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litclock_annotated.csv
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00:00|midnight|As midnight was striking bronze blows upon the dusky air, Dorian Gray, dressed commonly, and with a muffler wrapped round his throat, crept quietly out of his house.|The Picture of Dorian Gray |Oscar Wilde|unknown
00:00|midnight|"""But wait till I tell you,"" he said. ""We had a midnight lunch too after all the jollification and when we sallied forth it was blue o'clock the morning after the night before"""|Ulysses |James Joyce|unknown
00:00|midnight|"""Midnight,"" you said. What is midnight to the young? And suddenly a festive blaze was flung Across five cedar trunks, snow patches showed, And a patrol car on our bumpy road Came to a crunching stop. Retake, retake!"|Pale Fire |Vladimir Nabokov|unknown
00:00|12.00 pm|That a man who could hardly see anything more than two feet away from him could be employed as a security guard suggested to me that our job was not to secure anything but to report for work every night, fill the bulky ledger with cryptic remarks like 'Patrolled perimeter 12.00 pm, No Incident' and go to the office every fortnight for our wages and listen to the talkative Ms Elgassier.|A Squatter's Tale |Ike Oguine|unknown
00:00|midnight|'Tis the year's midnight, and it is the day's, Lucy's, who scarce seven hours herself unmasks; The sun is spent, and now his flasks Send forth light squibs, no constant rays;|A Nocturnal upon St Lucy's Day |John Donne|unknown
00:00|midnight|At midnight his wife and daughter might still be bustling about, preparing holiday delicacies in the kitchen, straightening up the house, or perhaps getting their kimonos ready or arranging flowers. Oki would sit in the living room and listen to the radio. As the bells rang he would look back at the departing year. He always found it a moving experience.|Beauty and Sadness |Yasunari Kawabata|unknown
00:00|twelve|Bernardo: 'Tis now struck twelve; get thee to bed, Francisco.|Hamlet |Shakespeare|unknown
00:00|midnight|Big Ben concluded the run-up, struck and went on striking. (...) But, odder still - Big Ben had once again struck midnight. The time outside still corresponded to that registered by the stopped gilt clock, inside. Inside and outside matched exactly, but both were badly wrong. H'm.|Nights At The Circus |Angela Carter|unknown
00:00|midnight|But in the end I understood this language. I understood it, I understood it, all wrong perhaps. That is not what matters. It told me to write the report. Does this mean I am freer now than I was? I do not know. I shall learn. Then I went back into the house and wrote, It is midnight. The rain is beating on the windows. It was not midnight. It was not raining.|Molloy |Samuel Beckett|unknown
00:00|0000h.|Cartridges not allowed after 0000h., to encourage sleep.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
00:00|twelve|Francisco. You come most carefully upon your hour. Bernardo. 'Tis now struck twelve. Get thee to bed, Francisco.|Hamlet |William Shakespeare|unknown
00:00|0000h|Gately can hear the horns and raised voices and u-turn squeals way down below on Wash. That indicate it's around 0000h., the switching hour.|Infinite Jest|David Foster Wallace|unknown
00:00|twelve|Hamlet: What hour now? Horatio: I think it lacks of twelve. Marcellus: No, it is struck.|Hamlet |William Shakespeare|unknown
00:00|midnight|He is certain he heard footsteps: they come nearer, and then die away. The ray of light beneath his door is extinguished. It is midnight; some one has turned out the gas; the last servant has gone to bed, and he must lie all night in agony with no one to bring him any help.|Swann's Way |Marcel Proust|unknown
00:00|midnight|I am conceived to the chimes of midnight on the clock on the mantelpiece in the room across the hall. The clock once belonged to my great-grandmother (a woman called Alice) and its tired chime counts me into the world.|Behind the Scenes at the Museum |Kate Atkinson|unknown
00:00|twelve|I took her hand in mine, and bid her be composed; for a succession of shudders convulsed her frame, and she would keep straining her gaze towards the glass. 'There's nobody here!' I insisted. 'It was YOURSELF, Mrs. Linton: you knew it a while since.' 'Myself!' she gasped, 'and the clock is striking twelve! It's true, then! that's dreadful!'|Wuthering Heights |Emily Brontë|unknown
00:00|midnight|I was born in the city of Bombay ... On the stroke of midnight, as a matter of fact. Clock-hands joined palms in respectful greeting as I came. Oh, spell it out, spell it out: at the precise instant of India's arrival at independence, I tumbled forth into the world.|Midnight's Children |Salman Rushdie|unknown
00:00|midnight|It is midnight. The rain is beating on the windows. I am calm. All is sleeping. Nevertheless I get up and go to my desk. I can't sleep. ...|Molloy |Samuel Beckett|unknown
00:00|midnight|It was nearing midnight and the Prime Minister was sitting alone in his office, reading a long memo that was slipping through his brain without leaving the slightest trace of meaning behind.|Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince |JK Rowling|unknown
00:00|midnight|Midnight had come upon the crowded city. The palace, the night-cellar, the jail, the madhouse; the chambers of birth and death, of health and sickness; the rigid face of the corpse and the calm sleep of the child - midnight was upon them all.|Oliver Twist |Charles Dickens|unknown
00:00|midnight|Midnight is approaching, and while the peak of activity has passed, the basal metabolism that maintains life continues undiminished, producing the basso continuo of the city's moan, a monotonous sound that neither rises or falls but is pregnant with foreboding.|After Dark |Murakami|unknown
00:00|midnight|Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore, While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. `'Tis some visitor,' I muttered, `tapping at my chamber door - Only this, and nothing more.'|The Raven |Edgar Allan Poe|unknown
00:00|twelve|The clock striketh twelve O it strikes, it strikes! Now body, turn to air, Or Lucifer will bear thee quick to hell. O soul, be changed into little water drops, And fall into the ocean, ne'er to be found. My God, my God, look not so fierce on me!|Dr Faustus |Christopher Marlowe|unknown
00:00|midnight|The first night, as soon as the corporal had conducted my uncle Toby up stairs, which was about 10 - Mrs. Wadman threw herself into her arm chair, and crossing her left knee with her right, which formed a resting-place for her elbow, she reclin'd her cheek upon the palm of her hand, and leaning forwards, ruminated until midnight upon both sides of the question.'|The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman |Laurence Sterne|unknown
00:00|twelve o'clock|To begin my life with the beginning of my life, I record that I was born (as I have been informed an believe) on a Friday, at twelve o'clock at night. It was remarked that the clock began to strike, and I began to cry, simultaneously.|David Copperfield |Charles Dickens|unknown
00:00|midnight|We have heard the chimes at midnight.|Henry IV|William Shakespeare|unknown
00:01|one minute past midnight|With the appointed execution time of one minute past midnight just seconds away, I knocked on the metal door twice. The lock turned and the door swiftly swung open.|Death at Midnight|Donald A. Cabana|unknown
00:02|two minutes past midnight|Two minutes past midnight. With me in the lead the fourteen other men of Teams Yellow, White and Red moved out of the clearing and separated for points along the wall where they would cross over into the grounds.|Night of the Krait|Shashi Warrier|unknown
00:03|after twelve o'clock|It was after twelve o'clock when Easton came home. Ruth recognised his footsteps before he reached the house, and her heart seemed to stop beating when she heard the clang of the gate, as it closed after he had passed through.|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
00:03|three minutes past midnight|It was just three minutes past midnight when I last saw Archer Harrison alive. I remember, because I said it was two minutes past and he looked at his watch and said it was three minutes past.|Since Ibsen|George Jean Nathan|unknown
00:03|Three minutes after midnight.|Suddenly I felt a great stillness in the air, then a snapping of tension. I glanced at my watch. Three minutes after midnight. I was breathing normally and my pen moved freely across the page. Whatever stalked me wasn’t quite as clever as I’d feared, I thought, careful not to pause in my work.|The Historian |Elizabeth Kostova|unknown
00:04|four minutes past midnight|At four minutes past midnight, January 22, Admiral Lowry's armada of more than 250 ships reached the transport area off Anzio. The sea was calm, the night was black.|Anzio: Epic of Bravery|Fred Sheehan|unknown
00:05|0005h|E.M. Security, normally so scrupulous with their fucking trucks at 0005h., is nowhere around, lending weight to yet another cliché. If you asked Gately what he was feeling right this second he'd have no idea.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
00:06|six minutes past midnight|At six minutes past midnight, death relieved the sufferer.|West of Hell's Fringe|Glenn Shirley|unknown
00:07|seven minutes after midnight|It was seven minutes after midnight. The dog was lying on the grass in the middle of the lawn in front of Mrs Shears' house. Its eyes were closed. It looked as if it was running on its side, the way dogs run when they think they are chasing a cat in a dream.|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time |Mark Haddon|unknown
00:08|eight past midnight|"""Hour of the night!"" exclaimed the priest; ""it is day, not night, and the hour is eight past midnight!"""|The Brigantine|James Pascoe|unknown
00:09|12.09am|At 12.09am on 18 October, the cavalcade had reached the Karsaz Bridge, still ten kilometres from her destination.|The Bhutto Murder Trail: From Waziristan to GHQ|Amir Mir|unknown
00:10|ten minutes past midnight|It was at ten minutes past midnight. Three police cars, Alsations and a black maria arrive at the farmhouse. The farmer clad only in a jock-strap, refused them entry.|The Queue|Jonathan Barrow|unknown
00:11|eleven minutes past midnight|The first incendiaries to hit St Thomas's Hospital had splattered Riddell House at eleven minutes past midnight, from where a few hours earlier the Archbishop of Canterbury had given 'an inspiring address'.|The Longest Night|Gavin Mortimer|unknown
00:12|0 Hours, 12 Minutes|Clock time is 0 Hours, 12 Minutes, 0 Seconds. Twenty three minutes later, they have their first sight of Venus. Each lies with his Eye clapp'd to the Snout of an identical two and a half foot Gregorian reflector made by Mr Short, with Darkening-Nozzles by Mr Bird.|Mason & Dixon|Thomas Pynchon|unknown
00:12|twelve minutes past midnight|It was twelve minutes past midnight when mother and daughter saw the first lightning strike. It hit the main barn with such force the ground trembled under their feet.|Kentucky heat|Fern Michaels|unknown
00:14|fourteen minutes past midnight|It was exactly fourteen minutes past midnight when he completed the final call. Among the men he had reched were honourable men. Their voices would be heard by the President.|The Matarese Circle|Robert Ludlum|unknown
00:15|twelve-fifteen|At twelve-fifteen he got out of the van. He tucked the pistol under the waistband of his trousers and crossed the silent, deserted street to the Hudston house.|Watchers|Dean Koontz|unknown
00:15|twelve-fifteen|At twelve-fifteen he got out of the van. He tucked the pistol under the waistband of his trousers and crossed the silent, deserted street to the Hudston house. He let himself through an unlocked wooden gate onto a side patio brightened only by moonlight filtered through the leafy branches of an enormous sheltering coral tree. He paused to pull on a pair of supple leather gloves.|Watchers |Dean Koontz|unknown
00:16|sixteen minutes past midnight|At sixteen minutes past midnight, Block 4 was hit and the roof set alight.|The Longest Night|Gavin Mortimer|unknown
00:17|seventeen minutes after twelve|Kava ordered two glasses of coffee for himself and his beloved and some cake. When the pair left, exactly seventeen minutes after twelve, the club began to buzz with excitement.|Vanvild Kava|Isaac Bashevis Singer|unknown
00:18|12.18am|21st December 1985, 12.18am [In bed] Michael doesn’t believe in Heaven or Hell. He’s got closer to death than most living people and he tells me there was no tunnel of light or dancing angels. I’m a bit disappointed, to be honest.|The Book of Lies|Mary Horlock|unknown
00:20|twelve-twenty|Now she was kneading the little ball of hot paste on the convex margin of the bowl and I could smell the opium. There is no smell like it. Beside the bed the alarm-clock showed twelve-twenty, but already my tension was over. Pyle had diminished.|The Quiet American|Graham Greene|unknown
00:21|12.21am|Nobody had been one of Mycroft Ward's most important operatives and for sixty seconds every day, between 12.21am and 12.22am., his laptop was permitted to connect directly with the gigantic online database of self that was Mycroft Ward's mind.|The Raw Shark Texts|Steven Hall|unknown
00:22|12.22am.|Nobody had been one of Mycroft Ward's most important operatives and for sixty seconds every day, between 12.21am and 12.22am., his laptop was permitted to connect directly with the gigantic online database of self that was Mycroft Ward's mind.|The Raw Shark Texts|Steven Hall|unknown
00:23|twenty-three minutes past midnight|Oskar weighed the wristwatch in his hand, then gave the rather fine piece with its luminous dial showing twenty-three minutes past midnight to little Pinchcoal. He looked up inquiringly at his chief. Störtebeker nodded his assent. And Oskar said, as he adjusted his drum snugly for the trip home: 'Jesus will lead the way. Follow thou me!'|The Tin Drum|Günter Grass|unknown
00:24|12.24am|Sanders with Sutton as his gunner began their patrol at 12.24am, turning south towards Beachy Head at 10,000 ft.|The Longest Night|Gavin Mortimer|unknown
00:25|five-and-twenty minutes past midnight|Charlotte remembered that she had heard Gregoire go downstairs again, almost immediately after entering his bedroom, and before the servants had even bolted the house-doors for the night. He had certainly rushed off to join Therese in some coppice, whence they must have hurried away to Vieux-Bourg station which the last train to Paris quitted at five-and-twenty minutes past midnight. And it was indeed this which had taken place.|Fruitfulness |Emile Zola|unknown
00:25|twenty-five past midnight|I mean, look at the time! Twenty-five past midnight! It was a triumph, it really was!|The Soldier's Wife|Joanna Trollope|unknown
00:26|12.26am.|"""A Mr Dutta from King's Cross called and told me you were on your way. He said you wanted to see the arrival of yesterday's 12.26am. It'll take me a few minutes to cue up the footage. Our regular security bloke isn't here today; he's up before Haringey Magistrates' Court for gross indecency outside the headquarters of the Dagenham Girl Pipers."""|Bryant & May Off the Rails|Christopher Fowler|unknown
00:28|12.28|The DRINK CHEER-UP COFFEE wall clock read 12.28.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
00:29|twenty-nine minutes past twelve|"""What time is it?"" asked Teeny-bits. The station agent hauled out his big silver watch, looked at it critically and announced: ""Twenty-nine minutes past twelve.” “Past twelve!"" repeated Teeny-bits. ""It can't be."""|The Mark of the Knife|Clayton H Ernst|unknown
00:30|half-past twelve|It was half-past twelve when I returned to the Albany as a last desperate resort. The scene of my disaster was much as I had left it. The baccarat-counters still strewed the table, with the empty glasses and the loaded ash-trays. A window had been opened to let the smoke out, and was letting in the fog instead.|The Amateur Cracksman |E.W. Hornung|unknown
00:31|00:31|Third individual approaches unnoticed and without caution. Once within reach, individual reaches out toward subjects. Recording terminates: timecode: 00:31:02.|Zombie Apocalypse! Fightback|Stephen Jones|unknown
00:32|thirty-two minutes past midnight|Thirty-two minutes past midnight; the way things were going I could be at it all night. Before beginning a completely new search of the dial I had a thought: maybe this safe didn't open on zero as older models did, but on a factory-set number.|Ixtapa |Everette Howard Hunt|unknown
00:33|thirty-three minutes past midnight|"""So that at twelve-thirty-three you bolted the south door?"" ""Yes,"" replied Stephen Maxie easily. ""At thirty-three minutes past midnight."""|Cover her Face|P.D. James|unknown
00:34|thirty-four minutes past midnight|Thirty-four minutes past midnight. 'We got ten minutes to be back here.' LT didn't argue. Schoolboy knew his former trade. LT's eyes fretted over the museum. 'Not still worrying about the security, are you, because there ain't none.'|Killer Tune|Dreda Say Mitchell|unknown
00:40|twenty to one|We sat in the car park till twenty to one/ And now I'm engaged to Miss Joan Hunter Dunn.|A Subaltern's Love Song |John Betjeman|unknown
00:42|eighteen minutes to one|The butt had been growing warm in her fingers; now the glowing end stung her skin. She crushed the cigarette out and stood, brushing ash from her black skirt. It was eighteen minutes to one. She went to the house phone and called his room. The telephone rang and rang, but there was no answer.|Marjorie Morningstar|Herman Wouk|unknown
00:43|twelve-forty-three|Died five minutes ago, you say? he asked. His eye went to the watch on his wrist. Twelve-forty-three, he wrote on the blotter.|A Pocket Full of Rye|Agatha Christie|unknown
00:45|12.45|At 12.45, during a lull, Mr Yoshogi told me that owing to the war there were now many more women in England than men.|Pig and Pepper: A Comedy of Youth|David Footman|unknown
00:45|third quarter after midnight|At the thought he jumped to his feet and took down from its hook the coat in which he had left Miss Viner's letter. The clock marked the third quarter after midnight, and he knew it would make no difference if he went down to the post-box now or early the next morning; but he wanted to clear his conscience, and having found the letter he went to the door.|The Reef |Edith Wharton|unknown
00:47|12:47a.m|At 12:47a.m, Uncle Ho left us forever.|Last Night I Dreamed Of Peace|Andrew X. Pham|unknown
00:50|12.50|The packing was done at 12.50; and Harris sat on the big hamper, and said he hoped nothing would be found broken. George said that if anything was broken it was broken, which reflection seemed to comfort him. He also said he was ready for bed.|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
00:54|six minutes to one|Everybody was happy; everybody was complimentary; the ice was soon broken; songs, anecdotes, and more drinks followed, and the pregnant minutes flew. At six minutes to one, when the jollity was at its highest— BOOM! There was silence instantly.|A Double Barrelled Detective Story|Mark Twain|unknown
00:55|five to one|He rolled one way, rolled the other, listened to the loud tick of the clock, and was asleep a minute later. Five to one in the morning. Fifty-one hours to go.|61 Hours|Lee Child|unknown
00:56|12:56 A.M.|It was 12:56 A.M. when Gerald drove up onto the grass and pulled the limousine right next to the cemetery.|Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close |Jonathan Safran Foer|unknown
00:56|12:56|Teacher used to lie awake at night facing that clock, batting his eyelashes against his pillowcase to mimic the sound of the rolling drop action. One night, and this first night is lost in the countless later nights of compounding wonder, he discovered a game. Say the time was 12:56.|Lessons in Essence|Dana Standridge|unknown
00:57|12:57|A minute had passed, and the roller dropped a new leaf. 12:57. 12 + 57 = 69; 6 + 9 = 15; 1 + 5 = 6. 712 + 5 = 717; 71 + 7 = 78; 7 + 8 = 15; 1 + 5 = 6 again.|Lessons in Essence|Dana Standridge|unknown
00:58|almost at one in the morning|It was downright shameless on his part to come visiting them, especially at night, almost at one in the morning, after all that had happened.|The Idiot|Fyodor Dostoyevsky|unknown
00:59|About one o’clock|‘What time is it now?’ she said. ‘About one o’clock’. ‘In the morning?’ Herera’s friend leered at her. ‘No, there’s a total eclipse of the sun’.|Freedom|Jonathan Frantzen|unknown
01:00|1.00 am.|1.00 am. I felt the surrounding quietness suffocating me.|Sister |Rosamund Lupton|unknown
01:00|one o’clock|He didn’t know what was at the end of the chute. The opening was narrow (though large enough to take the canary). He dreamed that the chute opened onto vast garbage bins filled with old coffee filters, ravioli in tomato sauce and mangled genitalia. Huge worms, as big as the canary, armed with terrible beaks, would attack the body. Tear off the feet, rip out its intestines, burst the eyeballs. He woke up, trembling; it was only one o’clock. He swallowed three Xanax. So ended his first night of freedom.|Atomised |Michel Houellebecq|unknown
01:00|nearly one o'clock|I looked attentively at her, as she put that singular question to me. It was then nearly one o'clock. All I could discern distinctly by the moonlight was a colourless, youthful face, meagre and sharp to look at about the cheeks and chin; large, grave, wistfully attentive eyes; nervous, uncertain lips; and light hair of a pale, brownish-yellow hue.|The Woman in White |Wilkie Collins|unknown
01:00|one in the morning|I'm the only one awake in this house on this night before the day that will change all our lives. Though it's already that day: the little luminous hands on my alarm clock (which I haven't set) show just gone one in the morning.|Tomorrow |Graham Swift|unknown
01:00|One am|It was the thirtieth of May by now. One am on the thirtieth of May 1940. Quite a famous date on which to be lying awake and staring at the ceiling. Already in the creeks and tidal estuaries of England the pleasure-boats and paddle-steamers were casting their moorings for the day trip to Dunkirk. And, over on the other side, Ted stood as a good a chance as anyone else.|London Belongs to Me |Norman Collins|unknown
01:00|one |Last night of all, When yon same star that's westward from the pole Had made his course t'illume that part of heaven Where now it burns, Marcellus and myself, The bell then beating one -|Hamlet |William Shakespeare|unknown
01:00|one o'clock in the morning|The station was more crowded than he had expected to find it at - what was it? he looked up at the clock - one o'clock in the morning. What in the name of God was he doing on King's Cross station at one o'clock in the morning, with no cigarette and no home that he could reasonably expect to get into without being hacked to death by a homicidal bird?|The Long Dark Tea-time of the Soul |Douglas Adams|unknown
01:01|About one o’clock|‘What time is it now?’ she said. ‘About one o’clock’. ‘In the morning?’ Herera’s friend leered at her. ‘No, there’s a total eclipse of the sun’.|Freedom|Jonathan Frantzen|unknown
01:06|1:06|When he woke it was 1:06 by the digital clock on the bedside table. He lay there looking at the ceiling, the raw glare of the vaporlamp outside bathing the bedroom in a cold and bluish light. Like a winter moon.|No Country for Old Men|Cormac McCarthy|unknown
01:08|1.08a.m.|It was 1.08a.m. but he had left the ball at the same time as I did, and had further to travel.|The Rosie Project|Graeme Simsion|unknown
01:09|nine minutes past one|They made an unostentatious exit from their coach, finding themselves, when the express had rolled on into the west, upon a station platform in a foreign city at nine minutes past one o'clock in the morning - but at length without their shadow.|The Black Bag|Louis Joseph Vance|unknown
01:10|1.10am|February 26, Saturday - Richards went out 1.10am and found it clearing a bit, so we got under way as soon as possible, which was 2:10a.m.|South: The Endurance Expedition|Ernest Shackleton|unknown
01:11|nearer to one than half past|Declares one of the waiters was the worse for liquor, and that he was giving him a dressing down. Also that it was nearer to one than half past.|The Affair at the Victory Ball|Agatha Christie|unknown
01:12|1:12am|It was 1:12am when Father arrived at the police station. I did not see him until 1:28am but I knew he was there because I could hear him. He was shouting, 'I want to see my son,' and 'Why the hell is he locked up?' and, 'Of course I'm bloody angry.'|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
01:15|quarter past one|I am sorry, therefore, as I have said, that I ever paid any attention to the footsteps. They began about a quarter past one o'clock in the morning, a rhythmic, quick-cadenced walking around the dining-room table.|"My Life and Hard Times: ""The Night the Ghost Got In"""|James Thurber|unknown
01:15|1.15am.|Lily Chen always prepared an 'evening' snack for her husband to consume on his return at 1.15am.|Sour Sweet |Timothy Mo|unknown
01:15|quarter past one|The ghost that got into our house on the night of November 17, 1915, raised such a hullabaloo of misunderstandings that I am sorry I didn't just let it keep on walking, and go to bed. Its advent caused my mother to throw a shoe through a window of the house next door and ended up with my grandfather shooting a patrolman. I am sorry, therefore, as I have said, that I ever paid any attention to the footsteps. They began about a quarter past one o'clock in the morning, a rhythmic, quick-cadenced walking around the dining-room table.|"My Life and Hard Times: ""The Night the Ghost Got In"" "|James Thurber|unknown
01:16|sixteen past one|At sixteen past one, they walked into the interview room.|Nothing Gold Can Stay |Dana Stabenow|unknown
01:16|1.16am|From 1am to 1.16am vouched for by other two conductors.|Murder on the Orient Express|Agatha Christie|unknown
01:17|seventeen minutes past one|At that moment (it was seventeen minutes past one in the morning) Lieutenant Bronsfield was preparing to leave the watch and return to his cabin, when his attention was attracted by a distant hissing noise.|A voyage round the moon |Jules Verne|unknown
01:17|1:17|The clocks stopped at 1:17. A long shear of light and then a series of low concussions. He got up and went to the window. What is it? she said. He didnt answer. He went into the bathroom and threw the lightswitch but the power was already gone. A dull rose glow in the windowglass. He dropped to one knee and raised the lever to stop the tub and then turned on both taps as far as they would go. She was standing in the doorway in her nightwear, clutching the jamb, cradling her belly in one hand. What is it? she said. What is happening?|The Road |Cormac McCarthy|unknown
01:20|twenty minutes past one|"""Well!"" she said, looking like a minor female prophet about to curse the sins of the people. ""May I trespass on your valuable time long enough to ask what in the name of everything bloodsome you think you're playing at, young piefaced Bertie? It is now some twenty minutes past one o'clock in the morning, and not a spot of action on your part."""|Jeeves and the Feudal Spirit |P.G. Wodehouse|unknown
01:20|1.20am|Then it was 1.20am, but I hadn't heard Father come upstairs to bed. I wondered if he was asleep downstairs or whether he was waiting to come in and kill me. So I got out my Swiss Army Knife and opened the saw blade so that I could defend myself.|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
01:22|1:22|It was 1:22 when we found Dad's grave.|Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close|Jonathan Safran Foer|unknown
01:23|twenty-three minutes past one|The clock marked twenty-three minutes past one. He was suddenly full of agitation, yet hopeful. She had come! Who could tell what she would say? She might offer the most natural explanation of her late arrival.|A Mummer's Tale|Anatole France|unknown
01:24|1.24am|Larkin had died at 1.24am, turning to the nurse who was with him, squeezing her hand, and saying faintly, 'I am going to the inevitable.'|Body Parts: Essays on Life-Writing|Hermione Lee|unknown
01:25|twenty-five minutes past one|He made a last effort; he tried to rise, and sank back. His head fell on the sofa cushions. It was then twenty-five minutes past one o'clock.|The Moonstone|Wilkie Collins|unknown
01:26|one twenty-six A.M.|When I reached the stop and got off, it was already one twenty-six A.M. by the bus's own clock. I had been gone over ten hours.|The Silver Metal Lover|Tanith Lee|unknown
01:27|twenty-seven minutes past one|At twenty-seven minutes past one she felt as if she was levitating out of her body.|Trackers|Deon Meyer|unknown
01:28|1:28 am|It was 1:12 am when Father arrived at the police station. I did not see him until 1:28 am but I knew he was there because I could hear him. He was shouting, 'I want to see my son,' and 'Why the hell is he locked up?' and, 'Of course I'm bloody angry.'|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
01:29|one-twenty-nine A.M.|He exited the men's room at one-twenty-nine A.M.|The Narc|William Edmund Butterworth|unknown
01:30|half-past one|"""Half-past one”, The street lamp sputtered, The street lamp muttered, The street lamp said, ""Regard that woman ..."""|Rhapsody on a Windy Night |TS Eliot|unknown
01:30|1:30 A.M.|Around 1:30 A.M. the door opened and I thought it was Karla, but it was Bug, saying Karla and Laura had gone out for a stag night after they ran out of paint.|Microserfs |Douglas Coupland|unknown
01:30|one thirty|The late hour helped. It simplified things. It categorized the population. Innocent bystanders were mostly home in bed. I walked for half an hour, but nothing happened. Until one thirty in the morning. Until I looped around to 22nd and Broadway.|Gone Tomorrow |Lee Child|unknown
01:30|1:30 a.m.|The radio alarm clock glowed 1:30 a.m. Bad karaoke throbbed through walls. I was wide awake, straightjacketed by my sweaty sheets. A headache dug its thumbs into my temples. My gut pulsed with gamma interference: I lurched to the toilet.|Ghostwritten |David Mitchell|unknown
01:32|one-thirty-two|She grinned at him with malicious playfulness, showing great square teeth, and then ran for the stairs. One-thirty-two. She thought that she heard a whistle blown and took the last three steps in one stride.|Stamboul Train|Graham Greene|unknown
01:33|one-thirty-three a.m.|He looked at his watch. One-thirty-three a.m. He had been asleep on this bench for over an hour and a half.|Skeletons|Kat Fox|unknown
01:38|one-thirty-eight|At one-thirty-eight am suspect left the Drive-In and drove to seven hundred and twenty three North Walnut, to the rear of the residence, and parked the car.|The Narc|William Edmund Butterworth|unknown
01:40|one-forty am|March twelfth, one-forty am, she leaves a group of drinking buddies to catch a bus home. She never makes it.|Bones to Ashes|Kathy Reichs|unknown
01:44|sixteen minutes to two|She knew it was the stress, two long days of stress, and she looked at her watch, sixteen minutes to two, and she almost leaped with fright, a shock wave rippling through her body, where had the time gone?|Trackers|Deon Meyer|unknown
01:46|one forty-six a.m.|That particular phenomenom got Presto up at one forty-six a.m.; silently, he painted his face and naked body with camouflage paint. He opened the door to his room and stepped out into the common lobby.|Fardnock's Revenge|J.W. Stockton|unknown
01:50|ten minutes before two AM|No, she thought: every spinster legal secretary, bartender, and orthodontist had a cat or two—and she could not tolerate (not even as a lark, not even for a moment at ten minutes before two AM), embodying cliché.|Dog|Michelle Herman|unknown
01:51|nine minutes to two|At nine minutes to two the other vehicle arrived. At first Milla didn't believe her eyes: that shape, those markings.|Trackers|Deon Meyer|unknown
01:54|six minutes to two|Six minutes to two. Janina Mentz watched the screen, where the small program window flickered with files scrolling too fast to read, searching for the keyword.|Trackers|Dean Koontz|unknown
