contact with either Monet or Musoke or with blood samples and fluids that came from the two patients.†   (source)
  • Monet and his friend drove in a Land Rover up the long, straight red-dirt road that leads to Endebess Bluff, a prominent cliff on the eastern side of the volcano.†   (source)
  • So Charles Monet is sitting on a bench in Casualty, and he does not look very much different from anyone else in the room, except for his bruised, expressionless face and his red eyes.†   (source)
  • A sign by a glass door says CASUALTY DEPT. Monet hands the driver some money and gets out of the taxi and opens the glass door and goes over to the reception window and indicates that he is very ill.†   (source)
  • The Flying Doctors, an air-ambulance service, picked him up, and he was flown to Nairobi and rushed to Nairobi Hospital, where he came under the care of Dr. David Silverstein, who had also taken care of Dr. Musoke after Charles Monet had spewed the black vomit into Musoke's eyes.†   (source)
  • The case of Charles Monet emerges in a cold geometry of clinical fact mixed with flashes of horror so brilliant and disturbing that we draw back and blink, as if we are staring into a discolored alien sun.†   (source)
  • Charles Monet was a loner.†   (source)
  • In the afternoon, it would have rained, as it usually does on Mount Elgon, and so Monet and his friend would have stayed in their tent, and perhaps they made love while a thunderstorm hammered the canvas.†   (source)
  • Dr. Musoke ripped open Monet's shirt so that he could observe any rise and fall of the chest, and he stood at the head of the gurney and bent over Monet's face until he was looking directly into his eyes, upside down.†   (source)
  • Not many tourists visit Mount Elgon, so Monet and his friend were probably driving the only vehicle on the road, although there would have been crowds of people walking on foot, villagers who cultivate small farms on the lower slopes of the mountain.†   (source)
  • The Friendship drones through the clouds, following the length of the Rift Valley, and Monet slumps back in the seat, and now he seems to be dozing....Perhaps some of the passengers wonder if he is dead.†   (source)
  • They included the doctor who had done the autopsy on Monet, nurses who had attended Monet or Dr. Musoke, the surgeons who had op- erated on Musoke, and aides and technicians who had handled any secretions from either Monet or Musoke.†   (source)
  • Monet came into the country in the summer of 1979, around the time that the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, which causes AIDS, made a final breakout from the rain forests of central Africa and began its long burn through the human race.†   (source)
  • Monet became airsick.†   (source)
  • Monet stirs himself.†   (source)
  • Behind Monet and Debussy the umbrella persisted, with the steady beat of a drum.†   (source)
  • It saw shadows black until Monet discovered they were coloured, and by Heaven, sir, they were black.†   (source)
  • "Look, here's a Monet,' she said.†   (source)
  • If Monet's really Debussy, and Debussy's really Monet, neither gentleman is worth his salt——that's my opinion."†   (source)
  • His brain might be full of names, he might have even heard of Monet and Debussy; the trouble was that he could not string them together into a sentence, he could not make them "tell," he could not quite forget about his stolen umbrella.†   (source)
  • They talked of the places they had been to in the summer, of studios, of the various schools; they mentioned names which were unfamiliar to Philip, Monet, Manet, Renoir, Pissarro, Degas.†   (source)
  • So the Barbizon people taught our fathers to look at trees in a certain manner, and when Monet came along and painted differently, people said: But trees aren't like that.†   (source)
  • Philip remembered that she had talked enthusiastically about Monet and the Impressionists, but here were only the worst traditions of the Royal Academy.†   (source)
  • At that time impressionism reigned in the Latin Quarter, but its victory over the older schools was still recent; and Carolus-Duran, Bouguereau, and their like were set up against Manet, Monet, and Degas.†   (source)
  • Sisley and Monet had painted the canal with its poplars, and they felt a desire to try their hands at what was so typical of France; but they were frightened of its formal beauty, and set themselves deliberately to avoid it.†   (source)
  • The amazement with which at first he had looked upon the works of the impressionists, changed to admiration; and presently he found himself talking as emphatically as the rest on the merits of Manet, Monet, and Degas.†   (source)
  • He knew now quite positively that there had been no painting of landscape before Monet; and he felt a real thrill when he stood in front of Rembrandt's Disciples at Emmaus or Velasquez' Lady with the Flea-bitten Nose.†   (source)
  • He was an elderly man, with a white beard and a florid complexion, who had painted a number of decorations for the State, but these were an object of derision to the students he instructed: he was a disciple of Ingres, impervious to the progress of art and angrily impatient with that tas de farceurs whose names were Manet, Degas, Monet, and Sisley; but he was an excellent teacher, helpful, polite, and encouraging.†   (source)
  • His writing and printing from time to time gave great advantage to his enemies; unguarded expressions, and even erroneous opinions, delivered in preaching, might have been afterwards explain'd or qualifi'd by supposing others that might have accompani'd them, or they might have been deny'd; but litera scripta monet.†   (source)
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