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Kindle Notes & Highlights
by
Alan Bradley
Read between
January 22 - January 26, 2019
It sounded to me like a classic case of cyanide poisoning,
Considering there are zero symptoms given besides "suffering" and "screaming" (and I don't think pain is a major symptom of cyanide, so much as things like dizziness and vomiting) I guess it's a good thing you're the best chemist who ever chemistried so you can figure it out.
Here, sometimes, I would reenact, step by step, the discoveries of the great chemists.
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Daphne had described to me the effects of tetanus: One scratch from an old auto wheel and I’d be foaming at the mouth, barking like a dog, and falling to the ground in convulsions at the sight of water.
... That's...rabies...tetanus is lockjaw and spasms...
Like, maybe this is meant to be deliberately wrong because child, but on the flip side obnoxiously precocious child, so it definitely doesn't read that way.
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She gasped. Her face went red, then gray, as if it had caught fire before my eyes and collapsed in an avalanche of ashes. She pulled a lace handkerchief from her sleeve, knotted it, and jammed it into her mouth, and for a few moments, she sat there, rocking in her chair, gripping the lace between her teeth like an eighteenth-century seaman having his leg amputated below the knee. At last, she looked up at me with brimming eyes and said in a shaky voice, “Mr. Twining was my mother’s brother.”
I brought to mind the image of the stranger lying there in the first light of dawn: the slight growth of whiskers on his chin, strands of his red hair shifting gently on the faint stirrings of the morning breeze, the pallor, the extended leg, the quivering fingers, that last, sucking breath. And that word, blown into my face … “Vale.” The thrill of it all!
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Why not something of practical value, like the Thirteen Carbon Atoms, for instance? Something that could be used as a memory aid? There were thirteen carbon atoms in tridecyl, whose hydride was marsh gas. What a jolly useful name for a pub!
I am very unclear as to how that works as a memory aid. Are marsh gas and pubs intrinsically linked?
I also think "tridecyl" is missing...the rest of the name but whatever.
the kind of orange you see when the scarlet cap of a Death’s Head mushroom has just begun to go off.
Do you mean Death Cap, because those are demonstrably not even slightly scarlet. Or do you mean fly agaric, which is not actually particularly deadly, although it will make you feel rotten and hallucinate? Or Russula emetica, which is very red/orange but also not deadly so much as, well, an emetic? Lacterius deliciosus is also quite orange, but also quite edible.
(I can be a know-it-all prat, too.)
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In every photograph, Harriet’s features were those of a woman whose design has been arrived at by taking those of Feely, Daffy, and me and shaking them in a jar before reassembling them into this grinning, confident, yet endearingly shy adventuress.
Almost like that's how genetics work. I'm glad her features don't change between pictures, that would be kind of weird. And since I don't know anything about what you three look like, this means nothing
‘Faintly tender, but only in one or two widely separated spots—like Carnforth’s beef,’ he said, and we both laughed. Carnforth was the notorious Hinley butcher whose family had been supplying Greyminster with its boot-leather Sunday roasts of beef since the Napoleonic Wars.
I decked myself out in an oversized silk kimono I had found at a church jumble sale, a beautiful bloodred thing covered with Chinese dragons and mystical markings. I plastered my face with yellow chalk and stretched a thin elastic round my head to pull my eyes up at the corners.
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