02:00|About two|"""The middle of the night?"" Alec asked sharply.""Can you be more definite?"" ""About two. Just past."" Daisy noted that he expressed no concern for her safety."|Dead in the water |Carola Dunn|unknown
02:00|two o'clock|As two o'clock pealed from the cathedral bell, Jean Valjean awoke.|Les Miserables |Victor Hugo|unknown
02:00|2 A.M.|Get on plane at 2 A.M., amid bundles, chickens, gypsies, sit opposite pair of plump fortune tellers who groan and (very discreetly) throw up all the way to Tbilisi.|Bech: A Book|J. Updike|unknown
02:00|two|Lady Macbeth: Out, damned spot! out, I say!—One: two: why, then, 'tis time to do't.—Hell is murky!—Fie, my lord, fie! a soldier, and afeard? What need we fear who knows it, when none can call our power to account?—Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him.|Macbeth|Shakespeare|unknown
02:00|It struck two.|Somewhere behind a screen a clock began wheezing, as though oppressed by something, as though someone were strangling it. After an unnaturally prolonged wheezing there followed a shrill, nasty, and as it were unexpectedly rapid, chime - as though someone were suddenly jumping forward. It struck two. I woke up, though I had indeed not been asleep but lying half-conscious.|Notes from the underground |Fyodor Dostoyevsky|unknown
02:00|two o'clock|When all had grown quiet and Fyodor Pavlovich went to bed at around two o'clock, Ivan Fyodorovich also went to bed with the firm resolve of falling quickly asleep, as he felt horribly exhausted.'|The Brothers Karamazov |Fyodor Dostoyevsky|unknown
02:01|2.01am.|I checked my watch. 2.01am. The cheeseburger Happy Meal was now only a distant memory. I cursed myself for not also ordering a breakfast sandwich for the morning.|The Selected Works of T.S. Spivet|Reif Larsen|unknown
02:02|almost 2:04|"""Wake up."" ""Having the worst dream."" ""I should certainly say you were."" ""It was awful. It just went on and on."" ""I shook you and shook you and."" ""Time is it."" ""It's nearly - almost 2:04.”"|Oblivion|David Foster Wallace|unknown
02:04|2:04|"""Wake up."" ""Having the worst dream."" ""I should certainly say you were."" ""It was awful. It just went on and on."" ""I shook you and shook you and."" ""Time is it."" ""It's nearly - almost 2:04.”"|Oblivion|David Foster Wallace|unknown
02:05|2.05|At 2.05 the fizzy tights came crackling off.|London Fields|Martin Amis|unknown
02:05|five minutes past two|Then he began ringing the bell. In about ten minutes his valet appeared, half dressed, and looking very drowsy. ‘I am sorry to have had to wake you up, Francis,’ he said, stepping in; ‘but I had forgotten my latch-key. What time is it?’ ‘Five minutes past two, sir,’ answered the man, looking at the clock and yawning. ‘Five minutes past two? How horribly late! You must wake me at nine to-morrow. I have some work to do.’|The Picture of Dorian Gray |Oscar Wilde|unknown
02:07|2:07 a.m.|At 2:07 a.m. I decided that I wanted a drink of orange squash before I brushed my teeth and got into bed, so I went downstairs to the kitchen. Father was sitting on the sofa watching snooker on the television and drinking whisky. There were tears coming out of his eyes.|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
02:07|2.07 am|But I couldn't sleep. And I got out of bed at 2.07 am and I felt scared of Mr. Shears so I went downstairs and out of the front door into Chapter Road.|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
02:07|2.07 a.m.|Saturday, 17 November — 2.07 a.m. I cannot sleep. Ben is upstairs, back in bed, and I am writing this in the kitchen. He thinks I am drinking a cup of cocoa that he has just made for me. He thinks I will come back to bed soon. I will, but first I must write again.|Before I Go to Sleep |S. J. Watson|unknown
02:10|ten minutes past two|"“Ten minutes past two, sir,"" answered the man, looking at the clock and blinking. ""Ten minutes past two? How horribly late! ..”"|The Picture of Dorian Gray |Oscar Wilde|unknown
02:10|2:10am|Decided to get under way again as soon as there is any clearance. Snowing and blowing, force about fifty or sixty miles an hour. February 26, Saturday - Richards went out 1:10am and found it clearing a bit, so we got under way as soon as possible, which was 2:10am|South: The Endurance Expedition|Ernest Shackleton|unknown
02:12|2.12am|Then the lights went out all over the city. It happened at 2.12am according to power-house records, but Blake's diary gives no indication of the time. The entry is merely, 'Lights out - God help me.'|The Haunter of the Dark|HP Lovecraft|unknown
02:13|02.13|Now, listen: your destination is Friday, 4 August 1944, and the window will punch through at 22.30 hours. You're going to a dimension that diverged from our own at 02.13 on the morning of Wednesday 20 February 1918, over twenty-six years earlier. You don't know what it's going to be like...|The Second Internet Cafe, Part 1: The Dimension Researcher|Chris James|unknown
02:15|2.15am|At 2.15am a policeman observed the place in darkness, but with the stranger's motor still at the curb.|The Shadow Out of Time|H.P. Lovecraft|unknown
02:15|two fifteen|It did. When the alarm rang at two fifteen, Lew shut it off, snapped on the little bedside lamp, then swung his feet to the floor to sit on the edge of the bed, holding his eyes open.|The Night People |Jack Finney|unknown
02:17|two-seventeen|"""What time is it now?"" He turned her very dusty alarm clock to check. ""Two-seventeen,"" he marveled. It was the strangest time he'd seen in his entire life. ""I apologize that the room is so messy,"" Lalitha said. ""I like it. I love how you are. Are you hungry? I'm a little hungry."" ""No, Walter."" She smiled. ""I'm not hungry. But I can get you something."" ""I was thinking, like, a glass of soy milk. Soy beverage."""|Freedom |Jonathan Franzen|unknown
02:17|2.17|"One of the ""choppers"" stopped, did an about-turn and came back to me. The flare spluttered and faded, and now the glare of the spotlight blinded me. I sat very still. It was 2.17. Against the noise of the blades a deeper resonant sound bit into the chill black air."|The Ipcress File|Len Deighton|unknown
02:18|2:18 in the morning|It was 2:18 in the morning, and Donna could see no one else in any other office working so late.|Moo|Jane Smiley|unknown
02:20|two-twenty|She turned abruptly to the nurse and asked the time. 'Two-twenty' 'Ah...Two-twenty!' Genevieve repeated, as though there was something urgent to be done.|Southern Mail|Antoine de Saint Exupery|unknown
02:20|two twenty|The night of his third walk Lew slept in his own apartment. When his eyes opened at two twenty, by the green hands of his alarm, he knew that this time he'd actually been waiting for it in his sleep.|The Night People |Jack Finney|unknown
02:21|2:21 a.m.|2:21 a.m. Lance-Corporal Hartmann emerged from the house in the Rue de Londres.|The Night of the Generals|Hans Hellmut Kirst|unknown
02:21|two-twenty-one|It was the urge to look up at the sky. But of course there was no sun nor moon nor stars overhead. Darkness hung heavy over me. Each breath I took, each wet footstep, everything wanted to slide like mud to the ground. I lifted my left hand and pressed on the light of my digital wristwatch. Two-twenty-one. It was midnight when we headed underground, so only a little over two hours had passed. We continued walking down, down the narrow trench, mouths clamped tight.|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
02:24|2.24am.|It was 2.24am. She stumbled out of bed, tripping on her shoes that she’d kicked off earlier and pulled on a jumper.|After You’d Gone|Maggie O’Farrell|unknown
02:25|2.25am.|You see it is time: 2.25am. You get out of bed.|Nineteen Eighty-Three: The Red Riding Quartet, Book Four|David Peace|unknown
02:26|2.26am|Listened to a voicemail message left at 2.26am by Claude.|The Lighted Rooms|Richard Mason|unknown
02:27|2.27am.|The moon didn’t shine again until 2.27am. It was enough to show Wallander that he was positioned some distance below the tree.|One Step Behind|Henning Mankell|unknown
02:28|2.28am|2.28am: Ran out of sheep and began counting other farmyard animals.|Mr Commitment|Mike Gayle|unknown
02:30|2:30 a.m.|"""Get into the mood, Shirl!"" Lew said. ""The party's already started! Yippee! You dressed for a party, Harry?"" ""Yep. Something told me to put on dinner clothes when I went to bed tonight."" ""I'm in mufti myself: white gloves and matching tennis shoes. But I'm sorry to report that Jo is still in her Dr. Dentons. What're you wearing, Shirl?"" ""My old drum majorette's outfit. The one I wore to the State Finals. Listen, we can't tie up the phones like this."" ""Why not?"" said Harry. ""Who's going to call at 2:30 a.m. with a better idea? Yippee, to quote Lew, we're having a party! What're we serving, Lew?"" ""Beer, I guess. Haven't got any wine, have we, Jo?"" ""Just for cooking."""|The Night People |Jack Finney|unknown
02:30|half past two|At about half past two she had been woken by the creak of footsteps out on the stairs. At first she had been frightened.|The Little Stranger|Sarah Waters|unknown
02:30|0230|Inc, I tried to pull her off about 0230, and there was this fucking… sound.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
02:30|2.30am|It is 2.30am and I am tight. As a tick, as a lord, as a newt. Must write this down before the sublime memories fade and blur.|Any Human Heart |William Boyd|unknown
02:31|2.31am.|And then I woke up because there were people shouting in the flat and it was 2.31am. And one of the people was Father and I was frightened.|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
02:32|2.32 a.m.|The last guests departed at 2.32 a.m., two hours and two minutes after the scheduled completion time.|The Rosie Project|Graeme Simsion|unknown
02:33|two-thirty-three|But it wasn't going on! It was two-thirty-four, well. Two-thirty-three and nothing had happened. Suppose he got a room call, or the elevator night-bell rang, now.|A Swell-looking Babe|Jim Thompson|unknown
02:34|two-thirty-four|But it wasn't going on! It was two-thirty-four, well. Two-thirty-three and nothing had happened. Suppose he got a room call, or the elevator night-bell rang, now.|A Swell-looking Babe|Jim Thompson|unknown
02:35|2.35|For what happened at 2.35 we have the testimony of the priest, a young, intelligent, and well-educated person; of Patrolman William J. Monohan of the Central Station, an officer of the highest reliability who had paused at that part of his beat to inspect the crowd.|The Haunter of the Dark|HP Lovecraft|unknown
02:36|2.36am|It was about 2.36am when a provost colonel arrived to arrest me. At 2.36 1/2 I remembered the big insulating gauntlets. But even had I remembered before, what could I have done?|The Ipcress File|Len Deighton|unknown
02:37|thirty-seven minutes past two|June 13, 1990. Thirty-seven minutes past two in the morning. And sixteen seconds.|The Stand|Stephen King|unknown
02:43|2:43|She settled back beside him. 'It's 2:43:12am, Case. Got a readout chipped into my optic nerve.'|Neuromancer|William Gibson|unknown
02:45|0245h|0245h., Ennet House, the hours that are truly wee.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
02:46|2.46am.|2.46am. The chain drive whirred and the paper target slid down the darkened range, ducking in and out of shafts of yellow incandescent light. At the firing station, a figure waited in the shadows. As the target passed the twenty-five-foot mark, the man opened fire: eight shots-rapid, unhesitating.|Patriots|Steve Sohmer|unknown
02:46|two forty-six|Vicki shoved her glasses at her face and peered at the clock. Two forty-six. 'I don't have time for this' she muttered, sttling back against the pillows, heart still slamming against her ribs.|Blood Lines |Tanya Huff|unknown
02:47|2.47am.|The glowing numbers read 2.47am. Moisés sighs and turns back to the bathroom door. Finally, the doorknob turns and Conchita comes back to bed. She resumes her place next to Moisés. Relieved, he pulls her close.|The Book of Want|Daniel A. Olivas|unknown
02:55|2:55 a.m.|"""It's the way the world will end, Harry. Recorded cocktail music nuclear-powered to play on for centuries after all life has been destroyed. Selections from 'No, No, Nanette,' throughout eternity. That do you for 2:55 a.m.?"""|The Night People |Jack Finney|unknown
02:55|2.55am.|Time to go: 2.55am. Two-handed, Cec lifted his peak cap from the chair.|Downriver|Iain Sinclair|unknown
02:56|2:56|It was 2:56 when the shovel touched the coffin. We all heard the sound and looked at each other.|Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close |Jonathan Safran Foer|unknown
02:59|2.59|"I remembered arriving in this room at 2.59 one night. I remembered the sergeant who called me names: mostly Anglo-Saxon monosyllabic four-letter ones with an odd ""Commie"" thrown in for syntax."|The Ipcress File|Len Deighton|unknown
03:00|three o'clock|"""She died this morning, very early, about three o'clock."""|The Voyage Out |Virginia Woolf|unknown
03:00|Three in the morn.|Three a.m. That’s our reward. Three in the morn. The soul’s midnight. The tide goes out, the soul ebbs. And a train arrives at an hour of despair. Why?|Something Wicked This Way Comes |Ray Bradbury|unknown
03:00|three o'clock|According to her watch it was shortly after three o'clock, and according to everything else it was night-time.|The Long Dark Tea-time of the Soul |Douglas Adams|unknown
03:00|At three am|At three am I was walking the floor and listening to Katchaturian working in a tractor factory. He called it a violin concerto. I called it a loose fan belt and the hell with it.|The Long Goodbye |Raymond Chandler|unknown
03:00|three o' clock in the morning|At three o' clock in the morning Eurydice is bound to come into it. After all, why did I sit here like a telegrapher at a lost outpost if not to receive messages from everywhere about the lost Eurydice who was never mine to begin with but whom I lamented and sought continually both professionally and amateurishly. This is not a digression. Where I am at three o' clock in the morning - and by now every hour is three o' clock in the morning - there are no digressions, it's all one thing.|The Medusa Frequency |Russell Hoban|unknown
03:00|At three o’clock in the morning|But at three o’clock in the morning, a forgotten package has the same tragic importance as a death sentence, and the cure doesn’t work -- and in a real dark night of the soul it is always three o’clock in the morning, day after day.|The Crack-Up |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
03:00|three o'clock|Early mornings, my mother is about, drifting in her pale nightie, making herself a cup of tea in the kitchen. Water begins to boil in the kettle; it starts as a private, secluded sound, pure as rain, and grows to a steady, solipsistic bubbling. Not till she has had one cup of tea, so weak that it has a colour accidentally golden, can she begin her day. She is an insomniac. Her nights are wide-eyed and excited with worry. Even at three o'clock in the morning one might hear her eating a Bain Marie biscuit in the kitchen.|Afternoon Raag |Amit Chaudhuri|unknown
03:00|3 a.m.|I slam the phone down but it misses the base. I hit the clock instead, which flashes 3 a.m.|Songs from the Other Side of the Wall |Dan Holloway|unknown
03:00|3 o'clock|In a real dark night of the soul it is always 3 o'clock in the morning.|The Crack-Up |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
03:00|At three A.M.|It was six untroubled days later – the best days at the camp so far, lavish July light thickly spread everywhere, six masterpiece mountain midsummer days, one replicating the other – that someone stumbled jerkily, as if his ankles were in chains, to the Comanche cabin’s bathroom at three A.M.|Nemesis|Philip Roth|unknown
03:00|three in the morning|It was three in the morning when his taxi stopped by giant mounds of snow outside his hotel. He had not eaten in hours.|Solar |Ian McEwan|unknown
03:00|three o'clock at night|Once I saw a figure I shall never forget. It was three o'clock at night, as I was going home from Blacky as usual; it was a short-cut for me, and there would be nobody in the street at this time of night, I thought, especially not in this frightful cold.|I'm Not Stiller|Max Frisch|unknown
03:00|Three AM.|Roused from her sleep, Freya Gaines groped for the switch of the vidphone; groggily she found it and snapped it on. 'Lo,' she mumbled, wondering what time it was. She made out the luminous dial of the clock beside the bed. Three AM. Good grief.|The Game Players of Titan |Philip K Dick|unknown
03:00|0300|Schact clears his mouth and swallows mightily. 'Tavis can't even regrout tile in the locker room without calling a Community meeting or appointing a committee. The Regrouting Committee's been dragging along since may. Suddenly they're pulling secret 0300 milk-switches? It doesn't ring true, Jim.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
03:00|Three in the morning|Three in the morning, thought Charles Halloway, seated on the edge of his bed. Why did the train come at that hour? For, he thought, it’s a special hour. Women never wake then, do they? They sleep the sleep of babes and children. But men in middle age? They know that hour well.|Something Wicked This Way Comes |Ray Bradbury|unknown
03:00|three|"What's the time?"" said the man, eyeing George up and down with evident suspicion; ""why, if you listen you will hear it strike."" George listened, and a neighbouring clock immediately obliged. ""But it's only gone three!"" said George in an injured tone, when it had finished."|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
03:00|3:00 a.m.|When Sophie awoke, it was 3:00 a.m.|Desperate Characters |Paula Fox|unknown
03:00|three o’clock|You hearken, Missy. It’s three o’clock in the morning and I’ve got all my faculties as well as ever I had in my life. I know all my property and where the money’s put out. And I’ve made everything ready to change my mind, and do as I like at the last. Do you hear, Missy? I’ve got my faculties.”|Middlemarch |George Eliot|unknown
03:01|about three o'clock|It was now about three o'clock in the morning and Francis Macomber, who had been asleep a little while after he had stopped thinking about the lion, wakened and then slept again.|The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber |Ernest Hemingway|unknown
03:04|3.04|…his back-up alarm clock rang. He looked at his front-line clock on the bedside table and noted that it had stopped at 3.04. So, you couldn’t even rely on alarm clocks.|The Return of the Dancing Master|Henning Mankell|unknown
03:05|3:05 a.m.|On the Sunday before Christmas she awoke at 3:05 a.m. and though: Thirty-six hours. Four hours later she got up thinking: Thirty-two hours. Late in the day she took Alfred to the street-association Christmas party at Dale and Honey Driblett’s, sat him down safely with Kirby Root, and proceeded to remind all her neighbors that her favorite grandson, who’d been looking forward all year to a Christmas in St. Jude, was arriving tomorrow afternoon.|The Corrections |Jonathan Franzen|unknown
03:07|3.07am|Wayne late-logged in: 3.07am -the late-late show. He parked. He dumped his milk can. He yawned, he stretched. He scratched.|The Cold Six Thousand|James Ellroy|unknown
03:10|ten-past three|I think my credit card was in there too. I wrote down the words credit card and said that if they wouldn't let me cancel them I'd demand that they registered the loss so you couldn't be charge for anything beyond the time of my calling them up. I looked at the clock. It was ten-past three.|The Whole Story and Other Stories |Ali Smith|unknown
03:10|ten past three|Love again; wanking at ten past three|Love Again|Philip Larkin|unknown
03:14|3.14|Since he had told the girl that it had to end, he'd been waking up every morning at 3.14, without fail. Every morning his eyes would flick open, alert, and the red numerals on his electric alarm clock would read 3.14.|The Slap|Christos Tsiolkas|unknown
03:15|3:15|Above the door of Room 69 the clock ticked on at 3:15. The motion was accelerating. What had once been the gymnasium was now a small room, seven feet wide, a tight, almost perfect cube.|Manhole 69|JG Ballard|unknown
03:17|3:17|The two of us sat there, listening—Boris more intently than me. “Who’s that with him then?” I said. “Some whore.” He listened for a moment, brow furrowed, his profile sharp in the moonlight, and then lay back down. “Two of them.” I rolled over, and checked my iPod. It was 3:17 in the morning.|The Goldfinch|Donna Tartt|unknown
03:17|3.17 a.m.|He turned to the monitors again and flicked through the screens, each one able to display eight different camera mountings, giving Kurt 192 different still lives of Green Oaks at 3.17 a.m. this March night.|What Was Lost |Catherine O'Flynn|unknown
03:19|3.19 A.M.|The time stamp on Navidson's camcorder indicates that it is exactly 3.19 A.M.|House of Leaves|Mark Z Danielewski|unknown
03:20|3.20am|Prabath Kumara, 16. 17th November 1989. At 3.20am from the home of a friend.|Anil's Ghost|Michael Ondaatje|unknown
03:21|twenty-one minutes past three|Next, he remembered that the morrow of Christmas would be the twenty-seventh day of the moon, and that consequently high water would be at twenty-one minutes past three, the half-ebb at a quarter past seven, low water at thirty-three minutes past nine, and half flood at thirty-nine minutes past twelve.|The Toilers of the Sea|Victor Hugo|unknown
03:25|3:25 a.m.|It was 3:25 a.m. A strange thrill, to think I was the only Mulvaney awake in the house.|We Were the Mulvaneys |Joyce Carol Oates|unknown
03:28|3.28|Now somebody was running past his room. A door slammed. That foreign language again. What the devil was going on? he switched on his light and peered at his watch. 3.28. He got out of bed.|Dreams of Leaving|Rupert Thomson|unknown
03:30|half past three|At Half past Three, a single Bird Unto a silent Sky Propounded but a single term Of cautious melody.|At Half past Three, a single Bird|Emily Dickinson|unknown
03:30|half-past three A.M.|At half-past three A.M. he lost one illusion: officers sent to reconnoitre informed him that the enemy was making no movement.|Les Miserables |Victor Hugo|unknown
03:30|3:30 A.M.|It's 3:30 A.M. in Mrs. Ralph's finally quiet house when Garp decides to clean the kitchen, to kill the time until dawn. Familiar with a housewife's tasks, Garp fills the sink and starts to wash the dishes.|The World According to Garp |John Irving|unknown
03:30|three-thirty|"Let's go to sleep, I say. ""Look at what time it is."" The clock radio is right there beside the bed. Anyone can see it says three-thirty."|Whoever Was Using This Bed|Raymond Carver|unknown
03:30|three thirty|Now, look. I am not going to call Dr. McGrath at three thirty in the morning to ask if it's all right for my son to eat worms. That's flat.|How to Eat Fried Worms |Thomas Rockwell|unknown
03:33|3:33|A draft whistled in around the kitchen window frame and I shivered. The digital clock on Perkus's stove read 3:33.|Chronic City|Jonathan Lethem|unknown
03:34|3:34 am.|It was 3:34 am. and he was wide-awake. He'd heard the phone ring and the sound of his uncle's voice.|Always Florence|Muriel Jensen|unknown
03:35|3.35 a.m.|He could just see the hands of the alarm clock in the darkness: 3.35 a.m. He adjusted his pillow and shut his eyes.|The Dogs of Riga|Henning Mankell|unknown
03:36|3:36 a.m.|As I near Deadhorse, it's 3:36 a.m. and seventeen below. Tall, sodium vapor lights spill on the road and there are no trees, only machines, mechanical shadows. There isn't even a church. It tells you everything.|Zoopraxis|Richard C Matheson|unknown
03:37|thirty-seven A.M.|It was three thirty-seven A.M., and for once Maggie was asleep. She had got to be a pretty good sleeper in the last few months. Clyde was prouder of this fact than anything.|The Cobweb|Stephen Bury|unknown
03:38|3.38am|At 3.38am, it began to snow in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The geese circling the city flew back to the park, landed, and hunkered down to sit it out on their island in the lake.|Just Like the Ones we Used to Know|Connie Willis|unknown
03:39|3.39am.|23 October 1893 3.39am. Upon further thought, I feel it necessary to explain that exile into the Master's workshop is not an unpleasant fate. It is not simply some bare-walled cellar devoid of stimulation - quite the opposite.|The Clockwork man|William Jablonsky|unknown
03:40|three forty|His bedside clock shows three forty. He has no idea what he's doing out of bed: he has no need to relieve himself, nor is he disturbed by a dream or some element of the day before, or even by the state of the world.|Saturday|Ian McEwan|unknown
03:41|3.41am.|The alarm clock said 3.41am. He sat up. Why was the alarm clock slow? He picked up the alarm clock and adjusted the hands to show the same time as his wristwatch: 3.44am|The Dogs of Riga|Henning Mankell|unknown
03:42|3:42|"""We are due in Yellow Sky at 3:42,"" he said, looking tenderly into her eyes. """"Oh, are we?"""" she said, as if she had not been aware of it. To evince surprise at her husband's statement was part of her wifely amiability."|Bride Comes to Yellow Sky|Stephen Crane|unknown
03:43|3.43am.|The clock says 3.43am. The thermometer says it's a chilly fourteen degrees Fahrenheit. The weatherman says the cold spell will last until Thursday, so bundle up and bundle up some more. There are icicles barring the window of the bat cave.|Ghostwritten|David Mitchell|unknown
03:44|3.44 a.m.|It was dark. After she had switched the light on and been to the toilet, she checked her watch: 3.44 a.m. She undressed, put the cat out the door and returned to the twin bed.|Liver: Leberknödel|Will Self|unknown
03:45|quarter to four|LORD CAVERSHAM: Well, sir! what are you doing here? Wasting your life as usual! You should be in bed, sir. You keep too late hours! I heard of you the other night at Lady Rufford's dancing till four o' clock in the morning! LORD GORING: Only a quarter to four, father.|An Ideal Husband|Oscar Wilde|unknown
03:47|3:47|I stayed awake until 3:47. That was the last time I looked at my watch before I fell asleep. It has a luminous face and lights up if you press a button so I could read it in the dark. I was cold and I was frightened Father might come out and find me. But I felt safer in the garden because I was hidden.|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
03:49|3.49|"It was 3.49 when he hit me because of the two hundred times I had said, ""I don't know."" He hit me a lot after that."|The Ipcress File|Len Deighton|unknown
03:50|ten or five to four|She had used her cell phone to leave several messages on the answering machine in Sao Paulo of the young dentist of the previous evening, whose name was Fernando. The first was recorded at ten or five to four in the morning. I'm never going to forget you ... I'm sure we'll meet again somewhere.|A Death in Brazil: A Book of Omissions|Peter Robb|unknown
03:51|3:51|I lacked the will and physical strength to get out of bed and move through the dark house, clutching walls and stair rails. To feel my way, reinhabit my body, re-enter the world. Sweat trickled down my ribs. The digital reading on the clock-radio was 3:51. Always odd numbered at times like this. What does it mean? Is death odd-numbered?|White Noise |Don DeLillo|unknown
03:51|3:51|The digital reading on the clock-radio was 3:51. Always odd numbers at times like this. What does it mean? Is death odd-numbered?|White Noise|Don DeLillo|unknown
03:54|3.54 a.m.|The charter flight from Florida touched down at Aldergrove minutes earlier, at 3.54 a.m.|The More a Man Has, the More a Man Wants|Paul Muldoon|unknown
03:55|3.55 a.m.|Here in the cavernous basement at 3.55 a.m., in a single pool of light, is Theo Perowne.|Saturday|Ian McEwan|unknown
03:57|Nearly four|"Certain facts were apparent: dark; cold; thundering boots; quilts; pillow; light under the door – the materials of reality - but I could not pin these materials down in time. And the raw materials of reality without that glue of time are materials adrift and reality is as meaningless as the balsa parts of a model airplane scattered to the wind...I am in my old room, yes, in the dark, certainly, and it is cold, obviously, but what time is it? ""Nearly four, son."" But I mean what time?"|Sometimes a Great Notion |Ken Kesey|unknown
03:58|two minutes to four|The ancient house was deserted, the crumbling garage padlocked, and one was just able to discern - by peering through a crack in the bubbling sun on the window - the face of a clock on the opposite wall. The clock had stopped at two minutes to four early in the morning, or who could tell, it may have been earlier still, yesterday in the afternoon, a couple of hours after Kaiser had left Kamaria for Bartica.|Heartland|Wilson Harris|unknown
03:58|3:58|The clock atop the clubhouse reads 3:58.|Underworld |Don Delillo|unknown
03:59|Nearly four|"And the raw materials of reality without that glue of time are materials adrift and reality is as meaningless as the balsa parts of a model airplane scattered to the wind...I am in my old room, yes, in the dark, certainly, and it is cold, obviously, but what time is it? ""Nearly four, son."""|Sometimes a Great Notion|Ken Kesey|unknown
04:00|four o'clock|"""Nothing happened,"" he said wanly. ""I waited, and about four o'clock she came to the window and stood there for a minute and then turned out the light."""|The Great Gatsby |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
04:00|four am.|"I looked at the clock and it was (yes, you guessed it) four am. I should have taken comfort from the fact that approximately quarter of the Greenwich Mean Time world had just jolted awake also and were lying, staring miserably into the darkness, worrying ..."""|Watermelon |Marian Keyes|unknown
04:00|4am|Suddenly, he started to cry. Curled up on the sofa he sobbed loudly. Michel looked at his watch; it was just after 4am. On the screen a wild cat had a rabbit in its mouth.|Atomised |Michel Houellebecq|unknown
04:00|four o'clock|The Birds begun at Four o'clock— Their period for Dawn—|The Birds begun at Four o'clock |Emily Dickinson|unknown
04:00|At four|The night before Albert Kessler arrived in Santa Teresa, at four in the morning, Sergio Gonzalez Rodriguez got a call from Azucena Esquivel Plata, reporter and PRI congresswoman.|2666|Roberto Bolano|unknown
04:00|At four|Waking at four to soundless dark, I stare. In time the curtain-edges will grow light. Till then I see what's really always there: Unresting death, a whole day nearer now, Making all thought impossible but how And where and when I shall myself die.|Aubade |Philip Larkin|unknown
04:00|At four|When he noticed that the chefs from the grand hotels and restaurants - a picky, impatient bunch - tended to move around from seller to seller, buying apples here and broccoli there, he asked if he could have tea available for them. Tommy agreed, and the chefs, grateful for a hot drink at four in the morning, lingered and bought.|The Tea Rose |Jennifer Donnelly|unknown
04:01|just after 4am|Suddenly, he started to cry. Curled up on the sofa he sobbed loudly. Michel looked at his watch; it was just after 4am. On the screen a wild cat had a rabbit in its mouth.|Atomised|Michel Houellebecq|unknown
04:02|4:02|I walked up and down the row. No one gave me a second look. Finally I sat down next to a man. He paid no attention. My watch said 4:02. Maybe he was late.|The History of Love|Nicole Krauss|unknown
04:03|4:03 a.m.|It's 4:03 a.m. on a supremely cold January morning and I'm just getting home. I've been out dancing and I'm only half drunk but utterly exhausted.|The Time Traveler's Wife|Audrey Niffenegger|unknown
04:04|Four minutes after four!|Four minutes after four! It's still very early and to get from here to there won't take me more than 15 minutes, even walking slowly. She told me around five o'clock. Wouldn't it be better to wait on the corner?|Angel Hill|Cirilo Villaverde|unknown
04:05|4.05am.|Leaves were being blown against my window. It was 4.05am. The moon had shifted in the sky, glaring through a clotted mass of clouds like a candled egg.|We Were the Mulvaneys|Joyce Carol Oates|unknown
04:06|4.06am|Dexter looked at Kate's note, then her face, then the clock. It was 4.06am, the night before they would go to the restaurant.|The Expats|Chris Pavone|unknown
