Even when I'm sitting up in this glass castle, I still got my street soldiers telling me what's happening.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
People who live in glass houses... have to answer the door.
Every so often you might have an outburst in the gallery. That's one of the most exciting things that happen because then you can say, 'Unless there's order we will call the Sergeant at Arms.' And that sounds really scary.
I'm just fascinated by visiting actual castles in the countryside.
I was not someone who participated in other people's castles.
'Glass Sword' has several set piece scenes that I plotted out or visualized before I wrote them, but I always knew they were coming. They anchor bits of the story.
For more than a quarter of a century on active duty, my house has been my tent, and my home the battlefield.
Your glass will not do you half so much service as a serious reflection on your own minds.
I never thought I was breaking a glass ceiling. I just had to do what I had to do, and it never occurred to me not to.
Right now, I'm standing behind the glass, and I guess that's a metaphor for how my life will be going forward.
When we got down from the ambulances there were sharp cracks about us as bursts of shrapnel splashed down upon the Town Hall square. Dead soldiers lay outside and I glanced at them coldly. We were in search of the living.