Sentences with phrase «swing out of a bus»

A martini glass left on a bar, a tiny bathroom shared by dozens of airline passengers, a touch of a hand using a railing to swing out of a bus — these innocuous commonplaces all become harbingers of death, each touch hitting us viscerally.

Not exact matches

Being in the swing of things means that we've sorted through back to school shopping, backpacks, lunchbags, messy mudrooms, figuring out new teachers, new bus schedules and new classrooms.
Being in the swing of things means that we've sorted through back to school shopping, backpacks, lunchbags, messy mudrooms, figuring out new teachers, new bus schedules and new classrooms.
(There's a lovely visual at one point involving the pair on either side of a divided bus, their seats swinging in and out of each other's sight lines as they talk.)
The Post... * Wonderstruck: aerial night view of Trailways bus slipping into the Lincoln Tunnel along pink trajectory... * Atomic Blonde: The fight on the stairs, and then part two... * A Ghost Story: moving van's reflection on window, swinging out of sight down road... * Mudbound: laughter and tears at homecoming... * Stephen Root pronouncing «melancholic,» Get Out... * Sublimely daft rhythms of MoMA reception, The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)... * Man pedaling boy's bike, city lights on horizon — Suburbiconout of sight down road... * Mudbound: laughter and tears at homecoming... * Stephen Root pronouncing «melancholic,» Get Out... * Sublimely daft rhythms of MoMA reception, The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)... * Man pedaling boy's bike, city lights on horizon — SuburbiconOut... * Sublimely daft rhythms of MoMA reception, The Meyerowitz Stories (New and Selected)... * Man pedaling boy's bike, city lights on horizon — Suburbicon...
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