04:07|4.07am.|4.07am. Why am I standing? My shoulders feel cold and I'm shivering. I become aware that I'm standing in the middle of the room. I immediately look at the bedroom door. Closed, with no signs of a break-in. Why did I get up?|Guarding Hanna: A Novel|Miha Mazzini|unknown
04:08|4:08 a.m.|It was at 4:08 a.m. beneath the cool metal of a jungle gym that all Andrew's dreams came true. He kissed his one true love and swore up and down that it would last forever to this exhausted companion throughout their long trek home.|Dying in the Twilight of Summer|Seth O'Connell|unknown
04:11|eleven minutes after four|The next morning I awaken at exactly eleven minutes after four, having slept straight through my normal middle-of-the-night insomniac waking at three.|The Stuff of Life|Karen Karbo|unknown
04:12|four-twelve|Finally, she signalled with her light that she'd made it to the top. I signalled back, then shined the light downward to see how far the water had risen. I couldn't make out a thing. My watch read four-twelve in the morning. Not yet dawn. The morning papers still not delivered, trains not yet running, citizens of the surface world fast asleep, oblivious to all this. I pulled the rope taut with both hands, took a deep breath, then slowly began my climb.|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
04:12|4:12|Karen felt the bed move beneath Harry's weight. Lying on her side she opened her eyes to see digital numbers in the dark, 4:12 in pale green. Behind her Harry continued to move, settling in. She watched the numbers change to 4:13.|Get Shorty|Elmore Leonard|unknown
04:13|4:13|Karen felt the bed move beneath Harry's weight. Lying on her side she opened her eyes to see digital numbers in the dark, 4:12 in pale green. Behind her Harry continued to move, settling in. She watched the numbers change to 4:13.|Get Shorty|Elmore Leonard|unknown
04:14|4:14 a.m.|At 4:14 a.m., the two men returned to the Jeep. After the passenger replaced the cans in the back of the Jeep, the driver backed out of the driveway and headed east. The last images found on the film appeared to be flames or smoke.|A Real Nightmare|David H Swendsen|unknown
04:15|four-fifteen|Alice wants to warn her that a defect runs in the family, like flat feet or diabetes: they're all in danger of ending up alone by their own stubborn choice. The ugly kitchen clock says four-fifteen.|Pigs in Heaven|Barbara Kingsolver|unknown
04:16|four-sixteen|I stooped to pick up my watch from the floor. Four-sixteen. Another hour until dawn. I went to the telephone and dialled my own number. It'd been a long time since I'd called home, so I had to struggle to remember the number. I let it ring fifteen times; no answer. I hung up, dialled again, and let it ring another fifteen times. Nobody.|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
04:16|four sixteen|They pulled into the visitor's carpark at four sixteen am. He knew it was four sixteen because the entrance to the maternity unit sported a digital clock beneath the signage.|Freaks in the City: Book Two of the Freaks Series|Maree Anderson|unknown
04:17|4.17am|He awoke at 4.17am in a sweat. He had been dreaming of Africa again, and then the dream had continued in the U.S. when he was a young man. But Inbata had been there, watching him.|The Vile|Douglas Phinney|unknown
04:18|four-eighteen|"I grabbed the alarm clock, threw it on my lap, and slapped the red and black buttons with both hands. The ringing didn't stop. The telephone! The clock read four-eighteen. It was dark outside. Four-eighteen a.m. I got out of bed and picked up the receiver. ""Hello?"""|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
04:22|4.22|He hurt me to the point where I wanted to tell him something. My watch said 4.22 now. It had stopped. It was smashed.|The Ipcress File|Len Deighton|unknown
04:23|4:23|4:23, Monday morning, Iceland Square. A number of people in the vicinity of Bjornsongatan are awakened by loud screams.|Let The Right One In|John Ajvide Lindqvist|unknown
04:23|04:23|Her chip pulsed the time. 04:23:04. It had been a long day.|Neuromancer |William Gibson|unknown
04:25|twenty-five minutes past four|As I dressed I glanced at my watch. It was no wonder that no one was stirring. It was twenty-five minutes past four.|The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes|Sir Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
04:30|four thirty|At the end of a relationship, it is the one who is not in love who makes the tender speeches. I was overwhelmed by a sense of betrayal, betrayal because a union in which I had invested so much had been declared bankrupt without my feeling it to be so. Chloe had not given it a chance, I argued with myself, knowing the hopelessness of these inner courts announcing hollow verdicts at four thirty in the morning.|Essays on Love |Alain de Botton|unknown
04:30|0430|Hester Thrale undulates in in a false fox jacket at 2330 as usual even though she has to be up at like 0430 for the breakfast shift at the Provident Nursing Home and sometimes eats breakfast with Gately, both their faces nodding perilously close to their Frosted Flakes.|Infinite Jest|David Foster Wallace|unknown
04:30|0430|Tonight Clenette H. and the deeply whacked out Yolanda W. come back in from Footprints around 2315 in purple skirts and purple lipstick and ironed hair, tottering on heels and telling each other what a wicked time they just had. Hester Thrale undulates in in a false fox jacket at 2330 as usual even though she has to be up at like 0430 for the breakfast shift at the Provident Nursing Home and sometimes eats breakfast with Gately, both their faces nodding perilously close to their Frosted Flakes.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
04:31|4:31|An earthquake hit Los Angeles at 4:31 this morning and the images began arriving via CNN right away.|Microserfs|Douglas Coupland|unknown
04:32|4:32 a.m.|On his first day of kindergarten, Peter Houghton woke up at 4:32 a.m. He padded into his parents' room and asked if it was time yet to take the school bus.|Nineteen Minutes|Jodi Picoult|unknown
04:35|4:35|No manner of exhaustion can keep a child asleep much later than six a.m. on Christmas Day. Colby awoke at 4:35.|Dreams and Shadows|C Robert Cargill|unknown
04:36|4:36|At 4:36 that morning, alone in my hotel room, it had been a much better scene. Spencer had blanched, confounded by the inescapable logic of my accusation. A few drops of perspiration had formed on his upper lip. A tiny vein had started to throb in his temple.|The Brass Go-Between|Ross Thomas|unknown
04:38|4.38 a.m.|At 4.38 a.m. as the sun is coming up over Gorley Woods, I hear a strange rustling in the grass beside me. I peer closely but can see nothing.|The Queue|Jonathan Barrow|unknown
04:40|4.40am|I settled into a daily routine. Wake up at 4.40am, shower, get on the train north by ten after five.|Bossypants|Tina Fey|unknown
04:41|4:41|At 4:41 Crane's voice crackled through the walkie-talkie as if he'd read their thoughts of mutiny. “Everyone into the elevator. Now!” Only moments before the call he and C.J. had finished what they hoped would be a successful diversion.|Damaged Goods: A Novel|Roland S. Jefferson|unknown
04:43|four forty-three|The time is four forty-three in the mornin an it's almost light oot there.|Pyschoraag|Suhayl Saadi|unknown
04:45|4:45 a.m.|He lies still in the darkness and listens. His wife's breathing at his side is so faint that he can scarcely hear it. One of these mornings she'll be lying dead beside me and I won't even notice, he thinks. Or maybe it'll be me. Daybreak will reveal that one of us has been left alone. He checks the clock on the table next to the bed. The hands glow and register 4:45 a.m.|Faceless Killers |Henning Mankell|unknown
04:45|4:45 a.m.|His wife's breathing at his side is so faint that he can scarcely hear it. One of these mornings she'll be lying dead beside me and I won't even notice, he thinks. Or maybe it'll be me. Daybreak will reveal that one of us has been left alone. He checks the clock on the table next to the bed. The hands glow and register 4:45 a.m.|Faceless Killers|Henning Mankell|unknown
04:46|four-forty-six|"The phone rang again at four-forty-six.""Hello,"" I said. ""Hello,"" came a woman's voice. ""Sorry about the time before. There's a disturbance in the sound field. Sometimes the sound goes away."" ""The sound goes away?"" ""Yes,"" she said. ""The sound field's slipping. Can you hear me?"" ""Loud and clear,"" I said. It was the granddaughter of that kooky old scientist who'd given me the unicorn skull. The girl in the pink suit."|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
04:48|4:48|At 4:48 the happy hour when clarity visits warm darkness which soaks my eyes I know no sin|4:48 Psychosis|Sarah Kane|unknown
04:50|ten minutes to five|Even the hands of his watch and the hands of all the thirteen clocks were frozen. They had all frozen at the same time, on a snowy night, seven years before, and after that it was always ten minutes to five in the castle.|The 13 Clocks|James Thurber|unknown
04:54|six minutes to five|Six minutes to five. Six minutes to go. Suddenly I felt quite clearheaded. There was an unexpected light in the cell; the boundaries were drawn, the roles well defined. The time of doubt and questioning and uncertainty was over.|Dawn: A Novel|Elie Wiesel|unknown
04:55|4:55|4:55 - Mank holding phone. Turns to Caddell - 'Who is this?' Caddell: 'Jim.' (shrugs) 'I think he's our man in Cincinnati.'|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S. Thompson|unknown
04:57|few minutes before five|The second said the same thing a few minutes before five, and mentioned eternity... I'm sure I'll meet you in the other world. Four minutes later she left a last, fleeting message: My love. Fernando. It's Suzana. Then, it seemed, she had shot herself.|A Death in Brazil: A Book of Omissions|Peter Robb|unknown
04:58|two minutes to five|He wants to look death in the face. Two minutes to five. I took a handkerchief out of my pocket, but John Dawson ordered me to put it back. An Englishman dies with his eyes open. He wants to look death in the face.|Dawn: A Novel|Elie Wiesel|unknown
04:59|0459|The whole place smells like death no matter what the fuck you do. Gately gets to the shelter at 0459.9h and just shuts his head off as if his head had a control switch.|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
05:00|five o'clock|Five o'clock had hardly struck on the morning of the 19th of January, when Bessie brought a candle into my closet and found me already up and nearly dressed.|Jane Eyre |Charlotte Brontë|unknown
05:00|five o'clock|Five o'clock had hardly struck on the morning of the 19th of January, when Bessie brought a candle into my closet and found me already up and nearly dressed. I had risen half-an-hour before her entrance, and had washed my face, and put on my clothes by the light of a half-moon just setting, whose rays streamed through the narrow window near my crib.|Jane Eyre |Charlotte Brontë|unknown
05:00|5 a.m.|It was in the township of Dunwich, in a large and hardly inhabited farmhouse set against a hillside 4 miles from the village and a mile and a half from any other dwelling, that Wilbur Whately was born at 5 a.m. on Sunday, 2 February, 1913. The date was recalled because it was Candlemas, which people in Dunwich curiously observe under another name...|The Dunwich Horror |H.P. Lovecraft|unknown
05:00|five o'clock|Just after five o'clock on this chill September morning, the fishmonger's cart, containing Kirsten and Emilia and such possessions as they have been able to assemble in the time allowed to them, is driven out of the gates of Rosenborg?|Music and Silence |Rose Tremain|unknown
05:00|five|"The cold eye of the Duke was dazzled by the gleaming of a thousand jewels that sparkled on the table. His ears were filled with chiming as the clocks began to strike. ""One!"" said Hark. ""Two!"" cried Zorn of Zorna. ""Three!"" the Duke's voice almost whispered. 'Four!"" sighed Saralinda. ""Five!"" the Golux crowed, and pointed at the table. ""The task is done, the terms are met,"" he said."|The 13 Clocks |James Thurber|unknown
05:00|five o'clock|The day came slow, till five o'clock. Then sprang before the hills. Like hindered rubies, or the light. A sudden musket spills|The Day Came Slow, Till Five O' Clock|Emily Dickinson|unknown
05:00|5 a.m.|There are worse things than having behaved foolishly in public. There are worse things than these miniature betrayals, committed or endured or suspected; there are worse things than not being able to sleep for thinking about them. It is 5 a.m. All the worse things come stalking in and stand icily about the bed looking worse and worse and worse.|Things |Fleur Adcock|unknown
05:00|five o'clock|"What causes young people to ""come out,"" but the noble ambition of matrimony? What sends them trooping to watering-places? What keeps them dancing till five o'clock in the morning through a whole mortal season?"|Vanity Fair |William Makepeace Thackeray|unknown
05:01|one minute past five|"""Oh yes. His clocks were set at one minute past five, four minutes past five and seven minutes past five. That was the combination number of a safe, 515457. The safe was concealed behind a reproduction of the Mona Lisa. Inside the safe,"" continued Poirot, with distaste, ""were the Crown Jewels of the Russian Royal Family."""|The clocks |Agatha Christie|unknown
05:01|after five o'clock|Just after five o'clock on this chill September morning, the fishmonger's cart, containing Kirsten and Emilia and such possessions as they have been able to assemble in the time allowed to them, is driven out of the gates of Rosenborg?|Music and Silence|Rose Tremain|unknown
05:02|5:02 a.m.|It was 5:02 a.m., December 14. In another fifty-eight minutes he would set sail for America. He did not want to leave his bride; he did not want to go.|The Prize|Brenda Joyce|unknown
05:03|5:03 a.m.|It was 5:03 a.m. It didn't matter. She wasn't going to get back to sleep. She threw off her covers and, swearing at herself, Caleb and Mr. Griffin, she headed into the shower.|Unhallowed ground|Heather Graham|unknown
05:04|four minutes past five|"""Oh yes. His clocks were set at one minute past five, four minutes past five and seven minutes past five. That was the combination number of a safe, 515457. The safe was concealed behind a reproduction of the Mona Lisa. Inside the safe,"" continued Poirot, with distaste, ""were the Crown Jewels of the Russian Royal Family."""|The clocks |Agatha Christie|unknown
05:04|5.04 a.m.|5.04 a.m. on the substandard clock radio. Because why do people always say the day starts now? Really it starts in the middle of the night at a fraction of a second past midnight.|The Accidental |Ali Smith|unknown
05:04|four minutes past five|"Oh yes. His clocks were set at one minute past five, four minutes past five and seven minutes past five. That was the combination number of a safe, 515457. The safe was concealed behind a reproduction of the Mona Lisa. Inside the safe, continued Poirot, with distaste, ""were the Crown Jewels of the Russian Royal Family."""|The Clocks|Agatha Christie|unknown
05:05|five past five|The baby, a boy, is born at five past five in the morning.|The Namesake|Jhumpa Lahiri|unknown
05:06|5:06 a.m.|5:06 a.m. I wake up strangely energized, my stomach growling. Upstairs, the overstocked fridge offers me its bounty of sympathy food.|This is Where I Leave you|Jonathon Tropper|unknown
05:07|seven minutes past five|"""Oh yes. His clocks were set at one minute past five, four minutes past five and seven minutes past five. That was the combination number of a safe, 515457. The safe was concealed behind a reproduction of the Mona Lisa. Inside the safe,"" continued Poirot, with distaste, ""were the Crown Jewels of the Russian Royal Family."""|The clocks |Agatha Christie|unknown
05:08|5:08|Ambrose and I will marry at Fort McHenry at 5:08 EDST this coming Saturday, Rosh Hashanah!|Letters|John Barth|unknown
05:09|5:09|The primal flush of triumph which had saturated the American's humor on this signal success, proved but fictive and transitory when inquiry of the station attendants educed the information that the two earliest trains to be obtained were the 5:09 to Dunkerque and the 5:37 for Ostend.|The Black Bag|Louis Joseph Vance|unknown
05:10|ten minutes past five|"""Oh, my husband, I have done the deed which will relieve you of the wife whom you hate! I have taken the poison--all of it that was left in the paper packet, which was the first that I found. If this is not enough to kill me, I have more left in the bottle. Ten minutes past five. ""You have just gone, after giving me my composing draught. My courage failed me at the sight of you. I thought to myself, 'If he look at me kindly, I will confess what I have done, and let him save my life.' You never looked at me at all. You only looked at the medicine. I let you go without saying a word."|The Law and the Lady |Wilkie Collins|unknown
05:10|ten after five|I settled into a daily routine. Wake up at 4:40am, shower, get on the train north by ten after five.|Bossypants|Tina Fey|unknown
05:11|eleven minutes past five|Today was Tuesday, the fifteenth of August; the sun had risen at eleven minutes past five this morning and would set at two minutes before seven this evening.|The Hot Rock|Donald E Westlake|unknown
05:12|twelve minutes and six seconds past five o'clock|At twelve minutes and six seconds past five o'clock on the morning of April 18th, 1906, the San francisco peninsula began to shiver in the grip of an earthquake which, when its ultimate consequences are considered, was the most disastrous in the recorded history of the North American continent.|Slummer's Paradise|Herbert Asbury|unknown
05:13|5:13 am.|Lying on my side in bed, I stared at my alarm clock until it became a blemish, its red hue glowing like a welcome sign beckoning me into the depths of hell's crimson-colored cavities. 5:13 am. To describe this Monday as a blue Monday was an understatement.|Uptempo|Nakia D Johnson|unknown
05:14|5.14am|The time was 5.14am, a very strange time indeed for the sheriff to have seen what he claimed he saw as he made his early-morning rounds, first patrolling back and forth along the deserted, snowbound streets of Kingdom City before extending his vigilance northward, along County Road.|Into the Web|Thomas H Cook|unknown
05:15|5:15 a.m.|By the first week of May, Ralph was waking up to birdsong at 5:15 a.m. He tried earplugs for a few nights, although he doubted from the outset that they would work. It wasn’t the newly returned birds that were waking him up, nor the occasional delivery-truck backfire out on Harris Avenue. He had always been the sort of guy who could sleep in the middle of a brass marching bad, and he didn’t think that had changed. What had changed was inside his head.|Insomnia |Stephen King|unknown
05:15|5:15|Weird conversation with Brown, a tired & confused old man who's been jerked out of bed at 5:15.|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S Thompson|unknown
05:16|5:16|5:16 - Mank on phone to Secretary of State Brown: 'Mr Brown, we're profoundly disturbed about this situation in the 21st. We can't get a single result out of there.|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S Thompson|unknown
05:16|5:16 a.m|She could go back to sleep. But typical and ironic, she is completely awake. It is completely light outside now; you can see for miles. Except there is nothing to see here; trees and fields and that kind of thing. 5:16 a.m on the substandard clock radio. She is really awake.|The Accidental |Ali Smith|unknown
05:20|five twenty|He saw on the floor his cigarette reduced to a long thin cylinder of ash: it had smoked itself. It was five twenty, dawn was breaking behind the shed of empty barrels, the thermometer pointed to 210 degrees.|The Periodic Table|Primo Levi|unknown
05:23|5.23am|If I could count precisely to sixty between two passing orange minutes on her digital clock, starting at 5.23am and ending exactly as it melted into 5:24, then when she woke she would love me and not say this had been a terrible mistake.|The Tragedy of Arthur|Arthur Phillips|unknown
05:24|5:24|If I could count precisely to sixty between two passing orange minutes on her digital clock, starting at 523am. and ending exactly as it melted into 5:24, then when she woke she would love me and not say this had been a terrible mistake.|The Tragedy of Arthur|Arthur Phillips|unknown
05:25|5.25|George's train home from New Street leaves at 5.25. On the return journey, there are rarely schoolboys.|Arthur and George|Julian Barnes|unknown
05:26|05:26|I think this is actually bump number 1,970. And the boy keeps plugging away at the same speed. There isn’t a sound from them. Not a moan. Poor them. Poor me. I look at the clock. 05:26.|101 Reykjavik|Hallgrímur Helgason|unknown
05:28|five-twenty-eight|I pulled into the Aoyama supermarket parking garage at five-twenty-eight. The sky to the east was getting light. I entered the store carrying my bag. Almost no one was in the place. A young clerk in a striped uniform sat reading a magazine; a woman of indeterminate age was buying a cartload of cans and instant food. I turned past the liquor display and went straight to the snack bar.|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
05:30|half-past five|Gideon has been most unlike Gideon. As Walter Eastman is preoccupied himself, he has not had time, or more to the point, inclination, to notice aberrant behaviour. For instance, it is half-past five in the summer morning. Young Chase's narrow bachelor bed has evidently been slept in, for it is rumpled in that barely disturbed way which can never be counterfeited. His jug's empty and there's grey water in the basin, cleanly boy. The window is open, admitting the salubrious sea-breeze. He doesn't smoke anyway. What an innocent room it is.|An Insular Possession |Timothy Mo|unknown
05:30|half-past five|It was by this time half-past five, and the sun was on the point of rising; but I found the kitchen still dark and silent. … The stillness of early morning slumbered everywhere .. the carriage horses stamped from time to time in their closed stables: all else was still.|Jane Eyre |Charlotte Brontë|unknown
05:30|five-thirty|On the day they were going to kill him, Santiago Nasar got up at five-thirty in the morning to wait for the boat the bishop was coming on.|Chronicle of a Death Foretold |Gabriel García Márquez|unknown
05:31|5:31|5:31 - Mank on phone to lawyer: 'Jesus, I think we gotta go in there and get those ballots! Impound 'em! Every damn one!'|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S Thompson|unknown
05:34|five-thirty-four|"I asked ""What time is sunrise?”' A second's silence while the crestfallen Bush absorbed his rebuke, and then another voice answered: ‘Five-thirty-four, sir.'"|The Commodore|C.S. Forester|unknown
05:35|5:35|5:35 - All phones ringing now, the swing shift has shot the gap - now the others are waking up.|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S Thompson|unknown
05:35|twenty-five before six|I squinted at the clock. 'It says twenty-five before six,' I said and rolled away from him.|the dice man |Luke Rhinehart|unknown
05:37|5:37|Richard glanced at the clock on the microwave - 5:37 - almost twelve hours, almost one half-day since he'd dialed 911.|This Book Will Save Your Life|AM Homes|unknown
05:38|5.38 a.m.|Kovac,’ said Johnny sleepily. It was very rare for the quantum computer and not Sol to wake him up. ‘What’s going on? What time is it?’ ‘Good morning, Johnny,’ said the ship. ‘It is 5.38 a.m.’ ‘What?’ said Johnny. ‘It’s Saturday.’ ‘I told you he wouldn’t like it,’ said Sol, presumably to Kovac. ‘It’s hardly a matter of likes or dislikes,’ said the computer. ‘I have information I deem important enough to pass on at the earliest opportunity – whatever time it is.’|Johnny Mackintosh: Battle for Earth |Keith Mansfield|unknown
05:40|twenty minutes to six|Twenty minutes to six. 'Rob's boys were already on the platform, barrows ready. The only thing that ever dared to be late around here was the train. Rob's boys were in fact Bill Bing, thirty, sucking a Woodbine, and Arthur, sixty, half dead.|The Peculiar Memories of Thomas Penman|Bruce Robinson|unknown
05:43|5.43|5.43 - Mank on phone to 'Mary' in Washington; 'It now appears quite clear that we'll lead the state - without the 21st.'|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S. Thompson|unknown
05:45|5:45|At 5:45 a power-transformer on a pole beside the abandoned Tracker Brothers’ Truck Depot exploded in a flash of purple light, spraying twisted chunks of metal onto the shingled roof.|IT|Stephen King|unknown
05:46|5.46am|Herbert could feel nothing. He wrote a legal-sounding phrase to the effect that the sentence had been carried out at 5.46am, adding, 'without a snag'. The burial party had cursed him quietly as they'd hacked at the thick roots and tight soil.|A Whispered Name|William Brodrick|unknown
05:52|5.52am|At 5.52am paramedics from the St. Petersburg Fire Department and SunStar Medic One ambulance service responded to a medical emergency call at 12201 Ninth Street North, St. Petersburg, apartment 2210.|Silent Witness|Mark Fuhrman|unknown
05:55|5.55am|It was 5.55am and raining hard when I pedalled up to the bike stand just outside the forecourt of the station and dashed inside. I raced past the bookstall, where all the placards of the Yorkshire Post (a morning paper) read 'York Horror', but also 'Terrific February Gales at Coast'.|The Lost Luggage Porter|Andrew Martin|unknown
05:58|5.58 a.m.|Annika Giannini woke with a start. She saw that it was 5.58 a.m.|The Girl who Kicked the Hornet's Nest|Stieg Larsson|unknown
06:00|six o’clock|‘What’s the time?’ I ask, and telling him so that he knows, ‘My mother likes “peace and quiet” to sleep late on Saturday mornings.’ ‘She does, does she? It’s six o’clock. I couldn’t sleep,’ he says wearily, like an afterthought, as if it’s what he expects. ‘Why are you up so early?’ ‘I woke up and needed my panda. I can’t find him.’ ‘Where do you think he can be?’ His face changes and he smiles again, bending down to look under the table and behind the curtain. But he isn’t clowning or teasing. He’s in earnest.|The Saints |Patsy Hickman|unknown
06:00|at six|But every morning, even if there's been a nighttime session and he has only slept two hours, he gets up at six and reads his paper while he drinks a strong cup of coffee. In this way Papa constructs himself every day.|The Elegance of the Hedgehog |Muriel Barbery|unknown
06:00|at six a.m.|I had risen half-an-hour before her entrance, and had washed my face, and put on my clothes by the light of a half-moon just setting, whose rays streamed through the narrow window near my crib. I was to leave Gateshead that day by a coach which passed the lodge gates at six a.m.|Jane Eyre|Charlotte Brontë|unknown
06:00|six |Lying awake in my attic room, i hear a clock strike six downstairs. It was fairly light and people were beginning to walk up and down the stairs...- i heard the clock strike eight downstairs before i rose and got dressed... I looked up - the clock tower of our saviour's showed ten.|Hunger |Knut Hamsun|unknown
06:00|six o'clock|On the 15th of September 1840, about six o'clock in the morning, the Ville-de-Montereau, ready to depart, pouring out great whirls of smoke by the quai Saint-Bernard.|L'Education sentimentale |Gustave Flaubert|unknown
06:00|6.00 A.M.|Rise from bed ............... . 6.00 A.M.|The Great Gatsby |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
06:00|six |The ball went on for a long time, until six in the morning; all were exhausted and wishing they had been in bed for at least three hours; but to leave early was like proclaiming the party a failure and offending the host and hostess who had taken such a lot of trouble, poor dears.|The Leopard |Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa|unknown
06:02|6.02|Bimingham New Street 5.25. Walsall 5.55. This train does not stop at Birchills, for reasons George has never been able to ascertain. Then it is Bloxwich 6.02, Wyrley & Churchbridge 6.09. At 6.10 he nods to Mr Merriman the stationmaster.|Arthur and George|Julian Barnes|unknown
06:05|five minutes past six|A second man went in and found the shop empty, as he thought, at five minutes past six. That puts the time at between 5:30 and 6:05.|The ABC Murders|Agatha Christie|unknown
06:06|6:06|At 6:06, every toilet on Merit Street suddenly exploded in a geyser of shit and raw sewage as some unimaginable reversal took place in the pipes which fed the holding tanks of the new waste-treatment plant in the Barrens.|IT|Stephen King|unknown
06:08|six oh-eight a.m.|At six oh-eight a.m. two men wearing ragged trench coats approached the Casino. The shorter of the men burst into flames.|Magic Bleeds|Ilona Andrews|unknown
06:10|ten past six|The bus left the station at ten past six - and she sat proud, like an accustomed traveller, apart from her father, John Henry, and Berenice. But after a while a serious doubt came in her, which even the answers of the bus-driver could not quite satisfy.|The Member of the Wedding|Carson McCullers|unknown
06:13|06:13|It's 06:13 .........Ma says I ought to be wrapped up in Rug already, Old Nick might possibly come.|Room |Emma Donoghue|unknown
06:15|6.15|Dumbbell exercise and wall-scaling ..... . 6.15-6.30|The Great Gatsby |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
06:15|quarter past six|Father expected his shaving-water to be ready at a quarter past six. Just seven minutes late, Dorothy took the can upstairs and knocked at her father's door.|A Clergyman's Daughter|George Orwell|unknown
06:15|6.15 am.|It was 6.15 am. Just starting to get light. A small knot of older teenagers were leaning against a nearby wall. They looked as though they had been out all night.Two of the guys stared at us. Their eyes hard and threatening.|Girl Missing|Sophie McKenzie|unknown
06:15|6.15 am.|It was 6.15 am. Just starting to get light. A small knot of older teenagers were leaning against a nearby wall. They looked as though they had been out all night.Two of the guys stared at us. Their eyes hard and threatening.|Girl Missing |Sophie McKenzie|unknown
06:17|six-seventeen|Dizzy, come on.' He turned slowly, coaxing the animal down on to the pillow. The clock read six-seventeen. A second cat, Miles, purred on contentedly from the patch in the covers where Resnick's legs had made a deep V.|Lonely Hearts|John Harvey|unknown
06:19|6.19 am|6.19 am, 8th June 2004, the jet of your pupil set in the gold of your eye.|Venus|Carol Ann Duffy|unknown
06:20|6:20 a.m.|It was 6:20 a.m., and my parents and I were standing, stunned and haf-awake, in the parking lot of a Howard Johnson's in Iowa.|Soon I Will Be Invincible|Austin Grossman|unknown
06:25|6.25|Simon is happy to travel scum class when he's on his own and even sometimes deliberately aims for the 6.25. But today the .25 is delayed to 6.44.|The Deaths|Mark Lawson|unknown
06:25|six-twenty-five|"Still, it's your consciousness that's created it. Not somethin' just anyone could do. Others could be wanderin' around forever in who-knows-what contradictory chaos of a world. You're different. You seem t'be the immortal type."" ""When's the turnover into that world going to take place?"" asked the chubby girl. The Professor looked at his watch. I looked at my watch. Six-twenty-five. Well past daybreak. Morning papers delivered. ""According t'my estimates, in another twenty-nine hours and thirty-five minutes,"" said the Professor. ""Plus or minus forty-five minutes. I set it at twelve noon for easy reference. Noon tomorrow."|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
06:27|06:27|06:27:52 by the chip in her optic nerve; Case had been following her progress through Villa Straylight for over an hour, letting the endorphin analogue she'd taken blot out his hangover.|Neuromancer |William Gibson|unknown
06:27|0627 hours|Early in the morning, late in the century, Cricklewood Broadway. At 0627 hours on January 1, 1975, Alfred Archibald Jones was dressed in corduroy and sat in a fume-filled Cavalier Musketeer Estate, facedown on the steering wheel, hoping the judgment would not be too heavy upon him.|White Teeth |Zadie Smith|unknown
