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This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

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202

Finding Civil Twilight

by Bonnie Tsui

(missing author)

0
terms
1
notes

? (2021). Finding Civil Twilight. In Kamiya, G. (ed) The End of the Golden Gate: Writers on Loving and (Sometimes) Leaving San Francisco. Chronicle Prism, pp. 202-208

207

Rookie agreed. “That never happens!” he exclaimed happily. “But watch out for sneaker waves.”

“What’s a sneaker wave?”

That’s a sneaker wave.” He pointed behind me at the sudden wall of water coming our way and quickly paddled out and over the rising swell. Contrary to my usual risk-­averse instinct, I went the other way and paddled in. The wave reared up as it caught me, and it was not just a sneaker but a screamer: the biggest I’d ever ridden in my life, an overhead freight train of water that blew my hair back and roared in my ears. Even now, I can’t believe that I managed to stand up. By the time I realized I was still alive—still standing! still riding that wave! all the way to shore!—a shit-­eating grin had colonized my face. The fact that it took me thirty minutes to paddle back out, and the fact that I got hooked by a fisherman in the process, failed to scrape off that smile. I’d tasted what was possible.

—p.207 missing author 2 days, 22 hours ago

Rookie agreed. “That never happens!” he exclaimed happily. “But watch out for sneaker waves.”

“What’s a sneaker wave?”

That’s a sneaker wave.” He pointed behind me at the sudden wall of water coming our way and quickly paddled out and over the rising swell. Contrary to my usual risk-­averse instinct, I went the other way and paddled in. The wave reared up as it caught me, and it was not just a sneaker but a screamer: the biggest I’d ever ridden in my life, an overhead freight train of water that blew my hair back and roared in my ears. Even now, I can’t believe that I managed to stand up. By the time I realized I was still alive—still standing! still riding that wave! all the way to shore!—a shit-­eating grin had colonized my face. The fact that it took me thirty minutes to paddle back out, and the fact that I got hooked by a fisherman in the process, failed to scrape off that smile. I’d tasted what was possible.

—p.207 missing author 2 days, 22 hours ago