06:29|a minute short of six-thirty|I sat up. There was a rug over me. I threw that off and got my feet on the floor. I scowled at a clock. The clock said a minute short of six-thirty.|The Big Sleep|Raymond Chandler|unknown
06:30|6.30 am.|Inside now MJ ordered. She pushed the three of us into the hotel room, thern shut the soor. I glanced at the clock by the bed. 6.30 am. Why were they waking Mum and Dad up this early?|Girl Missing |Sophie McKenzie|unknown
06:30|six-thirty|"Daniel and the FBI men listened to the sounds of his mother waking up his father. Daniel still held the door-knob. He was ready to close the door the second he was told to.""What time is it?"" said his father in a drugged voice. ""Oh my God, it's six-thirty,"" his mother said."|The Book of Daniel|E.L. Doctorow|unknown
06:30|six-thirty|"It was six-thirty. When the baby's cry came, they could not pick it out, and Sam, eagerly thrusting his face amongst their ears, said, ""Listen, there, there, that's the new baby."" He was red with delight and success."|The Man Who Loved Children |Christina Stead|unknown
06:30|six-thirty|It was very cold sitting in the truck and after a while he got out and walked around and flailed at himself with his arms and stamped his boots. Then he got back in the truck. The bar clock said six-thirty...By eight-thirty he’d decided that it that was it would take to make the cab arrive then that’s what he would do and he started the engine.|Cities of the Plain|Cormac McCarthy|unknown
06:30|half-past six|Nervously she jumped up and listened; the house itself was as still as ever; the footsteps had retreated. Through her wide-open window the brilliant rays of the morning sun were flooding her room with light. She looked up at the clock; it was half-past six—too early for any of the household to be already astir.|The Scarlet Pimpernel |Baroness Orczy|unknown
06:30|six-thirty|Six-thirty was clearly a preposterous time and he, the client, obviously hadn't meant it seriously. A civilised six-thirty for twelve noon was almost certainly what he had in mind, and if he wanted to cut up rough about it, Dirk would have no option but to start handing out some serious statistics. Nobody got murdered before lunch. But nobody. People weren't up to it. You needed a good lunch to get both the blood-sugar and blood-lust levels up. Dirk had the figures to prove it.|The Long Dark Tea-time of the Soul |Douglas Adams|unknown
06:30|6.30|Sometimes they were hooded carts, sometimes they were just open carts, with planks for seats, on which sat twelve cloaked and bonneted women, six a side, squeezed together, for the interminable journey. As late as 1914 I knew the carrier of Croydon-cum-Clopton, twelve miles from Cambridge; his cart started at 6.30 in the morning and got back at about ten at night. Though he was not old, he could neither read nor write; but he took commissions all along the road - a packet of needles for Mrs. This, and a new teapot for Mrs. That - and delivered them all correctly on the way back.|Period Piece |Gwen Raverat|unknown
06:32|twenty-eight minutes to seven|The familiar radium numerals on my left wrist confirmed the clock tower. It was twenty-eight minutes to seven. I seemed to be filling a set of loud maroon pajamas which were certainly not mine. My vis-a-vis was wearing a little number in yellow.|Too Like the Lightning|Dana Chambers|unknown
06:33|6.33 a.m.|Woke 6.33 a.m. Last session with Anderson. He made it plain he's seen enough of me, and from now on I'm better alone. To sleep 8:00? (These count-downs terrify me.) He paused, then added: Goodbye, Eniwetok.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
06:35|twenty-five minutes to seven|My watch lay on the dressing-table close by; glancing at it, I saw that the time was twenty-five minutes to seven. I had been told that the family breakfasted at nine, so I had nearly two-and-a-half hours of leisure. Of course, I would go out, and enjoy the freshness of the morning.|Ravensdene Court|J.S. Fletcher|unknown
06:36|6:36|Kaldren pursues me like luminescent shadow. He has chalked up on the gateway '96,688,365,498,702'. Should confuse the mail man. Woke 9:05. To sleep 6:36.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
06:37|6.37am|The dashboard clock said 6.37am Town frowned, and checked his wristwatch, which blinked that it was 1.58pm. Great, he thought. I was either up on that tree for eight hours, or for minus a minute.|American Gods|Neil Gaiman|unknown
06:38|6.38am.|The clock on the dashboard said it was 6.38am. He left the keys in the car, and walked toward the tree.|American Gods|Neil Gaiman|unknown
06:40|twenty to seven|At eleven o'clock the phone rang, and still the figure did not respond, any more than it has responded when the phone had rung at twenty-five to seven in the morning, and again at twenty to seven|The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul|Douglas Adams|unknown
06:43|6.43am.|To London on the 6.43am. Jessica is back from her holiday. Things are looking up, she called me Chris, instead of Minister, when we talked on the phone this afternoon.|A View From the Foothills|Chris Mullin|unknown
06:44|6.44|Simon is happy to travel scum class when he's on his own and even sometimes deliberately aims for the 6.25. But today the .25 is delayed to 6.44.|The Deaths|Mark Lawson|unknown
06:45|quarter to seven|As the clock pointed to a quarter to seven, the dog woke and shook himself. After waiting in vain for the footman, who was accustomed to let him out, the animal wandered restlessly from one closed door to another on the ground floor; and, returning to his mat in great perplexity, appealed to the sleeping family, with a long and melancholy howl.'|No Name |Wilkie Collins|unknown
06:45|quarter to seven|"He was still hurriedly thinking all this through, unable to decide to get out of the bed, when the clock struck quarter to seven. There was a cautious knock at the door near his head. ""Gregor"", somebody called - it was his mother - ""it's quarter to seven. Didn't you want to go somewhere?"""|Metamorphosis|Franz Kafka|unknown
06:46|one minute after the quarter to seven|At one minute after the quarter to seven I heard the rattle of the cans outside. I opened the front door, and there was my man, singling out my cans from a bunch he carried and whistling through his teeth.|The Thirty-Nine Steps|John Buchan|unknown
06:46|one minute after the quarter to seven|Then I hung about in the hall waiting for the milkman. That was the worst part of the business, for I was fairly choking to get out of doors. Six-thirty passed, then six-forty, but still he did not come. The fool had chosen this day of all days to be late. At one minute after the quarter to seven I heard the rattle of the cans outside. I opened the front door, and there was my man, singling out my cans from a bunch he carried and whistling through his teeth. He jumped a bit at the sight of me.|The Thirty-Nine Steps |John Buchan|unknown
06:49|6:49|Night ends, 6:49. Meet in the coffee shop at 7:30; press conference at 10:00.|Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail '72|Hunter S. Thompson|unknown
06:50|six-fifty|Will, my fiancé, was coming from Boston on the six-fifty train - the dawn train, the only train that still stopped in the small Ohio city where I lived.|Pretty Ice|Mary Robison|unknown
06:55|6:55 am|At 6:55 am Lisa parked and took the lift from the frozen underground car park up to level 1 of Green Oaks Shopping Centre.|What was Lost|Catherine O'Flynn|unknown
06:59|6.59 a.m.|"It was 6.59 a.m. on Maundy Thursday as Blomkvist and Berger let themselves into the ""Millennium"" offices."|The Girl who Played with Fire|Stieg Larsson|unknown
07:00|seven o'clock|"""Seven o'clock, already"", he said to himself when the clock struck again, ""seven o'clock, and there's still a fog like this."""|Metamorphosis |Franz Kafka|unknown
07:00|seven o’clock|At seven o’clock in the morning, Rubashov was awakened by a bugle, but he did not get up. Soon he heard sounds in the corridor. He imagined that someone was to be tortured, and he dreaded hearing the first screams of pain. When the footsteps reached his own section, he saw through the eye hole that guards were serving breakfast. Rubashov did not receive any breakfast because he had reported himself ill. He began to pace up and down the cell, six and a half steps to the window, six and a half steps back.|Darkness at Noon |Arthur Koestler|unknown
07:00|At seven|I had left directions that I was to be called at seven; for it was plain that I must see Wemmick before seeing any one else, and equally plain that this was a case in which his Walworth sentiments, only, could be taken. It was a relief to get out of the room where the night had been so miserable, and I needed no second knocking at the door to startle me from my uneasy bed.|Great Expectations|Charles Dickens|unknown
07:00|seven o'clock|She locked herself in, made no reply to my bonjour through the door; she was up at seven o'clock, the samovar was taken in to her from the kitchen.|Crime and Punishment |Fyodor Dostoyevsky|unknown
07:02|07:02|07:02:18 One and a half hours. 'Case,' she said, 'I wanna favour.'|Neuromancer|William Gibson|unknown
07:03|7:03am|7:03am General Tanz woke up as though aroused by a mental alarm-clock.|The Night of the Generals|Hans Hellmut Kirst|unknown
07:05|five minutes after seven o'clock|He really couldn't believe that the old woman who'd phoned him last night would show up this morning, as she'd said she would. He decided he'd wait until five minutes after seven o'clock, and then he'd call in, take the day off, and make every effort in the book to locate someone reliable.|Where I'm Calling From |Raymond Carver|unknown
07:05|five after seven|Outside my window the sky hung low and gray. It looked like snow, which added to my malaise. The clock read five after seven. I punched the remote control and watched the morning news as I lay in bed.|Dance Dance Dance|Haruki Murakami|unknown
07:05|7:05 A.M.|Ryan missed the dawn. He boarded a TWA 747 that left Dulles on time, at 7:05 A.M. The sky was overcast, and when the aircraft burst through the cloud layer into sunlight, Ryan did something he had never done before. For the first time in his life, Jack Ryan fell asleep on an airplane.|The Hunt for Red October |Tom Clancy|unknown
07:06|six minutes past seven|So far so good. There followed a little passage of time when we stood by the duty desk, drinking coffee and studiously not mentioning what we were all thinking and hoping: that Percy was late, that maybe Percy wasn't going to show up at all. Considering the hostile reviews he'd gotten on the way he'd handled the electrocution, that seemed at least possible. But Percy subscribed to that old axiom about how you should get right back on the horse that had thrown you, because here he came through the door at six minutes past seven, resplendent in his blue uniform with his sidearm on one hip and his hickory stick in its ridiculous custom-made holster on the other.|The Green Mile |Stephen King|unknown
07:06|six minutes past seven|Percy subscribed to that old axiom about how you should get right back on the horse that had thrown you, because here he came through the door at six minutes past seven, resplendent in his blue uniform with his sidearm on one hip and his hickory stick in its ridiculous custom-made holster on the other.|The Green Mile|Stephen King|unknown
07:08|between eight and nine minutes after seven o'clock|Reacher had no watch but he figured when he saw Gregory it must have been between eight and nine minutes after seven o'clock.|The Hard Way|Lee Child|unknown
07:09|seven-nine|In the living room the voice-clock sang, Tick-tock, seven o'clock, time to get up, time to get up, seven o 'clock! as if it were afraid that nobody would. The morning house lay empty. The clock ticked on, repeating and repeating its sounds into the emptiness. Seven-nine, breakfast time, seven-nine!|There Will Come Soft Rains |Ray Bradbury|unknown
07:09|seven-nine|Seven-nine, breakfast time, seven-nine!|There Will Come Soft Rains|Ray Bradbury|unknown
07:10|7.10|A search in Bradshaw informed me that a train left St Pancras at 7.10, which would land me at any Galloway station in the late afternoon.|The Thirty-Nine Steps|John Buchan|unknown
07:10|7:10|There were many others waiting to execute the same operation, so she would have to move fast, elbow her way to the front so that she emerged first. The time was 7:10 in the morning. The manoeuvre would start at 7:12. She looked apprehensively at the giant clock at the railway station.|The Fourth Passenger |Mini Nair|unknown
07:12|7:12|He taught me that if I had to meet someone for an appointment, I must refuse to follow the 'stupid human habit' of arbitrarily choosing a time based on fifteen-minute intervals. 'Never meet people at 7:45 or 6:30, Jasper, but pick times like 7:12 and 8:03!'|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
07:13|seven-thirteen|It was all the more surprising and indeed alarming a little later, said Austerlitz, when I looked out of the corridor window of my carriage just before the train left at seven-thirteen, to find it dawning upon me with perfect certainty that I had seen the pattern of glass and steel roof above the platforms before.|Austerlitz|WG Sebald|unknown
07:14|7.14|At 7.14 Harry knew he was alive. He knew that because the pain could be felt in every nerve fibre.|The Redeemer|Jo Nesbo|unknown
07:15|7:15 A.M.|At 7:15 A.M., January 25th, we started flying northwestward under McTighe's pilotage with ten men, seven dogs, a sledge, a fuel and food supply, and other items including the plane's wireless outfit.|At the Mountains of Madness |H.P. Lovecraft|unknown
07:15|7.15|Gough again knocked on Mr and Mrs Kent's bedroom door. This time it was opened - Mary Kent had got out of bed and put on her dressing gown, having just checked her husband's watch: it was 7.15. A confused conversation ensued, in which each woman seemed to assume Saville was with the other.|The Suspicions of Mr Whicher|Kate Summerscale|unknown
07:15|7.15|Gough again knocked on Mr and Mrs Kent's bedroom door. This time it was opened - Mary Kent had got out of bed and put on her dressing gown, having just checked her husband's watch: it was 7.15. A confused conversation ensued, in which each woman seemed to assume Saville was with the other.|The Suspicions of Mr Whicher |Kate Summerscale|unknown
07:15|quarter-past seven|It was early in April in the year ’83 that I woke one morning to find Sherlock Holmes standing, fully dressed, by the side of my bed. He was a late riser, as a rule, and as the clock on the mantelpiece showed me that it was only a quarter-past seven, I blinked up at him in some surprise, and perhaps just a little resentment, for I was myself regular in my habits.|The Adventure of the Speckled Band |Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
07:17|7.17am|As of 7.17am local time on 30 June 1908, Padzhitnoff had been working for nearly a year as a contract employee of the Okhrana, receiving five hundred rubles a month, a sum which hovered at the exorbitant end of spy-budget outlays for those years.|Against the Day|Thomas Pynchon|unknown
07:19|7.19am|I opened the sunroof and turned up the CD player volume to combat fatigue, and at 7.19am on Saturday, with the caffeine still running all around my brain, Jackson Browne and I pulled into Moree.|The Rosie Project|Graeme Simsion|unknown
07:20|7.20 a.m.|And this was my timetable when I lived at home with Father and I thought that Mother was dead from a heart attack (this was the timetable for a Monday and also it is an approximation). 7.20 a.m. Wake up|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
07:20|seven-twenty|He who had been a boy very credulous of life was no longer greatly interested in the possible and improbable adventures of each new day. He escaped from reality till the alarm-clock rang, at seven-twenty.|Babbitt|Sinclair Lewis|unknown
07:25|7.25 a.m.|7.25 a.m. clean teeth and wash face|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
07:27|7.27|His appointment with the doctor was for 8.45. It was 7.27.|The Return of the Dancing Master|Henning Mankell|unknown
07:29|7.29|At 7.29 in the morning of 1 July, the cinematographer finds himself filming silence itself.|At Break of Day|Elizabeth Speller|unknown
07:30|half-past seven|At half-past seven the next morning he rang the bell of 21 Blenheim Avenue.|After Rain|William Trevor|unknown
07:30|half past seven|Precisely at half past seven the station-master came into the traffic office. He weighed almost sixteen stone, but women always said that he was incredibly light on his feet when he danced.|Closely Observed Trains |Bohumil Hrabal|unknown
07:32|7:32|At 7:32, he suffered a fatal stroke.|IT|Stephen King|unknown
07:34|7:34.|7:34. Monday morning, Blackeberg. The burglar alarm at the ICA grocery store on Arvid Morne's way is set off.|Let The Right One In|John Ajvide Lindqvist|unknown
07:35|7:35am|At 7:35am Ishigami left his apartment as he did every weekday morning.|The Devotion of Duspect X|Higashino, Keigo|unknown
07:35|seven thirty-five|I looked at my watch. Seven thirty-five.|Bare Bones |Kathy Reichs|unknown
07:36|7:36|7:36, sunrise. The hospital blinds were much better, darker than her own.|Let The Right One In|John Ajvide Lindqvist|unknown
07:39|7.39|Now, at the station, do you recall speaking to Mr Joseph Markew?' 'Yes, indeed. I was standing on the platform waiting for my usual train - the 7.39 - when he accosted me.'|Arthur & George|Julian Barnes|unknown
07:40|7.40 a.m.|7.40 a.m. Have breakfast.|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
07:42|seven forty-two|Seven forty-two am., Mr Gasparian: I curse you. I curse your arms so they will wither and die and fall off your body...|Magic Bleeds|Ilona Andrews|unknown
07:44|seven forty-four|"And there I was, complaining that all this was just inconvenient, Anna castigates herself. The Goth was obviously right. What does it matter, really, if I'm a bit late for work? She voices her thoughts: ""It's not exactly how you'd choose to go, is it? You'd rather die flying a kite with your grandchildren, or at a great party or something. Not on the seven forty-four."""|One moment, one morning |Sarah Rayner|unknown
07:44|seven forty-four|"The Goth was obviously right. What does it matter, really, if I'm a bit late for work? She voices her thoughts: ""It's not exactly how you'd choose to go, is it? You'd rather die flying a kite with your grandchildren, or at a great party or something. Not on the seven forty-four."""|One Moment, One Morning|Sarah Rayner|unknown
07:45|quarter to eight|Mr Green left for work at a quarter to eight, as he did every morning. He walked down his front steps carrying his empty-looking leatherette briefcase with the noisy silver clasps, opened his car door, and ducked his head to climb into the driver's seat.|A Crime in The Neighborhood|Suzanne Berne|unknown
07:45|quarter to eight|Mr Green left for work at a quarter to eight, as he did every morning. He walked down his front steps carrying his empty-looking leatherette briefcase with the noisy silver clasps, opened his car door, and ducked his head to climb into the driver's seat.|A crime in the neighborhood |Suzanne Berne|unknown
07:46|7.46 a.m.|He awoke with a start. The clock on his bedside table said 7.46 a.m. He cursed, jumped out of bed and dressed. He stuffed his toothbrush and toothpaste in his jacket pocket, and parked outside the station just before 8 a.m. In reception, Ebba beckoned to him.|The Dogs of Riga|Henning Mankell|unknown
07:50|ten minutes to eight|At about ten minutes to eight, Jim had squared the part of the work he had been doing - the window - so he decided not to start on the door or the skirting until after breakfast.|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
07:51|nine minutes to eight|"Vimes fished out the Gooseberry as a red-hot cabbage smacked into the road behind him. ""Good morning!"" he said brightly to the surprised imp. ""What is the time, please?"" ""Er...nine minutes to eight, Insert Name Here,"" said the imp."|Thud! |Terry Pratchett|unknown
07:53|seven to eight|"""What time is it?"" ""Seven to eight. Won't be long now ..."""|Never go back|Robert Goddard|unknown
07:55|7.55|at 7.55 this morning the circus ran away to join me.|Tightrope, from Selected Poems 1967-1987|Roger McGough|unknown
07:56|seven fifty-six|I sit by the window, crunching toast, sipping coffee, and leafing through the paper in a leisurely way. At last, after devouring three slices, two cups of coffee, and all the Saturday sections, I stretch my arms in a big yawn and glance at the clock. I don't believe it. It's only seven fifty-six.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
07:56|four minutes to eight|The Castle Gate - only the Castle Gate - and it was four minutes to eight.|Buddenbrooks|Thomas Mann|unknown
07:59|7.59|I'd spent fifty two days in 1958, but here it was 7.59 in the morning.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
08:00|8 a.m.|"""I'm not crying,"" Maria said when Carter called from the desert at 8 a.m. ""I'm perfectly alright"". ""You don't sound perfectly alright"|Play it as is Lays |Joan Didion|unknown
08:00|8.00 a.m.|8.00 a.m. Put school clothes on|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
08:00|8 o'clock|At 8 o'clock on Thursday morning Arthur didn't feel very good.|Hitch-Hikers Guide to the Galaxy |Douglas Adams|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|At eight o'clock on Thursday morning Arthur didn't feel very good. He woke up blearily, got up, wandered blearily round his room, opened a window, saw a bulldozer, found his slippers and stomped off to the bathroom to wash.|Hitch-hikers guide to the galaxy |Douglas Adams|unknown
08:00|At eight o’clock|At eight o’clock, a shaft of daylight came to wake us. The thousand facets of the lava on the rock face picked it up as it passed, scattering like a shower of sparks.|Journey to the Centre of the Earth |Jules Verne|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|But for now it was still eight o'clock, and as I walked along the avenue under that brilliant blue sky, I was happy, my friends, as happy as any man who had ever lived.|Brooklyn Follies|Paul Auster|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|By eight o'clock Stillman would come out, always in his long brown overcoat, carrying a large, old-fashioned carpet bag. For two weeks this routine did not vary. The old man would wander through the streets of the neighbourhood, advancing slowly, sometimes by the merest of increments, pausing, moving on again, pausing once more, as though each step had to be weighed and measured before it could take its place among the sum total of steps.|City of Glass |Paul Auster|unknown
08:00|At eight|Dressed in sweater, anorak and long johns, he lay in bed, hemmed in on three sides by chunky wooden beams, and ate all the salted snacks in the minibar, and then all the sugary snacks, and when he was woken by reception at eight the following morning to be told that everyone was waiting for him downstairs, the wrapper of a Mars bar was still folded in his fist.|Solar |Ian McEwan|unknown
08:00|At eight|I hear noise at the ward door, off up the hall out of my sight. That ward door starts opening at eight and opens and closes a thousand times a day, kashash, click.|One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest |Ken Kesey|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|"It was dated from Rosings, at eight o'clock in the morning, and was as follows: - ""Be not alarmed, madam, on receiving this letter, by the apprehension of its containing any repetition of those sentiments or renewal of those offerings which were last night so disgusting to you."|Pride and Prejudice |Jane Austen|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|Mr. Pumblechook and I breakfasted at eight o'clock in the parlour behind the shop, while the shopman took his mug of tea and hunch of bread-and-butter on a sack of peas in the front premises.|Great Expectations |Charles Dickens|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock a.m.|Mrs. Rochester! She did not exist: she would not be born till to-morrow, some time after eight o'clock a.m.; and I would wait to be assured she had come into the world alive, before I assigned to her all that property.|Jane Eyre |Charlotte Brontë|unknown
08:00|eight |So here I'll watch the night and wait To see the morning shine, When he will hear the stroke of eight And not the stroke of nine;|A shropshire Lad |A E Housman|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|Someone must have been telling lies about Joseph K. for without having done anything wrong he was arrested one fine morning. His landlady's cook, who always brought him breakfast at eight o'clock, failed to appear on this occasion.|The Trial |Franz Kafka|unknown
08:00|oh eight oh oh hours|The next morning I woke up at oh eight oh oh hours, my brothers, and as I still felt shagged and fagged and fashed and bashed and as my glazzies were stuck together real horrorshow with sleepglue, I thought I would not go to school .|A Clockwork Orange |Anthony Burgess|unknown
08:00|eight o'clock|Three days after the quarrel, Prince Stepan Arkadyevitch Oblonsky--Stiva, as he was called in the fashionable world-- woke up at his usual hour, that is, at eight o'clock in the morning, not in his wife's bedroom, but on the leather-covered sofa in his study.|Anna Karenina |Leo Tolstoy|unknown
08:00|exactly eight|Through the curtained windows of the furnished apartment which Mrs. Horace Hignett had rented for her stay in New York rays of golden sunlight peeped in like the foremost spies of some advancing army. It was a fine summer morning. The hands of the Dutch clock in the hall pointed to thirteen minutes past nine; those of the ormolu clock in the sitting-room to eleven minutes past ten; those of the carriage clock on the bookshelf to fourteen minutes to six. In other words, it was exactly eight; and Mrs. Hignett acknowledged the fact by moving her head on the pillow, opening her eyes, and sitting up in bed. She always woke at eight precisely.|Three Men and a Maid |P.G. Wodehouse|unknown
08:00|At eight|When he opened the windows in the morning, the sky was as overcast as it had been, but the air seemed fresher, and regret set in. Had giving notice not been impetuous and wrongheaded, the result of an inconsequential indisposition? If he had held off a bit, if he had not been so quick to lose heart, if he had instead tried to adjust to the air or wait for the weather to improve, he would now have been free of stress and strain and looking forward to a morning on the beach like the one the day before. Too late. He must go on wanting what he had wanted yesterday. He dressed and rode down to the ground floor at eight for breakfast.|Death in Venice |Thomas Mann|unknown
08:01|eight-one|Eight-one, tick-tock, eight-one o'clock, off to school, off to work, run, run, eight-one!|There Will Come Soft Rains|Ray Bradbury|unknown
08:02|Eight oh two|... bingeley ... Eight oh two eh em, Death of Corporal Littlebottombottom ... Eight oh three eh em ... Death of Sergeant Detritus ... Eight oh threethreethree eh em and seven seconds seconds ... Death of Constable Visit ... Eight oh three eh em and nineninenine seconds ... Death of death of death of ...|Jingo|Terry Pratchett|unknown
08:03|Eight oh three|... bingeley ... Eight oh two eh em, Death of Corporal Littlebottombottom ... Eight oh three eh em ... Death of Sergeant Detritus ... Eight oh threethreethree eh em and seven seconds seconds ... Death of Constable Visit ... Eight oh three eh em and nineninenine seconds ... Death of death of death of ...|Jingo|Terry Pratchett|unknown
08:03|8:03|He taught me that if I had to meet someone for an appointment, I must refuse to follow the 'stupid human habit' of arbitrarily choosing a time based on fifteen-minute intervals. 'Never meet people at 7:45 or 6:30, Jasper, but pick times like 7:12 and 8:03!'|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
08:04|8:04|... every clerk had his particular schedule of hours, which coincided with a single pair of tram runs coming from the city: A had to come in at 8, B at 8:04, C at 8:08 and so on, and the same for quitting times, in such a manner that never would two colleagues have the opportunity to travel in the same tramcar.|The Periodic Table|Primo Levi|unknown
08:05|8.05 a.m.|8.05 a.m. Pack school bag|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
08:08|8:08|... every clerk had his particular schedule of hours, which coincided with a single pair of tram runs coming from the city: A had to come in at 8, B at 8:04, C at 8:08 and so on, and the same for quitting times, in such a manner that never would two colleagues have the opportunity to travel in the same tramcar.|The Periodic Table|Primo Levi|unknown
08:09|8:09|He followed the squeals down a hallway. A wall clock read 8:09 - 10:09 Dallas time.|American Tabloid|James Ellroy|unknown
08:10|8.10 a.m.|8.10 a.m. Read book or watch video|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
08:10|8:10|Amory rushed into the house and the rest followed with a limp mass that they laid on the sofa in the shoddy little front parlor. Sloane, with his shoulder punctured, was on another lounge. He was half delirious, and kept calling something about a chemistry lecture at 8:10.|This Side of Paradise|F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
08:10|8:10|Cell count down to 400,000. Woke 8:10. To sleep 7:15. (Appear to have lost my watch without realising it, had to drive into town to buy another.)|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
08:11|eight-eleven|'Care for a turn on the engine?' he called to the doxies, and pointed up at the footplate. They laughed but voted not to, climbing up with their bathtub into one of the rattlers instead. They both had very fetching hats, with one flower apiece, but the prettiness of their faces made you think it was more. For some reason they both wore white rosettes pinned to their dresses. I looked again at the clock: eight-eleven.|The Blackpool Highflyer |Andrew Martin|unknown
08:12|8:12 a.m.|At 8:12 a.m., just before the moment of pff, all the business of the cellars was being transacted - garbage transferred from small cans into large ones; early wide-awake grandmas, rocky with insomnia, dumped wash into the big tubs; boys in swimming trunks rolled baby carriages out into the cool morning.|In Time Which Made A Monkey Of Us All|Grace Paley|unknown
08:13|8:13 a.m.|At 8:13 a.m. the alarm clock in the laboratory gave the ringing word. Eddie touched a button in the substructure of an ordinary glass coffeepot, from whose spout two tubes proceeded into the wall.|In Time Which Made A Monkey Of Us All|Grace Paley|unknown
08:15|quarter-past eight|It was in the winter when this happened, very near the shortest day, and a week of fog into the bargain, so the fact that it was still very dark when George woke in the morning was no guide to him as to the time. He reached up, and hauled down his watch. It was a quarter-past eight.|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
08:15|eight fifteen|"You scrutinized your wrist: ""It's eight fifteen. (And here time forked.) I'll turn it on."" The screen In its blank broth evolved a lifelike blur, And music welled."|Pale Fire |Vladimir Nabokov|unknown
08:16|eight sixteen|I walk through the fruit trees toward a huge, square, brown patch of earth with vegetation growing in serried rows. These must be the vegetables. I prod one of them cautiously with my foot. It could be a cabbage or a lettuce. Or the leaves of something growing underground, maybe. To be honest, it could be an alien. I have no idea. I sit down on a mossy wooden bench and look at a nearby bush covered in white flowers. Mm. Pretty. Now what? What do people do in their gardens? I feel I should have something to read. Or someone to call. My fingers are itching to move. I look at my watch. Still only eight sixteen. Oh God.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
08:17|8.17 a.m.|"Breakfast over, my uncle drew from his pocket a small notebook, intended for scientific observations. He consulted his instruments, and recorded:
“Monday, July 1.
“Chronometer, 8.17 a.m.; barometer, 297 in.; thermometer, 6° (43° F.). Direction, E.S.E.”
This last observation applied to the dark gallery, and was indicated by the compass."|A Journey to the Centre of the Earth|Jules Verne|unknown
08:17|eight seventeen|Come on, I can't give up yet. I'll just sit here for a bit and enjoy the peace. I lean back and watch a little speckled bird pecking the ground nearby for a while. Then I look at my watch again: eight seventeen. I can't do this.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
08:19|8.19|I had arranged to meet the Occupational Health Officer at 10:30. I took the train from Watford Junction at 8.19 and arrived at London Euston seven minutes late, at 8.49.|The Terrible Privacy of Maxwell Sim|Jonathan Coe|unknown
08:20|8:20|When the typewriters happen to pause (8:20 and other mythical hours), and there are no flights of American bombers in the sky, and the motor traffic's not too heavy in Oxford Street, you can hear winter birds cheeping outside, busy at the feeders the girls have put up.|Gravity's Rainbow|Thomas Pynchon|unknown
08:23|twenty-three minutes past eight|"And then Wedderburn looked at his watch. ""Twenty-three minutes past eight. I am going up by the quarter to twelve train, so that there is plenty of time. I think I shall wear my alpaca jacket - it is quite warm enough - and my grey felt hat and brown shoes. I suppose”"|The Flowering of The Strange Orchid|HG Wells|unknown
08:23|8:23|At 8:23 there seemed every chance of a lasting alliance starting between Florin and Guilder. At 8:24 the two nations were very close to war.|The Princess Bride|William Goldman|unknown
08:24|8:24|At 8:23 there seemed every chance of a lasting alliance starting between Florin and Guilder. At 8:24 the two nations were very close to war.|The Princess Bride|William Goldman|unknown
08:26|twenty-six minutes past eight|It exploded much later than intended, probably a good twelve hours later, at twenty-six minutes past eight on Monday morning. Several defunct wristwatches, the property of victims, confirmed the time. As with its predecessors over the last few months, there had been no warning.|The Little Drummer Girl|John Le Carre|unknown
08:27|almost eight-thirty|The lecture was to be given tomorrow, and it was now almost eight-thirty.|A Confederacy of Dunces|John Kennedy Toole|unknown
08:28|8.28|And at 8.28 on the following morning, with a novel chilliness about the upper lip, and a vast excess of strength and spirits, I was sitting in a third-class carriage, bound for Germany, and dressed as a young sea-man, in a pea-jacket, peaked cap, and comforter.|The Riddle of the Sands|Erskine Childers|unknown
08:29|8.29|At 8.29 I punched the front doorbell in Elgin Crescent. It was opened by a small oriental woman in a white apron. She showed me into a large, empty sitting room with an open fire and a couple of huge oil paintings.|Engleby|Sebastian Faulks|unknown
08:30|half past eight|At half past eight, Mr. Dursley picked up his briefcase, pecked Mrs. Dursley on the cheek, and tried to kiss Dudley good-bye but missed, because Dudley was now having a tantrum and throwing his cereal at the walls.|Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone |JK Rowling|unknown
08:30|8:30|It is around 8:30. Sunshine comes through the windows at right. As the curtain rises, the family has just finished breakfast.|Long Day's Journey Into Night |Eugene O'Neill|unknown
08:30|8:30 a.m.|On July 25th, 8:30 a.m. the bitch Novaya dies whelping. At 10 o'clock she is lowered into her cool grave, at 7:30 that same evening we see our first floes and greet them wishing they were the last.|The Terrors of Ice and Darkness |Christoph Ransmayr|unknown
08:30|eight-thirty|The lecture was to be given tomorrow, and it was now almost eight-thirty.|A Confederacy of Dunces|John Kennedy Toole|unknown
08:30|eight-thirty|When he woke, at eight-thirty, he was alone in the bedroom. He put on his dressing gown and put in his hearing aid and went into the living room.|Deaf Sentence |David Lodge|unknown
08:30|eight-thirty|I can see by my watch, without taking my hand from the left grip of the cycle, that it is eight-thirty in the morning.|Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenence|Robert M. Pirsig|unknown
08:32|0832|'Does anybody know the time a little more exactly is what I'm wondering, Don, since Day doesn't.' Gately checks his cheap digital, head still hung over the sofa's arm. 'I got 0832:14, 15, 16, Randy.' ''ks a lot, D.G. man.'|Infinite Jest |David Foster Wallace|unknown
08:32|8.32 a.m.|8.32 a.m. Catch bus to school|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
08:35|thirty-five minutes past eight|It was thirty-five minutes past eight by the big clock of the central building when Mathieu crossed the yard towards the office which he occupied as chief designer. For eight years he had been employed at the works where, after a brilliant and special course of study, he had made his beginning as assistant draughtsman when but nineteen years old, receiving at that time a salary of one hundred francs a month.|Fruitfulness |Emile Zola|unknown
08:35|8.35 a.m.|Old gummy granny (thrusts a dagger towards Stephen's hand) Remove him, acushla. At 8.35 a.m. you will be in heaven and Ireland will be free (she prays) O good God take him!|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
08:37|eight thirty-seven|Eight thirty-seven am., Patrice Lane, Biohazard: The dog's clean. The Good Samaritan was a woman with an accent of some sort. Why haven't you called me?|Magic Bleeds|Ilona Andrews|unknown
08:39|8:39 A.M.|Doug McGuire noticed the early hour, 8:39 A.M. on the one wall clock that gave Daylight Savings Time for the East Coast.|Terminal Compromise|Winn Schwartau|unknown
08:40|8.40|At this moment the clock indicated 8.40. 'Five minutes more,' said Andrew Stuart. The five friends looked at each other. One may surmise that their heart-beats were slightly accelereted, for, even for bold gamblers, the stake was a large one.'|Around the world in eighty days |Jules Verne|unknown
08:40|twenty minutes to nine|It was when I stood before her, avoiding her eyes, that I took note of the surrounding objects in detail, and saw that her watch had stopped at twenty minutes to nine, and that a clock in the room had stopped at twenty minutes to nine.|Great Expectations|Charles Dickens|unknown
08:41|forty-one minutes past eight|By forty-one minutes past eight we are five hundred yards from the water’s edge, and between our road and the foot of the mountain we descry the piled-up remains of a ruined tower.|Narrative of a Journey round the Dead Sea and in the Bible lands in 1850 and 1851|Félicien de Saulcy|unknown
08:43|eight forty-three|"""You understand this tape recorder is on?"" ""Uh huh"" ""And it's Wednesday, May 15, at eight forty-three in the mornin'."" ""If you say so"""|A Time to Kill |John Grisham|unknown
08:43|8.43 a.m.|8.43 a.m. Go past tropical fish shop|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
08:44|eight forty-four|Several soldiers - some with their uniforms unbuttoned - were looking over a motorcycle, arguing about it. The sergeant looked at his watch; it was eight forty-four. They had to wait until nine. Hladik, feeling more insignificant than ill-fortuned, sat down on a pile of firewood.|The Secret Miracle|Jorge Luis Borges|unknown
08:45|8:45|He paid the waitress and left the café. It was 8:45. The sun pressed against the inside of a thin layer of cloud. He unbuttoned his jacket as he hurried down Queensway. His mind, unleashed, sprang forwards.|Dreams of leaving|Rupert Thomson|unknown
08:47|8.47|"""Just on my way to the cottage. It's, er, ..8.47. Bit misty on the roads....."""|Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency |Douglas Adams|unknown
08:47|8.47|8.47. Bit misty on the roads|Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency|Douglas Adams|unknown
08:49|8.49|I had arranged to meet the Occupational Health Officer at 10:30. I took the train from Watford Junction at 8.19 and arrived at London Euston seven minutes late, at 8.49.|The Terrible Privacy of Maxwell Sim|Jonathan Coe|unknown
08:50|ten to nine|At ten to nine the clerks began to arrive.When they had hung up their coats and hates they came to the fireplace and stood warming themselves. If there was no fire, they stood there all the same|The Chestnut Tree|V.S. Pritchett|unknown
08:50|8:50|"It was 8:50 in the morning and Bernie and I were alone on an Astoria side street, not far from a sandwich shop that sold a sopressatta sub called ""The Bypass"". I used to eat that sandwich weekly, wash it down with espresso soda, smoke a cigarette, go for a jog. Now I was too near the joke to order the sandwich, and my son's preschool in the throes of doctrinal schism."|The Ask |Sam Lipsyte|unknown
08:50|ten minutes to nine|Punctually at ten minutes to nine, a quarter hour after early mass, the boy stood in his Sunday uniform outside his father's door.|The Radetzky March|Joseph Roth|unknown
08:51|8.51 a.m.|8.51 a.m. Arrive at school|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
08:52|8.52am.|Message one. Tuesday, 8.52am. Is anybody there? Hello?|Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close|Jonathan Safran Foer|unknown
08:54|nearly nine o’clock|It was Mrs. Poppets that woke me up next morning. She said: “Do you know that it’s nearly nine o’clock, sir?” “Nine o’ what?” I cried, starting up. “Nine o’clock,” she replied, through the keyhole. “I thought you was a- oversleeping yourselves.”|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
08:55|five minutes to nine|"At five minutes to nine, Jacques, in his gray butler's livery, came down the stairs and said, ""Young master, your Herr Papá is coming."""|The Radetzky March|Joseph Roth|unknown
08:55|five minutes to nine|George pulled out his watch and looked at it: it was five minutes to nine!|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
08:56|nearly nine o'clock|It was nearly nine o'clock and the sun was fiercer every minute.'|Burmese Days|George Orwell|unknown
08:57|three minutes before nine|You'll have to hurry. Many a long year before that, in one of the bygone centuries, a worthy citizen of Wrychester, Martin by name, had left a sum of money to the Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral on condition that as long as ever the Cathedral stood, they should cause to be rung a bell from its smaller bell-tower for three minutes before nine o'clock every morning, all the year round.|The Paradise Mystery|JS Fletcher|unknown
08:58|two minutes of nine|It was two minutes of nine now - two minutes before the bombs were set to explode - and three or four people were gathered in front of the bank waiting for it to open.|The Getaway|Jim Thompson|unknown
08:59|8:59|She had been lying in bed reading about Sophie and Alberto's conversation on Marx and had fallen asleep. The reading lamp by the bed had been on all night. The green glowing digits on her desk alarm clock showed 8:59.|Sophie's World|Jostein Gaarder|unknown
09:00|nine o'clock|'I could never get all the way down there before nine o'clock.'|A Confederacy of Dunces |John Kennedy Toole|unknown
09:00|nine o'clock|'Look. Ignatius. I'm beat. I've been on the road since nine o'clock yesterday morning.'|A Confederacy of Dunces |John Kennedy Toole|unknown
09:00|nine |On the third morning after their arrival, just as all the clocks in the city were striking nine individually, and somewhere about nine hundred and ninety-nine collectively, Sam was taking the air in George Yard, when a queer sort of fresh painted vehicle drove up, out of which there jumped with great agility, throwing the reins to a stout man who sat beside him, a queer sort of gentleman, who seemed made for the vehicle, and the vehicle for him.|The Pickwick Papers |Charles Dickens|unknown
09:00|9:00 am|14 June 9:00 am woke up|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:00|9.00 a.m.|9.00 a.m. School assembly|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
09:00|nine |"A fly buzzed, the wall clock began to strike. After the nine golden strokes faded, the district captain began. ""How is Herr Colonel Marek?"" ""Thank you, Papá, he's fine."" ""Still weak in geometry?"" ""Thank you, Papá, a little better."" ""Read any books?"" ""Yessir, Papá."""|The Radetzky March |Joseph Roth|unknown
09:00|nine o' clock|As nine o' clock was left behind, the preposterousness of the delay overwhelmed me, and I went in a kind of temper to the owner and said that I thought he should sign on another cook and weigh spars and be off.|A Single Pebble |John Hershey|unknown
09:00|nine o'clock|At nine o'clock, one morning late in July, Gatsby's gorgeous car lurched up the rocky drive to my door and gave out a burst of melody from its three-noted horn|The Great Gatsby |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
09:00|At nine|"He was at breakfast at nine, and for the twentieth time consulted his ""Bradshaw,"" to see at what earliest hour Dr. Grantly could arrive from Barchester."|The Warden |Anthony Trollope|unknown
09:00|nine o'clock|He won't stand beating. Now, if you only kept on good terms with him, he'd do almost anything you liked with the clock. For instance, suppose it were nine o'clock in the morning, just time to begin lessons: you'd only have to whisper a hint to Time, and round goes the clock in a twinkling! Half-past one, time for dinner!|Alice's Adventures in Wonderland |Lewis Carroll|unknown
09:00|nine o'clock|It was around nine o'clock that I crossed the border into Cornwall. This was at least three hours before the rain began and the clouds were still all of a brilliant white. In fact, many of the sights that greeted me this morning were among the most charming I have so far encountered. It was unfortunate, then, that I could not for much of the time give to them the attention they warranted; for one may as well declare it, one was in a condition of some preoccupation with the thought that - barring some unseen complication - one would be meeting Miss Kenton again before the day's end.|The Remains of the Day |Kazuo Ishiguro|unknown
09:00|At nine|Opening his window, Aschenbach thought he could smell the foul stench of the lagoon. A sudden despondency came over him. He considered leaving then and there. Once, years before, after weeks of a beautiful spring, he had been visited by this sort of weather and it so affected his health he had been obliged to flee. Was not the same listless fever setting in? The pressure in the temples, the heavy eyelids? Changing hotels again would be a nuisance, but if the wind failed to shift he could not possibly remain here. To be on the safe side, he did not unpack everything. At nine he went to breakfast in the specially designated buffet between the lobby and the dining room.|Death in Venice |Thomas Mann|unknown
09:00|9.00am|Sometimes what I wouldn't give to have us sitting in a bar again at 9.00am telling lies to one another, far from God.|Jesus' Son |Denis Johnson|unknown
09:00|nine |The clock struck nine when I did send the nurse; In half an hour she promised to return. Perchance she cannot meet him: that's not so.|Romeo and Juliet |Shakespeare|unknown
09:00|nine|To where Saint Mary Woolnoth kept the hours With a dead sound on the final stroke of nine.|The Waste Land |T S Eliot|unknown
09:00|nine|Unreal City, Under the brown fog of a winter dawn, A crowd flowed over London Bridge, so many, I had not thought death had undone so many. Sighs, short and infrequent, were exhaled, And each man fixed his eyes before his feet. Flowed up the hill and down King William Street, To where Saint Mary Woolnoth kept the hours With a dead sound on the final stroke of nine.|The Waste Land |T S Eliot|unknown
09:01|9:01am|9:01am lay in bed, staring at ceiling.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:02|9:02am|9:02am lay in bed, staring at ceiling.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:03|9:03am|9:03am lay in bed, staring at ceiling.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:03|three minutes past nine|"This isn't a very good start to the new school year."" I stared at her. What was she talking about? Why was she looking at her watch? I wasn't late. Okay, the school bell had rung as I was crossing the playground, but you always get five minutes to get to your classroom. ""It's three minutes past nine,"" Miss Beckworth announced. ""You're late."""|The Lottie Project |Jacqueline Wilson|unknown
09:04|9:04am|9:04am lay in bed, staring at ceiling|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:04|9.04|In the light of a narrow-beam lantern, Pierce checked his watch. It was 9.04.|The Great Train Robbery|Michael Crichton|unknown
09:05|9:05am|9:05am lay in bed, staring at ceiling|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:05|9:05|Kaldren pursues me like luminescent shadow. He has chalked up on the gateway '96,688,365,498,702'. Should confuse the mail man. Woke 9:05. To sleep 6:36.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
09:05|9:05 a.m.|The tour of the office doesn't take that long. In fact, we're pretty much done by 9:05 a.m. … and even though it's just a room with a window and a pin board and two doors and two desks... I can't help feeling a buzz as I lead them around. It's mine. My space. My company.|Twenties Girl |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
09:05|9:05 a.m.|The tour of the office doesn't take that long. In fact, we're pretty much done by 9:05 a.m. Ed looks at everything twice and says it's all great, and gives me a list of contacts who might be helpful, then has to leave for his own office.|Twenties Girl|Sophie Kinsella|unknown
09:06|9:06am|9:06am lay in bed, staring at ceiling|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:07|9:07am|9:07am lay in bed, staring at ceiling|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:07|9:07|It was a sparkling morning, 9:07 by the clock when Mrs. Flett stepped aboard the Imperial Limited at the Tyndall station, certain that her life was ruined, but managing, through an effort of will, to hold herself erect and to affect an air of preoccupation and liveliness.|The Stone Diaries|Carol Shields|unknown
09:08|9.08am|9.08am rolled over onto left side.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:09|9.09am|9.09am lay in bed, staring at wall.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:10|9.10am|9.10am lay in bed, staring at wall.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:11|9:11am|9:11am lay in bed, staring at wall|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:12|9.12am|9.12am lay in bed, staring at wall.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:13|9:13am|9:13am lay in bed, staring at wall|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:13|9:13 A.M.|She tucked the phone in the crook of her neck and thumbed hurriedly through her pink messages. Dr. Provetto, at 9:13 A.M.|Mistaken Identity|Lisas Scottoline|unknown
09:14|9.14am|9.14am lay in bed, staring at wall.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:15|0915|"""Great!"" Jones commented. ""I've never seen it do that before. That's all right. Okay."" Jones pulled a handful of pencils from his back pocket. ""Now, I got the contact first at 0915 or so, and the bearing was about two-six-nine."""|The Hunt for Red October |Tom Clancy|unknown
09:15|9:15am|9:15am doubled over pillow, sat up to see out window|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:15|9.15 a.m.|9.15 a.m. First morning class|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
09:15|quarter past nine|Miss Pettigrew pushed open the door of the employment agency and went in as the clock struck a quarter past nine.|Miss Pettigrew Lives For a Day|Winifred Watson|unknown
09:16|9.16am|9.16am sat in bed, staring out window.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:17|9.17am|9.17am sat in bed, staring out window.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:18|9.18am|9.18am sat in bed, staring out window.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:19|9.19am|9.19am sat in bed, staring out window.|A Fraction of the Whole|Steve Toltz|unknown
09:20|nine-twenty|I'll compromise by saying that I left home at eight and spent an hour travelling to a nine o'clock appointment. Twenty minutes later is nine-twenty.|Girl, Interrupted |Susanna Kaysen|unknown
09:20|twenty minutes past nine|At twenty minutes past nine, the Duke of Dunstable, who had dined off a tray in his room, was still there, waiting for his coffee and liqueur.|Uncle Fred in the Springtime |P.G. Wodehouse|unknown
09:20|9.20|The following morning at 9.20 Mr Cribbage straightened his greasy old tie, combed his Hitler moustache and arranged the few strands of his hair across his bald patch.|Red Dog |Louis de Bernieres|unknown
09:21|nine twenty-one|It was nine twenty-one. With one minute to go, there was no sign of Herbert's mother.|This is Life|Dan Rhodes|unknown
09:22|nine twenty-two|No more throwing stones at him, and I'll see you back here exactly one week from now. She looked at her watch. 'At nine twenty-two next Wednesday.'|This is Life|Dan Rhodes|unknown
09:23|9.23|9.23. What possessed me to buy this comb?|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
09:24|9.24|9.24 I'm swelled after that cabbage. A speck of dust on the patent leather of her boot.|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
09:25|nine twenty-five|A man I would cross the street to avoid at nine o'clock - by nine twenty-five I wanted to fuck him until he wept. My legs trembled with it. My voice floated out of my mouth when I opened it to speak. The glass wall of the meeting room was huge and suddenly too transparent.|The Forgotten Waltz |Anne Enright|unknown
09:27|twenty-seven minutes past nine|From twenty minutes past nine until twenty-seven minutes past nine, from twenty-five minutes past eleven until twenty-eight minutes past eleven, from ten minutes to three until two minutes to three the heroes of the school met in a large familiarity whose Olympian laughter awed the fearful small boy that flitted uneasily past and chilled the slouching senior that rashly paused to examine the notices in assertion of an unearned right.|Sinister Street|Compton Mackenzie|unknown
09:28|twenty-eight minutes past nine|"""This clock right?"" he asked the butler in the hall. ""Yes, sir."" The clock showed twenty-eight minutes past nine. ""The clocks here have to be right, sir,"" the butler added with pride and a respectful humour, on the stairs."|Lord Raingo|Arnold Bennett|unknown
09:28|twenty-eight minutes past nine|"He entered No. 10 for the first time, he who had sat on the Government benches for eight years and who had known the Prime Minister from youth up. ""This clock right?"" he asked the butler in the hall. ""Yes, sir."" The clock showed twenty-eight minutes past nine. ""The clocks here have to be right, sir,"" the butler added with pride and a respectful humour, on the stairs."|Lord Raingo |Arnold Bennett|unknown
09:30|half-past nine|he looked at his watch; it was half-past nine|A watcher by the dead |Ambrose Bierce|unknown
09:30|nine-thirty|It was nine-thirty. In another ten minutes she would turn off the heat; then it would take a while for the water to cool. In the meantime there was nothing to do but wait. “Have you thought it through April?” Never undertake to do a thing until you’ve –“ But she needed no more advice and no more instruction. She was calm and quiet now with knowing what she had always known, what neither her parents not Aunt Claire not Frank nor anyone else had ever had to teach her: that if you wanted to do something absolutely honest, something true, it always turned out to be a thing that had to be done alone.|Revolutionary Road |Richard Yates|unknown
09:30|nine-thirty|The body came in at nine-thirty this morning. One of Holding's men went to the house and collected it. There was nothing particularly unusual about the death. The man had had a fear of hospitals and had died at home, being cared for more than adequately by his devoted wife.|Trumpet|Jackie Kay|unknown
09:30|9.30|Up the welcomingly warm morning hill we trudge, side by each, bound finally for the Hall of Fame. It's 9.30, and time is in fact a-wastin'.|Independence Day |Richard Ford|unknown
09:32|9.32|He said he couldn't say for certain of course, but that he rather thought he was. Anyhow, if he wasn't the 11.5 for Kingston, he said he was pretty confident he was the 9.32 for Virginia Water, or the 10 a.m. express for the Isle of Wight, or somewhere in that direction, and we should all know when we got there.|Three Men in a Boat|Jerome K Jerome|unknown
09:32|nine-thirty-two|Sandy barely made the nine-thirty-two and found a seat in no-smoking. She'd been looking forward to this visit with Lisbeth. They hadn't seen each other in months, not since January, when Sandy had returned from Jamaica. And on that day Sandy was sporting a full-blown herpes virus on her lower lip.|Wifey |Judy Blume|unknown
09:33|thirty-three minutes past nine|Next, he remembered that the morrow of Christmas would be the twenty-seventh day of the moon, and that consequently high water would be at twenty-one minutes past three, the half-ebb at a quarter past seven, low water at thirty-three minutes past nine, and half flood at thirty-nine minutes past twelve.|The Toilers of the Sea|Victor Hugo|unknown
09:35|nine-thirty-five|Nine-thirty-five. He really must be gone. The bird is no longer feeding but sitting at the apex of a curl of razor wire.|The Memory of Love|Aminatta Forna|unknown
09:35|nine-thirty-five|Nine-thirty-five. He really must be gone. The bird is no longer feeding but sitting at the apex of a curl of razor wire.|The Memory of Love |Aminatta Forna|unknown
09:36|9:36|I grab a pen and the pad of paper by the phone and start scribbling a list for the day. I have an image of myself moving smoothly from task to task, brush in one hand, duster in the other, bringing order to everything. Like Mary Poppins. 9:30-9:36 Make Geigers' bed 9:36-9:42 Take laundry out of machine and put in dryer 9:42-10:00 Clean bathrooms I get to the end and read it over with a fresh surge of optimism. At this rate I should be done easily by lunchtime. 9:36 Fuck. I cannot make this bed. Why won't this sheet lie flat? 9:42 And why do they make mattresses so heavy?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
09:36|9.36am.|Monday February 6th. '9.36am. Oh god, Oh god. Maybe he's fallen in love in New York and stayed there'.|Bridget Jones Diary|Helen Fielding|unknown
09:37|thirty-seven minutes past nine|It comprised all that was required of the servant, from eight in the morning, exactly at which hour Phileas Fogg rose, till half-past eleven, when he left the house for the Reform Club - all the details of service, the tea and toast at twenty-three minutes past eight, the shaving-water at thirty-seven minutes past nine, and the toilet at twenty minutes before ten.|Around the World in 80 days|Jules Verne|unknown
09:40|twenty minutes before ten|It comprised all that was required of the servant, from eight in the morning, exactly at which hour Phileas Fogg rose, till half-past eleven, when he left the house for the Reform Club—all the details of service, the tea and toast at twenty-three minutes past eight, the shaving-water at thirty-seven minutes past nine, and the toilet at twenty minutes before ten.|Around the World in 80 days|Jules Verne|unknown
09:40|9:40|Must have the phone disconnected. Some contractor keeps calling me up about payment for 50 bags of cement he claims I collected ten days ago. Says he helped me load them onto a truck himself. I did drive Whitby's pick-up into town but only to get some lead screening. What does he think I'd do with all that cement? Just the sort of irritating thing you don't expect to hang over your final exit. (Moral: don't try too hard to forget Eniwetok.) Woke 9:40. To sleep 4:15.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
09:42|9:42|I grab a pen and the pad of paper by the phone and start scribbling a list for the day. I have an image of myself moving smoothly from task to task, brush in one hand, duster in the other, bringing order to everything. Like Mary Poppins. 9:30-9:36 Make Geigers' bed 9:36-9:42 Take laundry out of machine and put in dryer 9:42-10:00 Clean bathrooms I get to the end and read it over with a fresh surge of optimism. At this rate I should be done easily by lunchtime. 9:36 Fuck. I cannot make this bed. Why won't this sheet lie flat? 9:42 And why do they make mattresses so heavy?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
09:45|9.45|9.15, 9.30, 9.45, 10! Bond felt the excitement ball up inside him like cat's fur.|On Her Majesty's Secret Service |Ian Fleming|unknown
09:47|9.47am.|Monday February 6th. '9.47am. Or gone to Las Vegas and got married'.|Bridget Jones Diary|Helen Fielding|unknown
09:50|9.50am.|9.50am. Hmmm. Think will go inspect make-up in case he does come in|Bridget Jones Diary|Helen Fielding|unknown
09:50|ten minutes to ten.|"Ten minutes to ten. ""I had just time to hide the bottle (after the nurse had left me) when you came into my room."""|The Law and the Lady |Wilkie Collins|unknown
09:52|9:52|"""She caught the 9:52 to Victoria. I kept well clear of her on the train and picked her up as she went through the barrier. Then she took a taxi to Hammersmith."" ""A taxi?"" Smiley interjected. ""She must be out of her mind."""|Call for the Dead|John le Carre|unknown
09:53|seven minutes to ten|Miss Pettigrew went to the bus-stop to await a bus. She could not afford the fare, but she could still less afford to lose a possible situation by being late. The bus deposited her about five minutes' walk from Onslow Mansions, an at seven minutes to ten precisely she was outside her destination.|Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day |Winifred Watson|unknown
09:54|9:54|9:54 This is sheer torture. My arms have never ached so much in my entire life. The blankets weigh a ton, and the sheets won't go straight and I have no idea how to do the wretched corners. How do chambermaids do it?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
09:55|five to ten|At five to ten I'm ready in the hall. Nathaniel's mother's house is nearby but apparently tricky to find, so the plan is to meet here and he'll walk me over. I check my reflection in the hall mirror and wince. The streak of bleach in my hair is as obvious as ever. Am I really going out in public like this?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
09:55|five minutes to ten|"Good-morning, Lucien, good-morning, said Albert; ""your punctuality really alarms me. What do I say? punctuality! You, whom I expected last, you arrive at five minutes to ten, when the time fixed was half-past! Has the ministry resigned?"""|The Count of Monte Cristo|Alexandre Dumas|unknown
09:58|around ten o'clock|I didn't sleep too long, because I think it was only around ten o'clock when I woke up. I felt pretty hungry as soon as I had a cigarette. The last time I'd eaten was those two hamburgers I had with Brossard and Ackley when we went in to Agerstown to the movies. That was a long time ago. It seemed like fifty years ago.|Catcher in the Rye |J.D. Salinger|unknown
09:59|One minute to ten.|One minute to ten. With a heavy heart Bert watched the clock. His legs were still aching very badly. He could not see the hands of the clock moving, but they were creeping on all the same.|The Ragged Trouserred Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
10:00|ten o'clock|––In assaying to put on his regimental coat and waistcoat, my uncle Toby found the same objection in his wig, ––so that went off too: ––So that with one thing and what with another, as always falls out when a man is in the most haste, ––'twas ten o'clock, which was half an hour later than his usual time before my uncle Toby sallied out.|Tristram Shandy |Laurence Sterne|unknown
10:00|an hour ago since it was nine|’Tis but an hour ago since it was nine, And after one hour more ‘twill be eleven.|As You Like It|William Shakespeare|unknown
10:00|ten |For some seconds the light went on becoming brighter and brighter, and she saw everything more and more clearly and the clock ticked louder and louder until there was a terrific explosion right in her ear. Orlando leapt as if she had been violently struck on the head. Ten times she was struck. In fact it was ten o'clock in the morning. It was the eleventh of October. It was 1928. It was the present moment.|Orlando |Virginia Woolf|unknown
10:00|10:00|The trial was irretrievably over; everything that could be said had been said, but he had never doubted that he would lose. The written verdict was handed down at 10:00 on Friday morning, and all that remained was a summing up from the reporters waiting in the corridor outside the district court.|The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo |Stieg Larsson|unknown
10:00|10 am|According to military records no US bombers or any other kind of aircraft were flying over that region at the time, that is around 10 am on November 7,1944.|Kafka on the shore |Haruki Murakami|unknown
10:00|ten o'clock|At about ten o'clock in the morning the sun threw a bright dust-laden bar through one of the side windows, and in and out of the beam flies shot like rushing stars.|Of Mice And Men |John Steinbeck|unknown
10:00|ten o' clock|I went to bed and the next thing I knew I was awake again and it was getting on for ten o' clock in the morning. Ring, ring, said the telephone, ring, ring.|The Medusa Frequency |Russell Hoban|unknown
10:00|ten o'clock|If Wednesday should ever come! It did come, and exactly when it might be reasonably looked for. It came - it was fine - and Catherine trod on air. By ten o'clock, the chaise and four conveyed the two from the abbey; and, after an agreeable drive of almost twenty miles, they entered Woodston, a large and populous village, in a situation not unpleasant.|Northanger Abbey |Jane Austen|unknown
10:00|ten|King Richard: Well, but what's o'clock? Buckingham: Upon the stroke of ten.|Richard III |William Shakespeare|unknown
10:00|10 o’clock|Monday 30 March 1668 Up betimes, and so to the office, there to do business till about 10 o’clock|The Diary of Samuel Pepys |Samuel Pepys|unknown
10:00|10 o'clock|On July 25th, 8:30 a.m. the bitch Novaya dies whelping. At 10 o'clock she is lowered into her cool grave, at 7:30 that same evening we see our first floes and greet them wishing they were the last.|The Terrors of Ice and Darkness |Christoph Ransmayr|unknown
10:00|Ten-thirty|The pundit sighed. 'Only a fool like me would leave his door open when a riot can occur at any moment, and only a fool like me would say yes to you,' he said. 'What time?' Just his head was sticking out of the partially opened door. The money from blessing the ice-cream factory must have dulled his desire for work, I thought. 'Ten.' 'Ten-thirty.' Without another word, he closed the door.|An Obedient Father |Akhil Sharma|unknown
10:00|ten o' clock|The Saturday immediately preceding the examinations was a very busy day for Kennedy. At ten o' clock he was entering Willey's room; the latter had given him a key and left the room vacant by previous arrangement - in fact he had taken Olivia on another house hunting trip.|The Greeks have a word for it |Barry Unsworth|unknown
10:00|At ten|The summer holidays were near at hand when I made up my mind to break out of the weariness of school-life for one day at least. With Leo Dillon and a boy named Mahoney I planned a day's mitching. Each of us saved up sixpence. We were to meet at ten in the morning on the Canal Bridge.|Dubliners |James Joyce|unknown
10:00|10:00|The written verdict was handed down at 10:00 on Friday morning, and allthat remained was a summing up from the reporters waiting in the corridor outside the district court.|The girl with the dragon tattoo |Stieg Larsson|unknown
10:01|about ten o'clock|At about ten o'clock in the morning the sun threw a bright dust-laden bar through one of the side windows, and in and out of the beam flies shot like rushing stars.'|Of Mice And Men|John Steinbeck|unknown
10:02|two minutes after ten|It was two minutes after ten; she was not satisfied with her clothes, her face, her apartment. She heated the coffee again and sat down in the chair by the window. Can't do anything more now, she thought, no sense trying to improve anything the last minute.|The Daemon Lover|Shirley Jackson|unknown
10:03|10.03|It's 10.03 according to his watch, and he is travelling down through the Scottish highlands to Inverness, tired and ever-so-slightly anxious in case he falls asleep between now and when the train reaches the station, and misses his cue to say to Alice, Drew and Aleesha: 'OK, this is Inverness, let's move it.'|“Vanilla-Bright like Eminem” from The Farenheit Twins |Michel Faber|unknown
10:03|10.03|The date was the 14th of May and the clock on his desk said the time was twenty three minutes past ten, so he tapped in the numbers 10.23. At least, that's what he meant to do. In fact he typed in the numbers 10.03.|Ctrl-Z|Andrew Norriss|unknown
10:05|five past ten|We both watch as a pair of swans sail regally under the little bridge. Then I glance at my watch. It's already five past ten. “We should get going,” I say with a little start. Your mother will be waiting.” “There's no rush,” Nathaniel calls as I hasten down the other side of the bridge. “We've got all day.” He lopes down the bridge. “It's OK. You can slow down.” I try to match his relaxed pace. But I'm not used to this easy rhythm. I'm used to striding along crowded pavements, fighting my way, pushing and elbowing.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
10:07|10.07 am|10.07 am: In a meeting with Rod, Momo and Guy. We are rehearsing the final for the third time, with Rod and Guy taking the parts of the clients, when Rod's secretary, Lorraine, bursts in.|I Don't Know How She Does It|Allison Pearson|unknown
10:09|10:09|He followed the squeals down a hallway. A wall clock read 8:09-10:09 Dallas time.|American Tabloid|James Ellroy|unknown
10:10|10:10|10:10 Shot is fired.|The Hollow Man |John Dickson Carr|unknown
10:10|ten minutes past 10|Saturday morning was bright and sunny, and at ten minutes past 10 Donald arrived at the Embankment entrance of Charing Cross Underground Station, carrying a small suitcase full of clothes suitable for outdoor sports and pastimes.|England, Their England|AG Macdonell|unknown
10:11|eleven minutes past ten|Through the curtained windows of the furnished apartment which Mrs. Horace Hignett had rented for her stay in New York rays of golden sunlight peeped in like the foremost spies of some advancing army. It was a fine summer morning. The hands of the Dutch clock in the hall pointed to thirteen minutes past nine; those of the ormolu clock in the sitting-room to eleven minutes past ten; those of the carriage clock on the bookshelf to fourteen minutes to six. In other words, it was exactly eight; and Mrs. Hignett acknowledged the fact by moving her head on the pillow, opening her eyes, and sitting up in bed. She always woke at eight precisely.|Three Men and a Maid |P.G. Wodehouse|unknown
10:12|ten twelve|“I'll take the coffee tray out,” I suggest humbly. As I pick it up I glance again at my watch. Ten twelve. I wonder if they've started the meeting.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
10:12|10:12 a.m.|He stood up once, early on, to lock his office door, and then he was reading the last page, and it was exactly 10:12 a.m., and the sun beating on his office windows was a different sun from the one he'd always known.|Freedom|Jonathan Franzen|unknown
10:13|thirteen minutes past ten|"""By the bye,"" said the first, ""I was able this morning to telegraph the very words of the order to my cousin at seventeen minutes past ten."" ""And I sent it to the Daily Telegraph at thirteen minutes past ten."" ""Bravo, Mr. Blount!"" ""Very good, M. Jolivet."""|Michel Strogoff|Jules Verne|unknown
10:14|ten fourteen|“Okay. Ten fourteen: Mrs. Narada reports that her cat has been attacked by a large dog. Now I send all the boys out looking, but they don't find anything until eleven. Then one of them calls in that a big dog has just bitten holes in the tires on his golf cart and run off. Eleven thirty: Dr. Epstein makes his first lost-nap call: dog howling. Eleven thirty-five: Mrs. Norcross is putting the kids out on the deck for some burgers when a big dog jumps over the rail, eats the burgers, growls at the kids, runs off. First mention of lawsuit.”|Coyote Blue |Christopher Moore|unknown
10:15|10.15|At 10.15 Arlena departed from her rondezvous, a minute or two later Patrick Redfern came down and registered surprise, annoyance, etc. Christine's task was easy enough. Keeping her own watch concealed she asked she asked Linda at twenty-five past eleven what time it was. Linda looked at her watch and replied that it was a quarter to twelve.|Evil under the sun |Agatha Christie|unknown
10:16|10:16|10:16 At last. Forty minutes of hard work and I have made precisely one bed. I'm way behind. But never mind. Just keep moving. Laundry next.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
10:17|seventeen minutes past ten|"""By the bye,"" said the first, ""I was able this morning to telegraph the very words of the order to my cousin at seventeen minutes past ten."" ""And I sent it to the Daily Telegraph at thirteen minutes past ten.""n ""Bravo, Mr. Blount!"" ""Very good, M. Jolivet."" ""I will try and match that!"""|Michel Strogoff|Jules Verne|unknown
10:18|10:18|I know that it was 10:18 when I got home because I look at my watch a lot.|Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close|Jonathan Safran Foer|unknown
10:20|twenty past ten|How much is the clock fast now? His mother straightened the battered alarm clock that was lying on its side in the middle of the mantelpiece until its dial showed a quarter to twelve and then laid it once more on its side. An hour and twenty-five minutes, she said. The right time now is twenty past ten.|A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man|James Joyce|unknown
10:21|10.21|Liz Headleand stares into the mirror, as though entranced. She does not see herself or the objects on her dressing-table. The clock abruptly jerks to 10.21.|The Radiant Way|Margaret Drabble|unknown
10:22|10:22|I listened to them, and listened to them again, and then before I had time to figure out what to do, or even what to think or feel, the phone started ringing. It was 10:22:27. I looked at the caller ID and saw that it was him.|Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close|Jonathan Safran Foer|unknown
10:23|twenty three minutes past ten|The date was the 14th of May and the clock on his desk said the time was twenty three minutes past ten, so he tapped in the numbers 10.23. At least, that's what he meant to do. In fact he typed in the numbers 10.03|Ctrl-Z|Andrew Norriss|unknown
10:25|10:25|10:25: Phone call from Lüding, very worked up, urging me to return at once and get in touch with Alois, who was equally worked up.|The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum|Heinrich Böll|unknown
10:25|10:25|One meal is enough now, topped up with a glucose shot. Sleep is still 'black', completely unrefreshing. Last night I took a 16 mm. film of the first three hours, screened it this morning at the lab. The first true-horror movie. I looked like a half-animated corpse. Woke 10:25. To sleep 3:45.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
10:26|10:26|10:26 No. Please, no. I can hardly bear to look. It's a total disaster. Everything in the washing machine has gone pink. Every single thing. What happened? With trembling fingers I pick out a damp cashmere cardigan. It was a cream when I put it in. It's now a sickly shade of candy floss. I knew K3 was bad news. I knew it -|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
10:26|ten-twenty-six|In the exact centre of my visual field was the alarm clock, hands pointing to ten-twenty-six. An alarm clock I received as a memento of somebody's wedding.|Hard-boiled Wonderland and The End of the World|Haruki Murakami|unknown
10:27|twenty-seven minutes past 10|Mr. Harcourt woke up with mysterious suddenness at twenty-seven minutes past 10, and, by a curious coincidence, it was at that very instant that the butler came in with two footmen laden with trays of whisky, brandy, syphons, glasses, and biscuits.|England, Their England|AG Macdonell|unknown
10:27|10:27 a.m.|She is on holiday in Norfolk. The substandard clock radio says 10:27 a.m. The noise is Katrina the Cleaner thumping the hoover against the skirting boards and the bedroom doors. Her hand is asleep. It is still hooked through the handstrap of the camera. She unhooks it and shakes it to get the blood back into it. She puts her feet on top of her trainers and slides them across the substandard carpet. It has the bare naked feet of who knows how many hundreds of dead or old people on it.|The Accidental |Ali Smith|unknown
10:30|10.30 a.m.|10.30 a.m. Break|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
10:30|ten thirty|according to the clock on the wall, it is barely ten thirty.|The Hours |Michael Cunningham|unknown
10:30|ten-thirty|At ten-thirty I'm cleaned up, shaved and dressed in my Easter best - a two-piece seersucker Palm Beach I've had since college.|The Sportswriter|Richard Ford|unknown
10:31|Just after half past ten.|"""If you please. You went to bed at what time, Madame?"" ""Just after half past ten."""|Death on the Nile|Agatha Christie|unknown
10:32|Just after half past ten.|"""If you please. You went to bed at what time, Madame?"" ""Just after half past ten."""|Death on the Nile|Agatha Christie|unknown
10:35|Five-and-twenty to eleven|Five-and-twenty to eleven. A horrible hour - a macabre hour, for it is not only the hour of pleasure ended, it is the hour when pleasure itself has been found wanting.|Rope|Patrick Hamilton|unknown
10:36|ten thirty-six|"""Strand post mark and dispatched ten thirty-six"" said Holmes reading it over and over. ""Mr Overton was evidently considerably excited when he sent it over and somewhat incoherent in consequence."""|The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter|Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
10:37|10.37 a.m.|I quite agree with you,' said Mr Murbles. 'It is a most awkward situation. Lady Dormer died at precisely 10.37 a.m. on November 11th.'|The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
10:38|10:38|There must be a solution, there must be. Frantically I scan the cans of products stacked on the shelves. Stain Away. Vanish. There has to be a remedy. ... I just need to think. ... 10:38 OK, I have the answer. It may not totally work—but it's my best shot.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
10:40|10:40|10:40: Call from Katharina asking me whether I had really said what was in the News.|The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum|Heinrich Böll|unknown
10:43|10.43 a.m|24 January, 10.43 a.m: one month and two days later I wonder if I should worry about the fact that my darling boyfriend bought me a birthday present that has the potential to cause instant death...|The Wish List|Jane Costello|unknown
10:45|quarter to eleven|If this is so, we have now to determine what Barker and Mrs. Douglas, presuming they are not the actual murderers, would have been doing from quarter to eleven, when the sound of the shot brought them down, until quarter past eleven, when they rang for the bell and summoned the servants'.|The Valley of Fear|Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
10:45|quarter to eleven|They reached King's Cross at a quarter to eleven. Mr Weasley dashed across the road to get trolleys for their trunks and they all hurried into the station.|Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets |J.K.Rowling|unknown
10:47|10.47|He whistles in the shower. It is 10.47 and he is ready for the off.|Trumpet|Jackie Kay|unknown
10:48|10.48am|At 10.48am, I closed my folder but didn't bother putting it back in my bag, so you knew I was on my way to a committee or meeting room nearby. Before I stood up, I folded my paper napkin and put it and the spoon into my coffee cup, a neat sort of person, you thought.|Apple Tree Yard|Louise Doughty|unknown
10:49|forty-nine minutes past ten|By forty-nine minutes past ten, we fall in again with a fine portion of the ancient road, which the modern track constantly follows, and descend by some steep windings, hewn in the side of a precipitous cliff, to the place where the Ouad-el-Haoud commences.|Narrative of a Journey round the Dead Sea and in the Bible lands in 1850 and 1851|Félicien de Saulcy|unknown
10:50|10.50 a.m.|10.50 a.m. Art class with Mrs Peters|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
10:50|ten to eleven|As he walked back to the flight office, airmen were forming a line to await the arrival of the NAAFI van with morning tea and cakes. Lambert looked at his watch; it was ten to eleven.|Bomber|Len Deighton|unknown
10:53|10.53 hrs|He begins to make a record of our observations.'10.53 hrs,' he writes, as we crouch at the top of the stairs, listening to his mother in the hall below.|Spies|Michael Frayn|unknown
10:53|10:53|I gaze and gaze again at that face, which seems to me both strange and familiar, said Austerlitz, I run the tape back repeatedly, looking at the time indicator in the top left-hand corner of the screen, where the figures covering part of her forehead show the minutes and seconds, from 10:53 to 10:57, while the hundredths of a second flash by so fast that you cannot read and capture them.|Austerlitz |W.G. Sebald|unknown
10:55|five minutes to eleven|The clock was still saying five minutes to eleven when Pooh and Piglet set out on their way half an hour later.|The House at Pooh Corner|AA Milne|unknown
10:57|10.57|I run the tape back repeatedly, looking at the time indicator in the top left-hand corner of the screen, where the figures covering part of her forehead show the minutes and seconds, from 10.53 to 10.57.|Austerlitz|W. G. Sebald|unknown
10:58|10:58|One day Joe was sitting in the office waiting for his 11 o'clock appointment, and at 10:58 this black gal came in.|Lightning Rods|Helen DeWitt|unknown
10:59|one minute to eleven|Harry grunted in his sleep and his face slid down the window an inch or so, making his glasses still more lopsided, but he did not wake up. An alarm clock, repaired by Harry several years ago, ticked loudly on the sill, showing one minute to eleven.|Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince|J. K. Rowling|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|'Who can - what can -” asked Mrs Dalloway (thinking it was outrageous to be interrupted at eleven o'clock on the morning of the day she was giving a party), hearing a step on the stairs.|Mrs Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
11:00|11 o'clock|"""By 11 o'clock I have finished the first chapter of Mr Y. The winter sun is peeping meekly through the thin curtains and I decide to get up"""|The End of Mr Y |Scarlett Thomas|unknown
11:00|At eleven|He was rather a long time, and I began to feel muffled, weighed down by thick stuffs and silence. I thought: He'll never come back; and when he did his figure seemed to come at me from very far away, dream-like and dwindled, making his way back along a tunnel...I dare say it was champagne at eleven in the morning.|The Weather in the Streets |Rosamond Lehmann|unknown
11:00|11 o'clock|As her husband had told him, she was still in bed although it was past 11 o'clock. Her normally mobile face was encased in clay, rigid and menacing as an Aztec mask.|Scoop |Evelyn Waugh|unknown
11:00|eleven |As they looked the whole world became perfectly silent, and a flight of gulls crossed the sky, first one gull leading, then another, and in this extraordinary silence and peace, in this pallor, in this purity, bells struck eleven times the sound fading up there among the gulls.|Mrs. Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|At eleven o'clock in the morning, large flakes had appeared from a colourless sky and invaded the fields, gardens and lawns of Romerike like an armada from outer space.|The Snowman |Jo Nesbo|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|At eleven o'clock the phone rang, and still the figure did not respond, any more than it had responded when the phone had rung at twenty-five to seven, and again for ten minutes continuously starting at five to seven...|The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul|Douglas Adams|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|Big Ben was striking as she stepped out into the street. It was eleven o'clock and the unused hour was fresh as if issued to children on a beach.|Mrs Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|It was about eleven o'clock in the morning, mid October, with the sun not shining and a look of hard wet rain in the clearness of the foothills. I was wearing my powder-blue suit, with dark blue shirt, tie and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool socks with dark blue clocks on them. I was neat, clean, shaved and sober, and I didn't care who knew it. I was everything the well-dressed private detective ought to be. I was calling on four millon dollars.|The big sleep |Raymond Chandler|unknown
11:00|eleven |My sister is terrified that I might write and tell all the family secrets. Why do I feel like a rebel, like an iconoclast? I am only trying to do a writing class, what is wrong with that? I keep telling myself that once in the car I will be fine, I can listen to Radio Four Woman’s Hour and that will take me till eleven o’clock when the class starts.|The Saints |Patsy Hickman|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|ON the morning following the events just narrated, Mrs. Arlington was seated at breakfast in a sweet little parlour of the splendid mansion which the Earl of Warrington had taken and fitted up for her in Dover Street, Piccadilly. It was about eleven o'clock; and the Enchantress was attired in a delicious deshabillé. With her little feet upon an ottoman near the fender, and her fine form reclining in a luxurious large arm-chair, she divided her attention between her chocolate and the columns of the Morning Herald. She invariably prolonged the morning's repast as much as possible, limply because it served to wile away the time until the hour for dressing arrived.|The Mysteries of London |G.W.M. Reynolds|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|Quiet as I am, I become at Eleven o'Clock in the Morning on every day of the week save Sunday a raving, ranting maniac -- a dangerous lunatic, panting with insane desires to do, not only myself but other people, a mischief, and possessed less by hallucination than by rabies.|Twice Around the Clock |George Augustus Sala|unknown
11:00|eleven|Though perhaps' – but here the bracket clock whirred and then hectically struck eleven, its weights spooling downwards at the sudden expense of energy. She had to sit for a moment, when the echo had vanished, to repossess her thoughts.|The Stranger's Child |Alan Hollinghurst|unknown
11:00|At eleven|We got to Waterloo at eleven, and asked where the eleven-five started from. Of course nobody knew; nobody at Waterloo ever does know where a train is going to start from, or where a train when it does start is going to, or anything about it.|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
11:00|At eleven|We got to Waterloo at eleven, and asked where the eleven-five started from.Of course nobody knew; nobody at Waterloo ever does know where a train is going to start from, or where a train when it does start is going to, or anything about it.|Three Men in a Boat |Jerome K Jerome|unknown
11:00|eleven o'clock|We passed a few sad hours until eleven o'clock, when the trial was to commence. My father and the rest of the family being obliged to attend as witnesses, I accompanied them to the court. During the whole of this wretched mockery of justice I suffered living torture.|Frankenstein |Mary Shelley|unknown
11:01|just past eleven|O'Neil rises and takes the tray. He has finished the tea, but the muffins are still here in a wicker basket covered with a blue napkin. The clock above the stove says that it is just past eleven, and guests will be arriving at the house now.|Mary and O'Neil|Justin Cronin|unknown
11:02|11.02am|On August 9th, three days later, at 11.02am, another B−29 dropped the second bomb on the industrial section of the city of Nagasaki, totally destroying 1 1/2 square miles of the city, killing 39,000 persons and injuring 25,000 more.|The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki|The Manhattan Engineer District|unknown
11:03|Eleven oh-three|"""What makes you think it's for real?"" ""Just a hunch, really. He sounded for real. Sometimes you can just tell about people""-he smiled-""even if you're a dull old WASP."" ""I think it's a setup."" ""Why?"" ""I just do. Why would someone from the government want to help you?"" ""Good question. Guess I'll find out."" She went back into the kitchen.""What time are you meeting him?"" she called out. ""Eleven oh-three,"" he said. ""That made me think he's for real. Military and intelligence types set precise appointment times to eliminate confusion and ambiguity. Nothing ambiguous about eleven oh-three."""|Little Green Men |Christopher Buckley|unknown
11:03|11.03am|On the fourth, at 11.03am, the editor of the Yidische Zaitung put in a call to him; Doctor Yarmolinsky did not answer. He was found in his room, his face already a little dark, nearly nude beneath a large, anachronistic cape.|Death and the Compass|Jorge Luis Borges|unknown
11:04|past 11 o'clock|As her husband had told him, she was still in bed although it was past 11 o'clock. Her normally mobile face was encased in clay, rigid and menacing as an Aztec mask.|Scoop |Evelyn Waugh|unknown
11:05|11:05|July 3: 5 3/4 hours. Little done today. Deepening lethargy, dragged myself over to the lab, nearly left the road twice. Concentrated enough to feed the zoo and get the log up to date. Read through the operating manuals Whitby left for the last time, decided on a delivery rate of 40 rontgens/min., target distance of 530 cm. Everything is ready now. Woke 11:05. To sleep 3:15.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
11:05|five past eleven|Sansom arrived in a Town Car at five past eleven. Local plates, which meant he had ridden up most of the way on the train. Less convenient for him, but a smaller carbon footprint than driving all the way, or flying. Every detail mattered, in a campaign.|Gone Tomorrow|Lee Child|unknown
11:06|11:06|11:06 And ... oh. The ironing. What am I going to do about that?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
11:06|11.06am|Despite the remaking of the BookWorld, some books remained tantalisingly out of reach [...] It was entirely possible that they didn't know there was a BookWorld, and still they thought they were real. A fantastic notion, until you consider that up until 11.06am on 12 April 1948, everyone else had thought the same.|One of Our Thursdays is Missing|Jasper Fforde|unknown
11:07|seven minutes past eleven|At exactly seven minutes past eleven by the ship's clock the Adventurer gave a prolonged screech and, moorings cast off, edged her way out of the basin and dipped her nose in the laughing waters of the bay, embarked at last on a voyage that was destined to fully vindicate her new name.|The Adventure Club Afloat |Ralph Henry Barbour|unknown
11:08|eight minutes past eleven|The bursar was standing in the hall with his arms folded across his chest and when he caught sight of the fat young man he looked significantly at the clock. It was eight minutes past eleven.|Stephen Hero|James Joyce|unknown
11:09|around eleven|The first time I saw them it was around eleven, eleven-fifteen, a Saturday morning, I was about two thirds through my route when I turned onto their block and noticed a '56 Ford sedan pulled up in the yard with a big open U-Haul behind.|Where I'm Calling From |Raymond Carver|unknown
11:10|Ten minutes after eleven|Ten minutes after eleven in Archie McCue's room on the third floor of the extension to the Robert Matthews' soaring sixties' tower - The Queen's Tower, although no queen was ever likely to live in it.|Emotionally Weird|Kate Atkinson|unknown
11:11|11:11|The LCD face on his Super G Digital Athletic Chronometer blinks, 11:11, on and off and on and off. Eleven eleven. Eleven eleven. Eleven eleven.|The Indifference League|Richard Scarsbrook|unknown
11:12|11:12|11:12 I have a solution, via the local paper. A girl from the village will collect it, iron it all overnight at £3 a shirt, and sew on Eddie's button.|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
11:12|11:12|"I squinted down the street at the bank clock: 11:12, 87 degrees. ""It's only a block and a half and it's not that hot, Daddy. The walk will do you good."" This conversation made me breathless, as if I were wearing a girdle with tight stays."|A Thousand Acres|Jane Smiley|unknown
11:14|11.14am.|The report was dated Sunday, 25 September, 1966, at 11.14am. The text was laconic. Call from Hrk Vanger; stating that his brother's daughter (?) Harriett Ulrika Vanger, born 15 June 1960 (age 1960) has been missing from her home on Hedley Island since Saturday afternoon.|The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo|Stieg Larsson|unknown
11:15|11:15|"""Have you a couple of days to spare? Have just been wired for from the west of England in connection with Boscombe Valley tragedy. Shall be glad if you will come with me. Air and scenery perfect. Leave Paddington by the 11:15."""|The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes|Sir Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
11:15|eleven-fifteen|The first time I saw them it was around eleven, eleven-fifteen, a Saturday morning, I was about two thirds through my route when I turned onto their block and noticed a '56 Ford sedan pulled up in the yard with a big open U-Haul behind. There are only three houses on Pine, and theirs was the last house,the others being the Murchisons, who'd been in Arcata a little less than a year, and the Grants, who'd been here about two years. Murchison worked at Simpson Redwood, and Gene Grant was a cook on the morning shift at Denny's. Those two, then a vacant lot, then the house on the end that used to belong to the Coles.|Where I'm Calling From |Raymond Carver|unknown
11:17|seventeen minutes past eleven|Mrs. Mooney glanced instinctively at the little gilt clock on the mantelpiece as soon as she had become aware through her revery that the bells of George's Church had stopped ringing. It was seventeen minutes past eleven: she would have lots of time to have the matter out with Mr. Doran and then catch short twelve at Marlborough Street. She was sure she would win.|Dubliners |James Joyce|unknown
11:18|11.18|It is 11.18. A row of bungalows in a round with a clump of larch tree in the middle.|Trumpet|Jackie Kay|unknown
11:19|11:19|A whistle cut sharply across his words. Peter got onto his knees to look out the window, and Miss Fuller glared at him. Polly looked down at her watch: 11:19. The train. But the stationmaster had said it was always late.|Blackout|Connie Willis|unknown
11:20|11h20|OFFICER'S NOTES Disruption alert logged 11h20 from Stones' Pool Hall (Premises ID 33CBD-Long181). Officer and Aito /379 responded. On arrival found subject shouting threats and acting in aggressive manner. A scan of the subject's SIM ID register revealed that the subject has recent priors including previous public disruptions and a juvenile record.|Moxyland |Lauren Beukes|unknown
11:20|11.20|Sweeney pointed to the clock above the bar, held in the massive and indifferent jaws of a stuffed alligator head. The time was 11.20.|American Gods|Neil Gaiman|unknown
11:25|twenty-five past eleven|At 10.15 Arlena departed from her rondezvous, a minute or two later Patrick Redfern came down and registered surprise, annoyance, etc. Christine's task was easy enough. Keeping her own watch concealed she asked Linda at twenty-five past eleven what time it was. Linda looked at her watch and replied that it was a quarter to twelve.|Evil under the Sun |Agatha Christie|unknown
11:25|11.25am|When, at about 11.25am, Katharina Blum was finally taken from her apartment for questioning, it was decided not to handcuff her at all.|The Lost Honour of Katharina Blum|Heinrich Böll|unknown
11:27|11.27|It's from one of the more recent plates the tree has scanned: 11.27 in the morning of 4 April 1175|The Second Internet Cafe, Part 2: The Cascade Annihilator|Chris James|unknown
11:28|twenty-eight minutes past eleven|From twenty minutes past nine until twenty-seven minutes past nine, from twenty-five minutes past eleven until twenty-eight minutes past eleven, from ten minutes to three until two minutes to three the heroes of the school met in a large familiarity whose Olympian laughter awed the fearful small boy that flitted uneasily past and chilled the slouching senior that rashly paused to examine the notices in assertion of an unearned right.|Sinister Street|Compton Mackenzie|unknown
11:29|twenty-nine minutes after eleven, a.m.|You are four minutes too slow. No matter; it's enough to mention the error. Now from this moment, twenty-nine minutes after eleven, a.m., this Wednesday, 2nd October, you are in my service.|Around the World in Eighty Days|Jules Verne|unknown
11:30|11.30|'It is now 11.30. The door to this room is shut, and will remain shut, barring emergencies, until 12.00. I am authorised to inform you that we are now under battle orders.|Singularity Sky |Charles Stross|unknown
11:30|half-past eleven|"""O, Frank - I made a mistake! - I thought that church with the spire was All Saints', and I was at the door at half-past eleven to a minute as you said..."""|Far from the madding crowd |Thomas Hardy|unknown
11:30|half-past eleven|"""Thank-you,"" said C.B. quietly; but as he hung up his face was grim. In a few minutes he would have to break it to John that, although they had braved such dredful perils dring the earlier part of the night they had, after all, failed to save Christina. Beddows had abjured Satan at a little after half-past eleven. By about eighteen minutes the Canon had beaten them to it again."""|To the Devil a Daughter |Dennis Wheatley|unknown
11:30|11.30|This time it was Kumiko. The wall clock said 11.30.|The Wind-up Bird Chronicle |Haruki Murakami|unknown
11:31|1131|Albatross 8 passed over Pamlico Sound at 1131 local time. Its on-board programming was designed to trace thermal receptors over the entire visible horizon, interrogating everything in sight and locking on any signature that fit its acquisition parameters.|The Hunt for Red October |Tom Clancy|unknown
11:32|eleven thirty two|And after that, not forgetting, there was the Flemish armada, all scattered, and all officially drowned, there and then, on a lovely morning, after the universal flood, at about eleven thirty two was it? Off the coast of Cominghome...|Finnegans Wake|James Joyce|unknown
11:34|11.34am|"Christmas Eve 1995. 11.34am. The first time, Almasa says it slowly and softly, as if she is really looking for an answer, ""Are you talking to me?"" She peers into the small, grimy mirror in a train toilet."|How to Fare Well and Stay Fair|Adnan Mahmutovic|unknown
11:35|11.35|At 11.35 the Colonel came out; he looked hot and angry as he strode towards the lift. There goes a hanging judge, thought Wormold.|Our Man in Havana|Graham Greene|unknown
11:36|eleven thirty-six|I ran up the stairs, away from the heat and the noise, the mess and the confusion. I saw the clock radio by my bed. Eleven thirty-six.|Losing You|Nicci French|unknown
11:38|11:38|At 11:38, she left her desk and walked to the side door of the auditorium, arriving ten minutes before noon.|The Circle|Dave Eggers|unknown
11:40|11.40am|"Did escape occur to him? … But the door was locked, and the window heavily barred with iron rods. He sat down again, and drew his journal from his pocket. On the line where these words were written, ""21st December, Saturday, Liverpool,"" he added, ""80th day, 11.40am,"" and waited."|Around the World in Eighty Days|Jules Verne|unknown
11:40|twenty minutes before noon|During the sessions at Ito he read the Lotus Sutra on mornings of play, and he now seemed to be bringing himself to order through silent meditation. Then, quickly, there came a rap of stone on board. It was twenty minutes before noon.|The Master of Go |Yusunari Kawabata|unknown
11:41|eleven forty-one|"Spagnola took a deep breath and started into the log again. ""Eleven forty-one: large dog craps in Dr. Yamata's Aston Martin. Twelve oh-three: dog eats two, count 'em, two of Mrs. Wittingham's Siamese cats. She just lost her husband last week; this sort of put her over the edge. We had to call Dr. Yamata in off the putting green to give her a sedative. The personal-injury lawyer in the unit next to hers was home for lunch and he came over to help. He was talking class action then, and we didn't even know who owned the dog yet."""|Coyote Blue |Christopher Moore|unknown
11:42|11:42|11:42 I'm doing fine. I'm doing well. I've got the Hoover on, I'm cruising along nicely- What was that? What just went up the Hoover? Why is it making that grinding noise? Have I broken it?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
11:44|quarter to twelve|At 10.15 Arlena departed from her rondezvous, a minute or two later Patrick Redfern came down and registered surprise, annoyance, etc. Christine's task was easy enough. Keeping her own watch concealed she asked Linda at twenty-five past eleven what time it was. Linda looked at her watch and replied that it was a quarter to twelve.|Evil under the Sun |Agatha Christie|unknown
11:45|quarter to twelve|"""...I waited till a quarter to twelve, and found then that I was in All Souls'. But I wasn't much frightened, for I thought it could be tomorrow as well."""|Far from the madding crowd |Thomas Hardy|unknown
11:45|quarter to twelve|"""I will tell you the time,"" said Septimus, very slowly, very drowsily, smiling mysteriously. As he sat smiling at the dead man in the grey suit the quarter struck, the quarter to twelve."|Mrs. Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
11:45|quarter to twelve|As he sat smiling, the quarter struck - the quarter to twelve.|Mrs Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
11:45|11.45am|I arrived at St. Gatien from Nice on Tuesday, the 14th of August. I was arrested at 11.45am on Thursday, the 16th by an agent de police and an inspector in plain clothes and taken to the Commissariat.|Epitaph for a Spy|Eric Ambler|unknown
11:45|11:45 A.M.|She tucked the phone in the crook of her neck and thumbed hurriedly through her pink messages. .... Dr. Provetto, at 11:45 A.M.|Mistaken Identity |Lisa Scottoline|unknown
11:46|quarter to twelve|At 10.15 Arlena departed from her rondezvous, a minute or two later Patrick Redfern came down and registered surprise, annoyance, etc. Christine's task was easy enough. Keeping her own watch concealed she asked Linda at twenty-five past eleven what time it was. Linda looked at her watch and replied that it was a quarter to twelve.|Evil under the Sun |Agatha Christie|unknown
11:47|thirteen minutes to noon|It was a vast plain with no one on it, neither living on the earth nor dead beneath it; and I walked a long time beneath a colourless sky, which didn't let me judge the time (my watch, set like all military watches to Berlin time, hadn't stood up to the swim and showed an eternal thirteen minutes to noon).|The Kindly Ones|Jonathan Littell|unknown
11:48|ten minutes before noon|At 11:38, she left her desk and walked to the side door of the auditorium, arriving ten minutes before noon.|The Circle|Dave Eggers|unknown
11:50|ten minutes to twelve|The man who gave them to him handed him a ten-shilling note and promised him another if it were delivered at exactly ten minutes to twelve.|The Adventure of Johnnie Waverley: A Hercule Poirot Story|Agatha Christie|unknown
11:51|nine minutes to twelve|The next day, at nine minutes to twelve o'clock noon, the last clock ran down and stopped. It was then placed in the town museum, as a collector's item, or museum piece, with proper ceremonies, addresses, and the like.|Lanterns & Lances|James Thurber|unknown
11:52|eight minutes to twelve|"At any rate, we whirled into the station with many more, just as the great clock pointed to eight minutes to twelve o'clock. ""Thank God! We are in time,"" said the young man, ""and thank you, too, my friend, and your good horse..."""|Black Beauty|Anna Sewell|unknown
11:54|six minutes to twelve|He swilled off the remains of [his beer] and looked at the clock. It was six minutes to twelve.|Hangover Square|Patrick Hamilton|unknown
11:55|five minutes to twelve|He was tearing off on his bicycle to one of the jobs about five minutes to twelve to see if he could catch anyone leaving off for dinner before the proper time.|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
11:55|11:55 a.m.|It was 11:55 a.m. on April 30.|All the President's Men |Bernstein & Woodward|unknown
11:55|11:55|What time did you arrive at the site? It was 11:55. I remember since I happened to glance at my watch when we got there. We rode our bicycles to the bottom of the hill, as far as we could go, then climbed the rest of the way on foot.|Kafka on the Shore|Haruki Murakami|unknown
11:56|around noon|A few minutes' light around noon is all that you need to discover the error, and re-set the clock – provide that you bother to go up and make the observation.|Odalisque: The Baroque Cycle #3 |Neal Stephenson|unknown
11:56|can't be far-off twelve|I wondered what the time is?' said the latter after a pause'. 'I don't know exactly', replied Easton, 'but it can't be far-off twelve.'|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
11:57|can't be far-off twelve|I wondered what the time is?' said the latter after a pause'. 'I don't know exactly', replied Easton, 'but it can't be far-off twelve.'|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
11:58|11.58|And when you go down the steps, it's always 11.58 on the morning of September ninth, 1958.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
11:58|Two minutes before the clock struck noon|Two minutes before the clock struck noon, the savage baron was on the platform to inspect the preparation for the frightful ceremony of mid-day. The block was laid forth-the hideous minister of vengeance, masked and in black, with the flaming glaive in his hand, was ready. The baron tried the edge of the blade with his finger, and asked the dreadful swordsman if his hand was sure? A nod was the reply of the man of blood. The weeping garrison and domestics shuddered and shrank from him. There was not one there but loved and pitied the gentle lady.|Burlesques |William Makepeace Thackeray|unknown
11:59|near to twelve|There is a big grandfather clock there, and as the hands drew near to twelve I don't mind confessing I was as nervous as a cat.|The Adventure of Johnnie Waverley: A Hercule Poirot Story|Agatha Christie|unknown
12:00|twelve|'There's nobody here!' I insisted. 'It was yourself, Mrs. Linton: you knew it a while since.' 'Myself!' she gasped, 'and the clock is striking twelve!|Wuthering Heights |Emily Brontë|unknown
12:00|twelve|A cheap little clock on the wall struck twelve hurriedly, and served to begin the conversation.|The Brothers Karamazov |Fyodor Dostoyevsky|unknown
12:00|noon|He had saved [the republic] and it was now in the present, alive now and everywhere in the present, and the hovering faces brightened and blurred about him, became the sound of a canal in the morning, the look of some roofs in the noon sun, and the fragrance of a certain evening flower. Here he was, home at last. Behind him were the mountains and the Sleeping Woman in the sky, and before him, like smoky flames in the sunset, the whole beautiful beloved city.|The Woman Who Had Two Navels |Nick Joaquin|unknown
12:00|twelve o'clock|It was precisely twelve o'clock; twelve by Big Ben; whose stroke was wafted over the northern part of London; blent with that of other clocks, mixed in a thin ethereal way with the clouds and wisps of smoke and died up there among the seagulls, twelve o'clock struck as Clarissa Dalloway laid her green dress on her bed and the Warren Smiths walked down Harley Street. Twelve was the hour of their appointment.|Mrs Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
12:00|twelve o'clock|It was precisely twelve o'clock; twelve by Big Ben; whose stroke was wafted over the northern part of London; blent with that of other clocks, mixed in a thin ethereal way wth the clouds and wisps of smoke and died up there among the seagulls - twelve o'clock struck as Clarissa Dalloway laid her green dress on the bed, and the Warren Smiths walked down Harley Street.|Mrs Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
12:00|twelve o’clock|It was precisely twelve o’clock; twelve by Big Ben; whose stroke was wafted over the northern part of London; blent with that of other clocks, mixed in a thin ethereal way with the clouds and wisps of smoke and died up there among the seagulls—twelve o’clock struck as Clarissa Dalloway laid her green dress on her bed, and the Warren Smiths walked down Harley Street|Mrs Dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
12:00|twelve o’clock|It was precisely twelve o’clock; twelve by Big Ben; whose stroke was wafted over the northern part of London; blent with that of other clocks, mixed in a thin ethereal way with the clouds and wisps of smoke, and died up there among the seagulls.|Mrs Dalloway|Virginia Woolf|unknown
12:00|noon|Noon found him momentarily alone, while the family prepared lunch in the kitchen. The cracks in the ceiling widened into gaps. The locked wheels of his bed sank into new fault lines opening in the oak floor beneath the rug. At any moment the floor was going to give.|tinkers |Paul Harding|unknown
12:00|noon|On Friday noon, July the twentieth, 1714, the finest bridge in all Peru broke and precipitated five travellers into the gulf below.|The Bridge of San Luis Rey |Thornton Wilder|unknown
12:00|noon|Roaring noon. In a well-fanned Forty-second Street cellar I met Gatsby for lunch.|The Great Gatsby |F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
12:00|Noon|The Birds begun at Four o'clock — Their period for Dawn — A Music numerous as space — But neighboring as Noon —|The Birds begun at Four o'clock|Emily Dickinson|unknown
12:00|twelve |"The Oxen Christmas Eve, and twelve of the clock. ""Now they are all on their knees,"" An elder said as we sat in a flock By the embers in hearthside ease. We pictured the meek mild creatures where They dwelt in their strawy pen, Nor did it occur to one of us there To doubt they were kneeling then. So fair a fancy few would weave In these years! Yet, I feel, If someone said on Christmas Eve, ""Come; see the oxen kneel ""In the lonely barton by yonder coomb Our childhood used to know,"" I should go with him in the gloom, Hoping it might be so."|The Oxen |Thomas Hardy|unknown
12:00|noon|Then came the stroke of noon, and all these working and professional people dispersed like a trampled anthill into all the streets and directions. The white bridge was swarming with nimble dots. And when you considered that each dot had a mouth with which it was now planning to eat lunch, you couldn't help bursting into laughter.|The Tanners |Robert Walser|unknown
12:01|12:01|And on all sides there were the clocks. Conrad noticed them immediately, at every street corner, over every archway, three quarters of the way up the sides of buildings, covering every conceivable angle of approach. Most of them were too high off the ground to be reached by anything less than a fireman's ladder and still retained their hands. All registered the same time: 12:01. Conrad looked at his wristwatch, noted that it was just 2:45. ‘‘They were driven by a master dock’’ Stacey told him. ‘‘When that stopped, they all ceased at the same moment. One minute after midnight, thirty-seven years ago.’’|Chronopolis |J.G. Ballard|unknown
12:01|12:01|It was the twelfth of December, the twelfth month. A was twelve. The electric clock/radio by his bedside table said 12:01.|Boy A|Jonathan Trigell|unknown
12:01|12:01|It was the twelfth of December, the twelfth month. A was twelve. The electric clock/radio by his bedside table said 12:01. A was waiting for it to read 12:12, he hoped there would be some sense of cosmic rightness when it did.|Boy A |Jonathan Trigell|unknown
12:02|twelve o'clock two minutes and a quarter|"It had struck twelve o'clock two minutes and a quarter. The Baron's footman hastily seized a large goblet, and gasped with terror as he filled it with hot, spiced wine. ""Tis past the hour, 'tis past,"" he groaned in anguish, ""and surely I shall now get the red hot poker the Baron hath so often promised me, oh! Woe is me! Would that I had prepared the Baron's lunch before!"""|Crundle Castle|Lewis Carroll|unknown
12:03|12.03|At 12.03 the sun has already punched its ticket. Sinking, it stains the cobbles and stucco of the platz in a violin-coloured throb of light that you would have to be a stone not to find poignant.|The Yiddish Policemen's Union|Michael Chabon|unknown
12:04|12.04pm|"Though by then it was by Tina's own desk clock 12.04pm I was always touched when, out of a morning's worth of repetition, secretaries continued to answer with good mornings for an hour or so into the afternoon, just as people often date things with the previous year well into February; sometimes they caught their mistake and went into a ""This is not my day"" or ""Where is my head?"" escape routine; but in a way they were right, since the true tone of afternoons does not take over in offices until nearly two."|The Mezzanine|Nicholson Baker|unknown
12:05|around noon|A few minutes' light around noon is all that you need to discover the error, and re-set the clock – provide that you bother to go up and make the observation.|Odalisque: The Baroque Cycle #3 |Neal Stephenson|unknown
12:06|around noon|A few minutes' light around noon is all that you need to discover the error, and re-set the clock – provide that you bother to go up and make the observation.|Odalisque: The Baroque Cycle #3 |Neal Stephenson|unknown
12:07|seven minutes after 12|On a Monday Simon Hirsch was going to break his leg at seven minutes after 12, noon, and as soon as Satan told us the day before, Seppi went to betting with me that it would not happen, and soon they got excited and went to betting with me themselves.|The Chronicle of Young Satan|Mark Twain|unknown
12:08|12:08|When a clock struck noon in Washington, D.C., the time was 12:08 in Philadephia, 12:12 in new York, and 12:24 in Boston.|Eighty Days|Matthew Goodman|unknown
12:10|noon, and ten minutes later|Madame Dumas arrived at noon, and ten minutes later Trause handed her his ATM card and instructed her to go to the neighborhood Citibank near Sheridan Square and transfer forty thousand dollars from his savings account to his checking account.|Oracle Night|Paul Auster|unknown
12:10|twelve-ten|They paid for only one room and kept Einstein with them because they were not going to need privacy for lovemaking. Exhausted, Travis barely managed to kiss Nora before falling into a deep sleep. He dreamed of things with yellow eyes, misshapen heads, and crocodile mouths full of sharks’ teeth. He woke five hours later, at twelve-ten Thursday afternoon.|Watchers |Dean Koontz|unknown
12:11|12:11|"At 12:11 there was a knock on the door. It was Terry, A could tell. He hadn't known Terry long, but there was something calmer, more patient, that separated Terry's knocks from the rest of the staff. He knocked from genuine politeness, not formality. ""Come in,"" A said, although the lock was on the other side. Terry did. ""It's your mother,"" he said. ""There's no easy way to say this."" Though he had just used the easiest, because A now knew the rest. A’s face froze, as it tried to catch up, as it tried to register the news. Then it crumpled, and while he considered this fresh blow, the tears came."|Boy A |Jonathan Trigell|unknown
12:12|12:12|It was the twelfth of December, the twelfth month. A was twelve. The electric clock/radio by his bedside table said 12:01. A was waiting for it to read 12:12, he hoped there would be some sense of cosmic rightness when it did.|Boy A|Jonathan Trigell|unknown
12:14|twelve-fourteen|She left London on the twelve-fourteen from Paddington, arriving at Bristol (where she had to change) at two-fifty.|The Plymouth Express|Agatha Christie|unknown
12:15|quarter past twelve|Very well, dear,' she said. 'I caught the 10.20 to Eastnor, which isn't a bad train, if you ever want to go down there. I arrived at a quarter past twelve, and went straight up to the house--you've never seen the house, of course? It's quite charming--and told the butler that I wanted to see Mr Ford on business. I had taken the precaution to find out that he was not there. He is at Droitwich.'|The Little Nugget |P.G. Wodehouse|unknown
12:15|12.15|What shall I think of that's liberating and refreshing? I'm in the mood when I open my window at night and look at the stars. Unfortunately it's 12.15 on a grey dull day, the aeroplanes are active|A Writer's Diary: Being Extracts from the Diary of Virgina Woolf|Virginia Woolf|unknown
12:17|seventeen minutes after twelve|Kava ordered two glasses of coffee for himself and his beloved and some cake. When the pair left, exactly seventeen minutes after twelve, the club began to buzz with excitement.|Vanvild Kava|Isaac Bashevis Singer|unknown
12:17|12:17 p.m.|In a bus of the S-line, 10 meters long, 3 wide, 6 high, at 3 km. 600m. from its starting point, loaded with 48 people at 12:17 p.m., a person of the masculine sex aged 27 years 3 months and 8 days, 1 m. 72 cm tall and weighing 65 kg. and wearing a hat 35 cm. in height round the crown of which was a ribbon 60 cm.|Exercises in Style|Raymon Queneau|unknown
12:20|twelve-twenty|By twelve-twenty in the afternoon, Vince was seated in a rattan chair with comfortable yellow and green cushions at a table by the windows in that same restaurant. He’d spotted Haines on entering. The doctor was at another window table, three away from Vince, half-screened by a potted palm. Haines was eating shrimp and drinking margaritas with a stunning blonde. She was wearing white slacks and a gaily striped tube-top, and half the men in the place were staring at her.|Watchers |Dean Koontz|unknown
12:20|12:20|It is 12:20 in New York a Friday three days after Bastille day, yes it is 1959 and I go get a shoeshine because I will get off the 4:19 in Easthampton at 7:15 and then go straight to dinner and I don’t know the people who will feed me|The Day Lady Died|Frank O'Hara|unknown
12:21|twelve twenty-one|Jake think of something. PLEASE! Twelve twenty-one.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
12:22|twenty-two minutes past twelve|By twenty-two minutes past twelve we leave, much too soon for our desires, this delightful spot, where the pilgrims are in the habit of bathing who come to visit the Jordan.|Narrative of a Journey round the Dead Sea and in the Bible lands in 1850 and 1851|Félicien de Saulcy|unknown
12:23|12:23 p.m.|"–At what time did the 12:23 p.m. S-line bus proceeding in the direction of Porte de Champerret arrive on that day?
—At 12:38 p.m.
–Were there many people on the aforesaid S-bus?
–Bags of 'em.
–Did you particularly notice any of them?
–An individual who had a very a long neck and a plait round his hat."|Exercises in Style|Raymon Queneau|unknown
12:24|12:24|12:24 My legs are in total agony. I've been kneeling on hard tiles, cleaning the bath, for what seems like hours. There are little ridges where the tiles have dug into my knees, and I'm boiling hot and the cleaning chemicals are making me cough. All I want is a rest. But I can't stop for a moment. I am so behind ...|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
12:25|12.25|Boys, do it now. God's time is 12.25.|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
12:25|12.25pm|12.25pm. 26. 27. Every time Billy saved a shot he looked heartbroken|A Kestrel For a Knave|Barry Hines|unknown
12:26|26.|12.25pm. 26. 27. Every time Billy saved a shot he looked heartbroken|A Kestrel For a Knave|Barry Hines|unknown
12:27|27.|12.25pm. 26. 27. Every time Billy saved a shot he looked heartbroken|A Kestrel For a Knave|Barry Hines|unknown
12:28|12.28|The DRINK CHEER-UP COFFEE wall clock read 12.28.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
12:30|half-past twelve|"""You'll never believe this but (in Spain) they are two hours late for ever meal - two hours Fanny - (can we lunch at half-past twelve today?)"""|Love in a Cold Climate |Nancy Mitford|unknown
12:30|12.30 p.m.|12.30 p.m. Lunch|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
12:30|half past twelve|At half past twelve, when Catherine’s anxious attention to the weather was over and she could no longer claim any merit from its amendment, the sky began voluntarily to clear. A gleam of sunshine took her quite by surprise; she looked round; the clouds were parting, and she instantly returned to the window to watch over and encourage the happy appearance. Ten minutes more made it certain that a bright afternoon would succeed, and justified the opinion of Mrs. Allen, who had “always thought it would clear up.”|Northanger Abbey |Jane Austen|unknown
12:30|12.30pm|Tuesday, 12.30pm… Baker, California… Into the Ballantine Ale now, zombie drunk and nervous. I recognize this feeling: three or four days of booze, drugs, sun, no sleep and burned out adrenalin reserves – a giddy, quavering sort of high that means the crash is coming. But when? How much longer?|Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas|Hunter S. Thompson|unknown
12:32|12:32|12:30 What is wrong with this bleach bottle? Which way is the nozzle pointing, anyway? I'm turning it round in confusion, peering at the arrows on the plastic ... Why won't anything come out? OK, I'm going to squeeze it really, really hard- That nearly got my eye. 12:32 FUCK. What has it done to my HAIR?|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
12:32|twelve thirty-two|A chutney-biting brigadier named Boyd-Boyd fixed an appointment on the 'phone with Oxted, at Hornborough Station, for the twelve thirty-two. He was to deliver the goods.|Extremely Entertaining Short Stories|Stacy Aumonier|unknown
12:33|12.33|It's 12.33 now and I could do it, the station is just down that side road there.|Five Red Herrings|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
12:35|twelve-thirty-five|As surely as Apthorpe was marked for early promotion, Trimmer was marked for ignominy. That morning he had appeared at the precise time stated in orders. Everyone else had been waiting five minutes and Colour Sergeant Cork called out the marker just as Trimmer appeared. So it was twelve-thirty-five when they were dismissed.|Men At Arms|Evelyn Waugh|unknown
12:38|12:38 p.m.|"–At what time did the 12:23 p.m. S-line bus proceeding in the direction of Porte de Champerret arrive on that day?
—At 12:38 p.m.
–Were there many people on the aforesaid S-bus?
–Bags of 'em.
–Did you particularly notice any of them?
–An individual who had a very a long neck and a plait round his hat."|Exercises in Style|Raymon Queneau|unknown
12:39|thirty-nine minutes past twelve|Next, he remembered that the morrow of Christmas would be the twenty-seventh day of the moon, and that consequently high water would be at twenty-one minutes past three, the half-ebb at a quarter past seven, low water at thirty-three minutes past nine, and half flood at thirty-nine minutes past twelve.|The Toilers of the Sea|Victor Hugo|unknown
12:40|twenty minutes to one|A little ormolu clock in the outer corridor indicated twenty minutes to one. The car was due at one-fifteen. Thirty-five minutes: oh, to escape for only that brief period!|Extremely Entertaining Short Stories (The Octave of Jealousy)|Stacy Aumonier|unknown
12:42|eighteen minutes to one|The butt had been growing warm in her fingers; now the glowing end stung her skin. She crushed the cigarette out and stood, brushing ash from her black skirt. It was eighteen minutes to one. She went to the house phone and called his room. The telephone rang and rang, but there was no answer.|Marjorie Morningstar|Herman Wouk|unknown
12:43|twelve-forty-three|Died five minutes ago, you say? he asked. His eye went to the watch on his wrist. Twelve-forty-three, he wrote on the blotter.|A Pocket Full of Rye|Agatha Christie|unknown
12:44|around quarter to one|It is around quarter to one. No sunlight comes into the room now through the windows at right. Outside the day is fine but increasingly sultry, with a faint haziness in the air which softens the glare of the sun.|Long Day's Journey Into Night |Eugene O'Neil|unknown
12:45|12:45|"The boy handed in a dispatch. The Professor closed the door again, and after looking at the direction, opened it and read aloud. ""Look out for D. He has just now, 12:45, come from Carfax hurriedly and hastened towards the South. He seems to be going the round and may want to see you: Mina"""|Dracula |Bram Stoker|unknown
12:45|quarter to one|Because it was raining, and because she was depressed and out of sorts, and because Robbie had not come by quarter to one, Elizabeth treated herself to a Martini while she was waiting, sitting uncomfortably on a narrow chair in the restaurant, watching other unimpressive people go in and out.|The Lottery, or the Adventure of James Harris|Shirley Jackson|unknown
12:46|around quarter to one|It is around quarter to one. No sunlight comes into the room now through the windows at right. Outside the day is fine but increasingly sultry, with a faint haziness in the air which softens the glare of the sun.|Long Day's Journey Into Night |Eugene O'Neil|unknown
12:49|12:49 hours|The first victim of the Krefeld raid died at 12:49 hours Double British Summer Time at B Flight, but it wasn't due to carelessness.|Bomber|Len Deighton|unknown
12:50|ten minutes to one|So presently Bert was sent up to the top of the house to look at a church clock which was visible therefrom, and when he came down he reported that it was ten minutes to one.|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
12:52|12.52|The nightclub stood on the junction, flamboyant, still. It was 12.52.|Dreams of Leaving|Rupert Thomson|unknown
12:53|12:53|Aboot twelve miles. We ought tae pass her at Pinmore. She's due there at 12:53.|Five Red Herrings|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
12:54|12:54 pm.|I listen to the different boats' horns, hoping to learn what kind of boat I'm hearing and what the signal means: is the boat leaving or entering the harbor; is it the ferry, or a whale-watching boat, or a fishing boat? At 5:33 pm there is a blast of two deep, resonant notes a major third apart. On another day there is the same blast at 12:54 pm. On another, exactly 8:00 am.|Varieties of Disturbance|Lydia Davis|unknown
12:55|five to one|The inspector glanced at the clock. Five to one. A busy morning.|A Man Lay Dead|Ngaio Marsh|unknown
12:58|12.58pm|The watch on my wrist showed 12.58pm. I'd have time to hit the morgue.|Magic Bites|Ilona Andrews|unknown
12:59|12.59pm|And I had been looking at my watch since the train had started at 12.59pm|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
13:00|clock strikes one|"""I think,"" he said, with a triumphant smile, ""that I may safely expect to find the person I seek in the dining-room, fair lady."" ""There may be more than one."" ""Whoever is there, as the clock strikes one, will be shadowed by one of my men; of these, one, or perhaps two, or even three, will leave for France to-morrow. One of these will be the `Scarlet Pimpernel.'"""|The Scarlet Pimpernel |Baroness Orczy|unknown
13:00|one o'clock|"""One o'clock pee em! Hello, Insert Name Here!"" Said by the Disorganizer"|Jingo |Terry Pratchett|unknown
13:00|one o'clock|“Czarina Catherine reported entering Galatz at one o'clock today.”|Dracula |Bram Stoker|unknown
13:00|1.00 p.m.|1.00 p.m. First afternoon class|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
13:00|1 o'clock|After 1 o'clock checks, Gretta always goes out for a smoke.|Girl, Interrupted |Susanna Kaysen|unknown
13:00|1pm|Gottfried Rembke arrived at 1pm precisely. The moment he walked into the restaurant, handed his coat to the waiter, they knew it was him. The solid, stocky body, the gleaming pate, the open expression, the vigorous handshake: everything about him radiated ease and enthusiasm|Platform |Michel Houellebecq|unknown
13:00|one o'clock|I got to Schmidt's early, feeling horribly nervous. At one o'clock sharp: Toni. She was looking at the menu she knew well - Schmorbraten? Schnitzel? - when he loomed over her. I had seen him come in. She looked up, through him, at me. 'Traitor.' Jamie, hovering, looking very big, said her pet name, a German diminutive chosen by her. Toni addressed the air. 'If he does not leave at once I shall tell the waiter that I am not sharing my table with this gentleman.' Jamie heard, said her name again, turned to go, I rose to go with him. Toni - with that concentration of will - said, 'YOU are lunching with me.'|Jigsaw |Sybille Bedford|unknown
13:00|thirteen|It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.|Nineteen Eighty-Four |George Orwell|unknown
13:00|one o'clock|It was one o'clock. I bought some apples and a small pork pie and drove across the bridge to the other side of the riverbank in the direction of Orford Ness.|The Swimmer |Roma Tearne|unknown
13:00|At one|Many moons passed by. Did Baboon ever fly? Did he ever get to the sun? I’ve just heard today That he’s well on his way! He’ll be passing through Acton at one.|Silly Old Baboon |Spike Milligan|unknown
13:00|one o'clock|That day it was one o'clock before John and Roger rowed across and went up to Dixon's farm for the milk and a new supply of eggs and butter.|Swallows and Amazons |Arthur Ransome|unknown
13:00|one o'clock|The day-room floor gets cleared of tables and at one o'clock the doctor comes out of his office down the hall, nods once at the nurse as he goes past where he's watching out of her window, sits in his chair just to the left of the door.|One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest |Ken Kesey|unknown
13:01|about one|There's five fathoms out there, he said. It'll be swept up that way when the tide comes in about one. It's nine days today.|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
13:02|about one o'clock|At about one o'clock the overseer arrived and told them he had no jobs for them|A Clergyman's Daughter|George Orwell|unknown
13:03|a little after one o'clock|It was a little after one o'clock when I got there, time for lunch, so I had it. The food was awful. But it would go on the expense account, and after I'd eaten I got out my notebook and put it down. Lunch $1.50. Taxi $1.00.|The Big Clock |Kenneth Fearing|unknown
13:04|four minutes past one|"""Jesus Christ!"" he gasped. ""It's four minutes past one!"" Linden frantically seized hold of a pair of steps and began wandering about the room with them."|The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists|Robert Tressell|unknown
13:05|five past one|“Samantha?” I can hear Trish approaching. “Um ... hold on!” I hurry to the door, trying to block her view. “It's already five past one,” I can hear her saying a little sharply. “And I did ask, most clearly for ...” Her voice trails off into silence as she reaches the kitchen door, and her whole face sags in astonishment. I turn and follow her gaze as she surveys the endless plates of sandwiches. “My goodness!” At last Trish finds her voice. “This is ... this is very impressive!”|The Undomestic Goddess |Sophie Kinsella|unknown
13:05|five past one|At five past one Alleyn opened the outer door, knocked his pipe out on the edge of the stone step,and remained staring out on to the drive.|A Man Lay Dead|Ngaio Marsh|unknown
13:06|13 hours and 6 minutes|And then at precisely 13 hours and 6 minutes - confusion broke out in the rectangle.|We|Yevgeny Zamyatin|unknown
13:08|1:08|The numbers on the clock changed silently, advanced to 1:08.|Replay|Kim Grimwood|unknown
13:09|nine minutes past one|At nine minutes past one, a pair of horses approached (not from the city, from which direction Krieger had expected her to come, but from the Desert, which lay, vast and largely uncharted, out to the West and South-West of the city.)|Tortured Souls: The Legend of Primordium|Clive Barker|unknown
13:10|ten minutes past one|"""It was ten minutes past one.” “You are sure of that?"""|Death on the Nile|Agatha Christie|unknown
13:11|1.11|I pursued my inquiries at the other stations along the line an' I found there was a gentleman wi' a bicycle tuk the 1.11 train at Girvan.|Five Red Herrings|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
13:13|thirteen minutes past one|"""There it is! There it is!"" shouted the Professor. ""Now for the centre of the globe!"" he added in Danish. I looked at Hans. ""Forüt!"" was his tranquil answer. ""Forward!"" replied my uncle. It was thirteen minutes past one."|Journey to the Centre of the Earth|Jules Verne|unknown
13:15|One hour and a quarter|‘Monsieur has well slept this morning,’ he said, smiling. ‘What o’clock is it, Victor?’ asked Dorian Gray, sleepily. ‘One hour and a quarter, monsieur.’|The Picture of Dorian Gray |Oscar Wilde|unknown
13:15|one-fifteen|"""Where are the ladies and Gentlemen?"" asked Aleyn. ""Sir, in the garding"", said Bunce. ""What time's lunch?"" ""One-fifteen""."|A Man Lay Dead|Ngaio Marsh|unknown
13:15|Quarter-past one|The clock caught Miss LaFosse´s eye. ´Good heavens!´ she gasped. ´Look at the time. Quarter-past one. You must be starved.' She turned impetuously to Miss Pettigrew.|Miss Pettigrew lives for a Day |Winifred Watson|unknown
13:16|1.16pm|And the first stop had been at 1.16pm which was 17 minutes later.|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
13:17|one seventeen|One seventeen and four seconds. That shorter guy’s really got it made, and gets on a scooter, and that taller one, he goes in. One seventeen and forty seconds. That girl there, she’s got a green ribbon in her hair. Too bad that bus just cut her from view.|The Terrorist, He Watches|Wislawa Szymborska|unknown
13:18|one eighteen|One eighteen exactly. Was she stupid enough to head inside? Or wasn't she? We'll know before long, When the dead are carried out.|The Terrorist, He Watches|Wislawa Szymborska|unknown
13:20|1320 hours|"Kamarov, signal to Purga: 'Diving at—,'"" he checked his watch, ""'—1320 hours. Exercise OCTOBER FROST begins as scheduled. You are released to other assigned duties. We will return as scheduled."" Kamarov worked the trigger on the blinker light to transmit the message. The Purga responded at once, and Ramius read the flashing signal unaided: ""IF THE WHALES DON'T EAT YOU. GOOD LUCK TO RED OCTOBER!"""|The Hunt for Red October |Tom Clancy|unknown
13:20|twenty minutes past one|The time is coming for action. Today this Vampire is limit to the powers of man, and till sunset he may not change. It will take him time to arrive here, see it is twenty minutes past one, and there are yet some times before he can hither come, be he never so quick.|Dracula |Bram Stoker|unknown
13:20|twenty minutes past one|Today this Vampire is limit to the powers of man, and till sunset he may not change. It will take him time to arrive here, see it is twenty minutes past one, and there are yet some times before he can hither come, be he never so quick.|Dracula|Bram Stoker|unknown
13:23|1.23pm|"And when we got to Swindon Mother had keys to the house and we went in and she said, ""Hello?"" but there was no one there because it was 1.23pm."|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
13:23|twenty-three minutes past one|The clock marked twenty-three minutes past one. He was suddenly full of agitation, yet hopeful. She had come! Who could tell what she would say? She might offer the most natural explanation of her late arrival. Félicie entered the room, her hair in disorder, her eyes shining, her cheeks white, her bruised lips a vivid red; she was tired, indifferent, mute, happy and lovely, seeming to guard beneath her cloak, which she held wrapped about her with both hands, some remnant of warmth and voluptuous pleasure.|A Mummer's Tale |Anatole France|unknown
13:24|1:24 p.m|Littell checked his watch - 1:24 p.m - Littell grabbed the phone by the bed.|The Cold Six Thousand|James Ellroy|unknown
13:25|one-twenty-five|I'd really have liked to, I told her, if it weren't for the things I had in the drier. I cast an eye at my watch. One-twenty-five. The drier had already stopped.|Hard Boiled Wonderland and the End of the World |Haruki Murakami|unknown
13:26|around one-thirty|Raymond came back with Masson around one-thirty. His arm was bandaged up and he had an adhesive plaster on the corner of his mouth. The doctor had told him it was nothing, but Raymond looked pretty grim. Masson tried to make him laugh. But he still wouldn't say anything.|The Stranger|Albert Camus|unknown
13:30|half-past one|"Lupin not having come down, I went up again at half-past one, and said we dined at two; he said he ""would be there."""|The Diary of a Nobody |George and Weedon Grossmith|unknown
13:30|half past one|She was a sticker. A clock away in the town struck half past one.|Brighton Rock|Graham Greene|unknown
13:30|half-past one|Shredding and slicing, dividing and subdividing, the clocks of Harley Street nibbled at the June day, counselled submission, upheld authority, and pointed out in chorus the supreme advantages of a sense of proportion, until the mound of time was so far diminished that a commercial clock, suspended above a shop in Oxford Street, announced, genially and fraternally, as if it were a pleasure to Messrs Rigby and Lowndes to give the information gratis, that it was half-past one.|Mrs dalloway |Virginia Woolf|unknown
13:32|one ... thirty-two|At the third stroke it will be one ... thirty-two ... and twenty seconds. 'Beep ... beep ... beep.' Ford Prefect suppressed a little giggle of evil satisfaction, realized that he had no reason to suppress it, and laughed out loud, a wicked laugh.|So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish|Douglas Adams|unknown
13:33|one ... thirty-three|He waited for the green light to show and then opened the door again on to the now empty cargo hold.'... one ... thirty-three ... and fifty seconds.' Very nice.|So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish|Douglas Adams|unknown
13:34|one ... thirty-four|'At the third stroke it will be ...' He tiptoed out and returned to the control cabin. '... one ... thirty-four and twenty seconds.' The voice sounded as clear as if he was hearing it over a phone in London, which he wasn't, not by a long way.|So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish|Douglas Adams|unknown
13:34|one ... thirty ... four|He then went and had a last thorough examination of the emergency suspended animation chamber, which was where he particularly wanted it to be heard. 'At the third stroke it will be one ... thirty ... four ... precisely.'|So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish|Douglas Adams|unknown
13:37|1.37pm|"He had not dared to sleep in his rented car—you didn't sleep in your car when you worked for Jesus Castro—and he was beginning to hallucinate. Still, he was on the job, and he scribbled in his notebook:"" 1.37pm Subject appears to be getting laid."""|Light House|William Monahan|unknown
13:39|1.39pm|And it was now 1.39pm which was 23 minutes after the stop, which mean that we would be at the sea if the train didn't go in a big curve. But I didn't know if it went in a big curve.|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
13:42|1.42pm|The last note was recorded at 1.42pm: G.M. on site at H-by; will take over the matter.|The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo|Stieg Larsson|unknown
13:44|forty-four minutes past one|By good luck, the next train was due at forty-four minutes past one, and arrived at Yateland (the next station) ten minutes afterward.|Mr. Policeman and the Cook|Wilkie Collins|unknown
13:45|quarter to two|That period which is always so dangerous, when the wicket is bad, the ten minutes before lunch, proved fatal to two more of the enemy. The last man had just gone to the wickets, with the score at a hundred and thirty-one, when a quarter to two arrived, and with it the luncheon interval.|Mike|PG Wodehouse|unknown
13:45|one forty-five|The blow fell at precisely one forty-five (summer-time). Benson, my Aunt Agatha's butler, was offering me the fried potatoes at the moment, and such was my emotion that I lofted six of them on the sideboard with the spoon.|Sir Roderick Comes to Lunch|P.G. Wodehouse|unknown
13:47|1.47pm.|Poppy was sprawled on Brianne's bed, applying black mascara to her stubby lashes. Brianne was sitting at her desk, trying to complete an essay before the 2pm deadline. It was 1.47pm.|The Woman Who Went To Bed For A Year|Sue Townsend|unknown
13:48|twelve minutes to two|It was twelve minutes to two in the afternoon when Claude Moreau and his most-trusted field officer, Jacques Bergeron, arrived at the Georges Cinq station of the Paris Metro. They walked, separately, to the rear of the platform, each carrying a handheld radio, the frequencies calibrated to each other.|The Apocalypse Watch|Robert Ludlum|unknown
13:49|1.49|The bookstall clerk had seen the passenger in grey pass the bookstall at 1.49, in the direction of the exit.|Five Red Herrings|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
13:50|ten to two|Rahel's toy wristwatch had the time painted on it. Ten to two. One of her ambitions was to own a watch on which she could change the time whenever she wanted to (which according to her was what Time was meant for in the first place).|The God of Small Things |Arundhati Roy|unknown
13:50|one-fifty|The best train of the day was the one-fifty from Paddington which reached Polgarwith just after seven o'clock.|The Cornish Mystery|Agatha Christie|unknown
13:55|five minutes before two|"If I was punctual in quitting Mlle. Reuter's domicile, I was at least equally punctual in arriving there; I came the next day at five minutes before two, and on reaching the schoolroom door, before I opened it, I heard a rapid, gabbling sound, which warned me that the ""priere du midi"" was not yet concluded."|The Professor|Charlotte Brontë|unknown
13:57|three minutes to two|"I looked for a clock. It was three minutes to two. ""I hope you can catch him, then. Thank you. I really appreciate it."""|Urban Shaman|C.E. Murphy|unknown
13:58|almost two o’clock|It was almost two o’clock, but nothing moved, Stari Teočak was silent and so empty it seemed abandoned, and yet Tijmen constantly felt he was being observed by invisible eyes.|King of Tuzla |Arnold Jansen op de Haar|unknown
13:59|One ... fifty-nine …|"For twenty minutes he sat and watched as the gap between the ship and Epun closed, as the ship's computer teased and kneaded the numbers that would bring it into a loop around the little moon, and close the loop and keep it there, orbiting in perpetual obscurity. 'One ... fifty-nine …'"""|So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish|Douglas Adams|unknown
14:00|two o'clock|'She could have fired the jig, and he could have kept on picking up his packages at the old time, two o'clock. As it was, he had almost been arrested.'|A Confederacy of Dunces |John Kennedy Toole|unknown
14:00|two o'clock|"""The old people's home is at Marengo, fifty miles from Algiers. I'll catch the two o'clock bus and get there in the afternoon."".... ""I caught the two o'clock bus. It was very hot."""|The Outsider |Albert Camus|unknown
14:00|1400 hours|At approximately 1400 hours a pair of enemy Skyhawks came flying in at deck level out of nowhere.|Black Swan Green |David Mitchell|unknown
14:00|two o'clock|At two o'clock Gatsby put on his bathing suit and left word with the butler that if any one phoned word was to be brought to him at the pool.|The Great Gatsby|F. Scott Fitzgerald|unknown
14:00|At two|At two, the snowplows were in action in Lillestrom.|The Snowman |Jo Nesbo|unknown
14:00|two o'clock|I caught the two o'clock bus. It was very hot. I ate at Céleste's restaurant as usual. They all felt very sorry for me and Céleste told me, 'There's no one like a mother'.|The Outsider |Albert Camus|unknown
14:00|two o'clock|The Home for Aged Persons is at Marengo, some fifty miles from Algiers. With the two o'clock bus I should get there well before nightfall. Then I can spend the night there, keeping the usual vigil beside the body, and be back here by tomorrow evening.|The Outsider |Albert Camus|unknown
14:00|2.00|When Salander woke up it was 2.00 on Saturday afternoon and a doctor was poking at her.|The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest |Stieg Larsson|unknown
14:01|about two o' clock|At about two o' clock the owners young wife came, carrying a handleless cup and a pot with a quilted cover, to where I was still lying disconsolate|A Single Pebble |John Hershey|unknown
14:01|about two o'clock|The next day was Saturday and, now that Moon was done, I decided to bring the job to its end. So I sent word that I shouldn't be able to umpire for the team at Steeple Sinderby and, after working through the morning, came down about two o'clock.|A Month in the Country |JL Carr|unknown
14:02|14.02|"""I'm not dead. How did that happen?"" He was right. It was 14.02 and twenty-six seconds. Destiny had not been fulfilled. We all looked at each other, confused."|The Woman Who Died A Lot|Jasper Fforde|unknown
14:04|2.04pm.|2.04pm. Once again, the Quartermaster-General's office came on the line asking for Colonel Finckh, and once again Finckh heard the quiet, unemotional, unfamiliar voice|The Night of the Generals|Hans Hellmut Kirst|unknown
14:05|five past two|...and at five past two on 17 September of that same unforgettable year 1916, I was in the Muryovo hospital yard, standing on trampled withered grass, flattened by the September rain.|A Country Doctor's Notebook |Mikhail Bulgakov|unknown
14:06|six minutes past two|A man driving a tractor saw her, four hundred yards from her house, six minutes past two in the afternoon.|A Change of Climate|Hilary Mantel|unknown
14:10|ten past two|"Mrs Eunice Harris pulls back the sleeve of her good coat and checks her good watch. ""Indeed yes. Half twelve,"" and waves a hand at the Town Hall clock as if it was hers. ""Always ten past two. Someone put a nail in the time years back."""|The Coward's Tale|Vanessa Gebbie|unknown
14:13|two ... thirteen|At the third stroke, it will be two ... thirteen ... and fifty seconds.'|So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish|Douglas Adams|unknown
14:15|2.15 P.M.|I had a date with her next day at 2.15 P.M. In my own rooms, but it was less successful, she seemed to have grown less juvenile, more of a woman overnight.|Lolita |Vladimir Nabokov|unknown
14:15|2.15 p.m.|2.15 p.m. Second afternoon class|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
14:15|2.15pm|I had a date with her next day at 2.15pm in my own rooms, but it was less successful, she seemed to have grown less juvenile, more of a woman overnight. A cold I caught from her led me to cancel a fourth assignment, nor was I sorry to break an emotional series that threatened to burden me with heart-rending fantasies and peter out in dull disappointment. So let her remain, sleek, slender Monique, as she was for a minute or two|Lolita|Vladimir Nabokov|unknown
14:16|2.16|Oh, good evening. I think you were on the barrier when I came in at 2.16 this afternoon. Now, do you know that you let me get past without giving up my ticket? Yes, yes he-he! I really think you ought to be more careful|Five Red Herrings|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
14:19|2:19|2:19: Duane Hinton walks out. He walks through the backyard. He lugs some clothes. He wore said clothes last night. He walks to the fence. He feeds the incinerator. He lights a match.|The Cold Six Thousand|James Ellroy|unknown
14:20|twenty minutes past two|The having originated a precaution which was already in course of execution, was a great relief to Miss Pross. The necessity of composing her appearance so that it should attract no special notice in the streets, was another relief. She looked at her watch, and it was twenty minutes past two. She had no time to lose, but must get ready at once.|A tale of two cities |Charles Dickens|unknown
14:20|twenty past two|Inevitable, implacable, the rainstorm wept itself out. She saw Tom look at his watch. 'What time is it?' 'Twenty past two. Want to go back to the hotel for a while?' 'All right.' They walked out of the gardens and down the rue de Vaugirard. This holiday, unlike those holidays long ago, would not end with her sleeping at home. Two nights from now I will be high over the Atlantic Ocean and on Saturday I will be walking around in the Other Place. I am going to America. I am starting my life over again. But as she said these words to herself, she found it hard to imagine what the new life would be like. And, again, she was afraid.|The Doctor's Wife |Brian Moore|unknown
14:20|twenty minutes past two|She looked at her watch and it was twenty minutes past two. She had no time to lose but must get ready at once.|A Tale of Two Cities|Charles Dickens|unknown
14:20|twenty minutes past two|The watch found at the Weir was challenged by the jeweller as one he had wound and set for Edwin Drood, at twenty minutes past two on that same afternoon; and it had run down, before being cast into the water; and it was the jeweller's positive opinion that it had never been re-wound.|The Mystery of Edwin Drood |Charles Dickens|unknown
14:22|two-twenty-two|Garth here. Sunday afternoon. Sorry to miss you, but I'll leave a brief message on your tape. Two-twenty-two or there-aboutish. Great party.|Larry's Party|Carol Shields|unknown
14:25|2:25|Gary shut himself inside his office and flipped through the messages. Caroline had called at 1:35, 1:40, 1:50, 1:55, and 2:10; it was now 2:25. He pumped his fist in triumph. Finally, finally, some evidence of desperation.|The Corrections |Jonathan Franzen|unknown
14:28|28 minutes and 57 seconds after 2pm|It happened to be the case that the sixty-based system coincided with our our current method of keeping time... Apparently they wanted us to know that that something might happen at 28 minutes and 57 seconds after 2pm on a day yet to be specified.|Ratner's Star|Don DeLillo|unknown
14:30|2:30|Ach! It's 2:30. Look how the time is flying. And it's still so much to do today.. It's dishes to clean, dinner to defrost, and my pills I haven't yet counted. I don't get it... Why didn't the Jews at least try to resist? It wasn't so easy like you think. Everybody was so starving and frightened, and tired they couldn't believe even what's in front of their eyes.|Maus |Art Spiegelman|unknown
14:30|2.30pm|At 2.30pm on the 13th inst. began to shadow Sir Bobadil the Ostrich, whom I suspect of being the criminal. Shadowing successful. Didn't lose sight of him once.|The Wind on the Moon|Eric Linklater|unknown
14:30|half past two|At half past two the same afternoon the boy and the elderly man are standing in the room directly above the Inner Office and Waiting-Room.|Corker's Freedom |John Berger|unknown
14:30|half-past two|It was half-past two in the afternoon. The sun hung in the faded blue sky like a burning mirror, and away beyond the paddocks the blue mountains quivered and leapt like sea. Sid wouldn't be back until half-past ten. He had ridden over to the township with four of the boys to help hunt down the young fellow who'd murdered Mr. Williamson. Such a dreadful thing!|Millie |Katherine Mansfield|unknown
14:30|half-past two|"It was half-past two o'clock when the knock came. I took my courage a deux mains and waited. In a few minutes Mary opened the door, and announced ""Dr. Van Helsing""."|Dracula |Bram Stoker|unknown
14:30|1/2 past 2 o'clock|May 14th 1800. Wm and John set off into Yorkshire after dinner at 1/2 past 2 o'clock, cold pork in their pockets. I left them at the turning of the Low-wood bay under the trees. My heart was so full that I could barely speak to W. when I gave him a farewell kiss.|The Journals of Dorothy Wordsworth |Dorothy Wordsworth|unknown
14:32|2.32 p.m.|Like 2.32 p.m., Beecher and Avalon, L3 R2 (which meant left three blocks, right two) 2:35 p.m., and you wondered how you could pick up one box, then drive 5 blocks in 3 minutes and be finished cleaning out another box.|Post Office|Charles Bukowski|unknown
14:36|two thirty-six|I look at my watch. Two thirty-six. All I've got left today is take in the laundry and fix dinner.|The Elephant Vanishes|Haruki Murakami|unknown
14:39|2.39|Noo, there's a report come in fra' the station-master at Pinwherry that there was a gentleman tuk the 2.39 at Pinwherry.|Five Red Herrings|Dorothy L. Sayers|unknown
14:40|two-forty|If a girl looks swell when she meets you, who gives a damn when she's late? 'We better hurry', I said. 'The show starts at two-forty.'|The Catcher in the Rye |J.D. Salinger|unknown
14:40|twenty minutes to three|Members of Big Side marked Michael and Alan as the two most promising three-quarters for Middle Side next year, and when the bell sounded at twenty minutes to three, the members of Big Side would walk with Michael and Alan towards the changing room and encourage them by flattery and genial ragging.|Sinister Street|Compton Mackenzie|unknown
14:41|2.41|At 2.41, when the afternoon fast train to London was pulling out of Larborough prompt to the minute, Miss Pym sat under the cedar on the lawn wondering whether she was a fool, and not caring much anyhow.|Miss Pym Disposes|Josephine Tey|unknown
14:43|2.43pm|Jacobson died at 2.43pm the next day after slashing his wrists with a razor blade in the second cubicle from the left in the men's washroom on the third floor.|Now: Zero|JG Ballard|unknown
14:45|quarter to three|He never came down till a quarter to three.|The Diary of a Nobody |George and Weedon Grossmith|unknown
14:45|two forty-five|Pull the other one, and tell it to the marines, and don't make me laugh, and fuck off out of it, and all that, but the fact remained that it was still only two forty-five'.|The Pregnant Window |Martin Amis|unknown
14:45|quarter to three|What time is it?' 'Look for yourself,' the old woman says to me. I look, and I see the clock has no hands. 'There are no hands,' I say. The old woman looks at the clock face and says to me, 'It's a quarter to three'.|The Old Woman|Daniil Ivanovich Kharms|unknown
14:50|ten to three|Stands the Church clock at ten to three? And is there honey still for tea?|The Old Vicarage, Grantchester |Rupert Brooke|unknown
14:54|About 2.55|In the end, it was the Sunday afternoons he couldn’t cope with, and that terrible listlessness that starts to set in about 2.55, when you know you’ve had all the baths you can usefully have that day, that however hard you stare at any given paragraph in the newspaper you will never actually read it, or use the revolutionary new pruning technique it describes, and that as you stare at the clock the hands will move relentlessly on to four o’clock, and you will enter the long dark teatime of the soul.|Life, the universe and everything |Douglas Adams|unknown
14:55|five to three|The superior, the very reverend John Conmee SJ reset his smooth watch in his interior pocket as he came down the presbytery steps. Five to three. Just nice time to walk to Artane.|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
14:56|2.56 P.M.|2.56 P.M. Helen is alone now. Her face is out of frame, and through the viewfinder I see only a segment of the pillow, an area of crumpled sheet and the upper section of her chest and shoulders.|The 60 Minute Zoom|JG Ballard|unknown
14:58|two minutes to three|From twenty minutes past nine until twenty-seven minutes past nine, from twenty-five minutes past eleven until twenty-eight minutes past eleven, from ten minutes to three until two minutes to three the heroes of the school met in a large familiarity whose Olympian laughter awed the fearful small boy that flitted uneasily past and chilled the slouching senior that rashly paused to examine the notices in assertion of an unearned right.|Sinister Street|Compton Mackenzie|unknown
14:58|two minutes to three|We betted that it would happen on the morrow; they took us up and gave us the odds of two to one; we betted that it would happen in the afternoon; we got odds of four to one on that; we betted that it would happen at two minutes to three; they willingly granted us the odds of ten to one on that.|The Chronicle of Young Satan|Mark Twain|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|'I gotta get uptown by three o'clock.'|A Confederacy of Dunces |John Kennedy Toole|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|"""Remember,"" they shouted, ""battle at three o'clock sharp. There's no time to lose."""|Swallows and Amazons |Arthur Ransome|unknown
15:00|three |And the sound of the bell flooded the room with its melancholy wave; which receded, and gathered itself together to fall once more, when she heard, distractedly, something fumbling, something scratching at the door. Who at this hour? Three, good Heavens! Three already!|Mrs Dalloway|Virginia Woolf|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|At three o'clock on the afternoon of that same day, he called on her. She held out her two hands, smiling in her usual charming, friendly way; and for a few seconds they looked deep into each other's eyes.|Bel-Ami |Guy de Maupassant|unknown
15:00|three o’clock|At three o’clock precisely I was at Baker Street, but Holmes had not yet returned.|A Scandal in Bohemia |Sir Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
15:00|At three|At three on the Wednesday afternoon, that bit of the painting was completed.|The Moonstone |Wilkie Collins|unknown
15:00|At three|Ditched by the woman I loved, I exalted my suffering into a sign of greatness (lying collapsed on a bed at three in the afternoon), and hence protected myself from experiencing my grief as the outcome of what was at best a mundane romantic break-up. Chloe's departure may have killed me, but it had at least left me in glorious possession of the moral high ground. I was a martyr.|Essays in Love |Alain de Botton|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|He walks into the Hospital for Broken Things at three o'clock on Monday afternoon. That was the arrangement. If he came in after six o'clock, he was to head straight for the house in Sunset Park.|Sunset Park |Paul Auster|unknown
15:00|three o’clock|I had a three o’clock class in psychology, the first meeting of the semester, and I suspected I was going to miss it. I was right. Victoria made a real ritual of the whole thing, clothes coming off with the masturbatory dalliance of a strip show, the covers rolling back periodically to show this patch of flesh or that, strategically revealed.|Achates McNeil|T.C. Boyle|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|It was three o'clock in the beautiful breezy autumn day when Mr. Casaubon drove off to his Rectory at Lowick, only five miles from Tipton; and Dorothea, who had on her bonnet and shawl, hurried along the shrubbery and across the park that she might wander through the bordering wood with no other visible companionship than that of Monk, the Great St. Bernard dog, who always took care of the young ladies in their walks|Middlemarch|George Eliot|unknown
15:00|three-o’clock|Ladies bathed before noon, after their three-o’clock naps, and by nightfall were like soft teacakes with frostings of sweat and sweet talcum.|To kill a mockingbird |Harper Lee|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|M. Madeleine usually came at three o'clock, and as punctuality was kindness, he was punctual.|Les Miserables |Victor Hugo|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|On Wednesday at three o'clock, Monsieur and Madame Bovary, seated in their dog-cart, set out for Vaubyessard, with a great trunk strapped on behind and a bonnet-box in front of the apron. Besides these Charles held a bandbox between his knees.|Madame Bovary |Gustave Flaubert|unknown
15:00|At three|The scent and smoke and sweat of a casino are nauseating at three in the morning. Then the soul-erosion produced by high gambling - a compost of greed and fear and nervous tension - becomes unbearable and the senses awake and revolt from it.|Casino Royale |Ian Fleming|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|Three o'clock is always too late or too early for anything you want to do.|Nausea |Jean-Paul Sartre|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|Three o'clock is the perfect time in Cham, because anything is possible. You can still ski, but also respectably start drinking, the shops have just reopened, the sun is still up. Three o'clock is never too late or too early.|Cham |Jonathan Trigell|unknown
15:00|three o'clock|Today was the day Alex had appointed for her 'punishment'. I became increasingly nervous as the hour of three o'clock approached. I was alone in the house, and paced restlessly from room to room, glancing at the clocks in each of them.|Deaf Sentence |David Lodge|unknown
15:01|about three|The sun was now setting. It was about three in the afternoon when Alisande had begun to tell me who the cowboys were; so she had made pretty good progress with it - for her. She would arrive some time or other, no doubt, but she was not a person who could be hurried.|A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court |Mark Twain|unknown
15:03|3.03pm.|I check Shingi's mobile phone - it says it's 3.03pm. I get out of bed, open my suitcase to take clean socks out and the smell of Mother hit my nose and make me feel dizzy.|Harare North|Brian Chikwava|unknown
15:04|1504|Woken at 1504 by Michelangelo hammering away with his chisel.|101 Reykjavik|Hallgrímur Helgason|unknown
15:05|five minutes past three|"Ultimately, at five minutes past three that afternoon, Smith admitted the falsity of the Fort Scott tale. ""That was only something Dick told his family. So he could stay out overnight. Do some drinking."""|In Cold Blood|Truman Capote|unknown
15:07|seven minutes past three|The next day was grey, threatening rain. He was there at seven minutes past three. The clock on the church over the way pointed to it. They had arranged to be there at three fifteen. Therefore, if she had been there when he came, she would have been eight minutes before her time.|Twenty Thousand Streets Under The Sky|Patrick Hamilton|unknown
15:08|3 hr 8 m p.m.|A private wireless telegraph which would transmit by dot and dash system the result of a national equine handicap (flat or steeplechase) of 1 or more miles and furlongs won by an outsider at odds of 50 to 1 at 3 hr 8 m p.m. at Ascot (Greenwich time), the message being received and available for betting purposes in Dublin at 2.59 p.m.|Ulysses|James Joyce|unknown
15:09|3.09|On the next day he boarded the London train which reaches Hull at 3.09. At Paragon Station he soon singled out Beamish from Merriman's description.|The Pit-Prop Syndicate|Freeman Wills Crofts|unknown
15:10|3.10pm|This time it was only the simple fact that the hands chanced to point to 3.10pm, the precise moment at which all the clocks of London had stopped.|The Purple Cloud|M.P. Shiel|unknown
15:13|thirteen minutes past three|The lift moved. It was thirteen minutes past three. The bell gave out its ping. Two men stepped out of the lift, Alan Norman and another man. Tony Blair walked into the office.|Virtual Assassin |Simon Kearns|unknown
15:14|3.14|"A signal sounded. ""There's the 3.14 up,"" said Perks. ""You lie low till she's through, and then we'll go up along to my place, and see if there's any of them strawberries ripe what I told you about."""|The Railway Children |Edith Nesbit|unknown
15:14|three fourteen|I shall be back at exactly THREE fourteen, for our hour of revery together, real sweet revery darling|On the Road |Jack Kerouac|unknown
15:15|quarter past three|Gordon was alone. He wandered back to the door. The strawberry-nosed man glanced over his shoulder, caught Gordon's eye, and moved off, foiled. He had been on the point of slipping Edgar Wallace into his pocket. The clock over the Prince of Wales struck a quarter past three.|Keep the Aspidistra Flying|George Orwell|unknown
15:15|3:15|"I got out my old clothes. I put wool socks over my regular socks and took my time lacing up the boots. I made a couple of tuna sandwiches and some double-decker peanut-butter crackers. I filled my canteen and attached the hunting knife and the canteen to my belt. As I was going out the door, I decided to leave a note. So I wrote: ""Feeling better and going to Birch Creek. Back soon. R. 3:15."" That was about four hours from now."|Where I'm Calling From |Raymond Carver|unknown
15:15|3:15|July 3: 5 3/4 hours. Little done today. Deepening lethargy, dragged myself over to the lab, nearly left the road twice. Concentrated enough to feed the zoo and get the log up to date. Read through the operating manuals Whitby left for the last time, decided on a delivery rate of 40 rontgens/min., target distance of 530 cm. Everything is ready now. Woke 11:05. To sleep 3:15.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
15:16|1516|The Nimrod rendezvoused with the light aircraft at 1516 GMT.|The Crow Road|Iain Banks|unknown
15:20|twenty minutes past three|At twenty minutes past three on Monday, 26 January 1948, in Tokyo, and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking and I am drinking …|Occupied City|David Peace|unknown
15:23|three twenty-three|Three twenty-three! Is that all? Doesn't time - no, I've already said that, thought that. I sit and watch the seconds change on the watch. I used to have a limited edition Rolex worth the price of a new car but I lost it.|Espedair Street|Iain Banks|unknown
15:23|three twenty-three|Three twenty-three! Is that all? Doesn't time - no, I've already said that, thought that. I sit and watch the seconds change on the watch. I used to have a limited edition Rolex worth the price of a new car but I lost it. It was present from...Christine? No, Inez. She got fed up with me always having to ask other people what the time was; embarrassed on my behalf.|Espedair Street |Iain Banks|unknown
15:25|15.25|"""Hmm, let's see. It's a three-line rail-fence, a, d, g...d-a-r-l...Got it: 'Darling Hepzibah'—Hepzibah? What kind of name is that?—'Will meet you Reading Sunday 15.25 train Didcot-Reading.' Reading you all right, you idiots."""|C|Tom McCarthy|unknown
15:27|3.27pm|And she rang the Reverend Peters and he came into school at 3.27pm and he said, 'So, young man, are we ready to roll?'|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
15:29|nearly half-past three|"""Good heavens!"" she said, ""it's nearly half-past three. I must fly. Don't forget about the funeral service,"" she added, as she put on her coat. ""The tapers, the black coffin in the middle of the aisle, the nuns in their white-winged coifs, the gloomy chanting, and the poor cowering creature without any teeth, her face all caved in like an old woman's, wondering whether she wasn't really and in fact dead - wondering whether she wasn't already in hell. Goodbye."""|Nuns at Luncheon|Aldous Huxley|unknown
15:30|half-past thrrree|"""Before I am rrroasting the alarm-clock, I am setting it to go off, not at nine o'clock the next morning, but at half-past thrrree the next afternoon. Vhich means half-past thrrree this afternoon. And that"", she said, glancing at her wrist-watch, ""is in prrree-cisely seven minutes' time!"""|The Witches |Roald Dahl|unknown
15:30|3.30 p.m.|3.30 p.m. Catch school bus home|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
15:30|half past three|I must have completed my packing with time to spare, for when the knock came on my door at half past three precisely, I had been sitting in my chair waiting for a good while. I opened the door to a young Chinese man, perhaps not even twenty, dressed in a gown, his hat in his hand.|When We Were Orphans|Kazuo Ishiguro|unknown
15:32|3:32|At 3:32 precisely, I noticed Kaitlyn striding confidently past the Wok House. She saw me the moment I raised my hand, flashed her very white and newly straightened teeth at me, and headed over.|The Fault in Our Stars|John Green|unknown
15:33|three thirty-three|I picked up my briefcase, glancing at my watch again as I did so. Three thirty-three.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
15:35|three-thirty-five|By three-thirty-five business really winds down. I have already sold my ladderback chairs and my Scottish cardigans. I'm not even sure now why I've sold all these things, except perhaps so as not to be left out of this giant insult to one's life that is a yard sale, this general project of getting rid quick.|Anagrams|Lorrie Moore|unknown
15:35|3:35 P.M.|If Me flashed a little crazy after a restless night of smoking & prowling the darkened house with owl-eyes alert to suspicious noises outside & on the roof, it didn’t inevitably mean she’d still be in such a state when the schoolbus deposited Wolfie back home at 3:35 P.M.|I Am No One You Know: Stories |Joyce Carol Oates|unknown
15:37|15.37|"The explosion was now officially designated an ""Act of God"". But, thought Dirk, what god? And why? What god would be hanging around Terminal Two of Heathrow Airport trying to catch the 15.37 flight to Oslo?"|The Long Dark Tea Time of the Soul|Douglas Adams|unknown
15:39|three thirty-nine|I lived two lives in late 1965 and early 1963, one in Dallas and one in Jodie. They came together at three thirty-nine in the afternoon of April 10.|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
15:40|three-forty|At three-forty, Cliff called to report that Dilworth and his lady friend were sitting on the deck of the Amazing Grace, eating fruit and sipping wine, reminiscing a lot, laughing a little. “From what we can pick up with directional microphones and from what we can see, I’d say they don’t have any intention of going anywhere. Except maybe to bed. They sure do seem to be a randy old pair.” “Stay with them,” Lem said. “I don’t trust him.”|Watchers |Dean Koontz|unknown
15:41|15:41|At 15:41 GMT, the Cessna's engine began to cut out and the plane - presumably out of fuel - began to lose altitude|The Crow Road|Iain Banks|unknown
15:44|3.44 p.m.|The armed response team hastily assembled from Strängnäs arrived at Bjurman's summer cabin at 3.44 p.m.|The Girl who Played with Fire|Stieg Larsson|unknown
15:45|3.45pm|"I opened my notebook, flipped almost to the end before I found a blank page, and wrote ""October 5th, 3.45pm, Dunning to Longview Cem, puts flowers on parents' (?) graves. Rain."" I had what I wanted."|11/22/63|Stephen King|unknown
15:45|3:45|One meal is enough now, topped up with a glucose shot. Sleep is still 'black', completely unrefreshing. Last night I took a 16 mm. film of the first three hours, screened it this morning at the lab. The first true-horror movie. I looked like a half-animated corpse. Woke 10:25. To sleep 3:45.|The Voices of Time |JG Ballard|unknown
15:49|3.49 p.m.|3.49 p.m. Get off school bus at home|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
15:49|3.49 pm|But there were more bad things than good things. And one of them was that Mother didn't get back from work til 5.30 pm so I had to go to Father's house between 3.49 pm and 5.30 pm because I wasn't allowed to be on my own and Mother said I didn't have a choice so I pushed the bed against the door in case Father tried to come in.|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
15:50|3.50 p.m.|3.50 p.m. Have juice and snack|The Curious Incident Of The Dog In The Night-Time|Mark Haddon|unknown
15:51|fifty-one minutes after fifteen o'clock|"Date of the telegram, Rome, November 24, ten minutes before twenty-three o'clock. The telegram seems to say, ""The Sovereigns and the Royal Children expect themselves at Rome tomorrow at fifty-one minutes after fifteen o'clock."""|Italian Without a Master|Mark Twain|unknown
15:53|seven minutes to four|It was like the clouds lifting away from the sun. Jodie glanced at Reacher. He glanced at the clock. Seven minutes to four. Less than three hours to go.|Tripwire|Lee Child|unknown
15:55|3.55 p.m.|3.55 p.m. Give Toby food and water|The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time |Mark Haddon|unknown
15:56|four minutes to four|Four minutes to four. Newman sighed again, lost in thought.|Tripwire|Lee Child|unknown
15:57|close upon four |It was close upon four before the door opened, and a drunken-looking groom, ill-kempt and side-whiskered with an inflamed face and disreputable clothes, walked into the room. Accustomed as I was to my friend's amazing powers in the use of disguises, I had to look three times before I was certain that it was indeed he.|The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes |Arthur Conan Doyle|unknown
15:58|Towards four o'clock|"Towards four o'clock the condition of the English army was serious. The Prince of Orange was in command of the centre, Hill of the right wing, Picton of the left wing. The Prince of Orange, desperate and intrepid, shouted to the Hollando-Belgians: ""Nassau! Brunswick! Never retreat!"""|Les Miserables |Victor Hugo|unknown
15:59|nearly 4|He looked at his watch: it was nearly 4. He helped Delphine to her feet and led her down a passage to a rear door that gave on to the hospital garden.|The Blue Afternoon |William Boyd|unknown