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The office was a tarpaper shack; the car didn't look much better.
She'd been sitting in the cold on the tarpaper rooftop for three hours.
He lived through people, cars and dogs in a house of tarpaper stone."
The open side faced the black tarpaper wall of the shed where the feast had, taken place.
These were really nailheads holding the tarpaper to the shed.
A family up the road lived in a trailer with gaping holes covered by tarpaper.
Billy moved along the screen and reached a point where he could see a message freshly painted on the tarpaper wall.
Climbing onto the tarpaper, he rubbed a hole clean with his tie and looked in.
Any tarpaper shack with an outdoor john in Maine would be better."
The wood looked freshly cut and had been stored beneath a tarpaper cover to keep it from the rain.
It was a tarpaper shack with two old-fashioned pumps set in the dirt.
Claude collapsed onto the tarpaper covering the roof, staring up at the night sky.
I sprawled on the tarpaper, gasping for air, my heart whamming.
The framing of the building and the heavy old tarpaper behind the exterior siding was exposed.
She pointed to a cottage like frame house painted light green and roofed with brown tarpaper.
Some of them had sheet iron roof on them, and then covered with tarpaper, you know.
You have to put down heavyweight plastic or tarpaper, and the sheets should overlap by six inches where they meet.
The coffin was lowered, and covered with asphalt and tarpaper.
The window was nothing but a square cut into the tarpaper and buttoned up with all-weather plastic.
You couldn't figure out how he was allowed to live this way, in a tarpaper shack with an outhouse."
Hoff pointed further down the street to a tarpaper cabin half concealed by brush.
It was covered with tarpaper, and she hadn't bothered to nail it shut.
He was the youngest of 10 children, raised in a tarpaper shack on property rented from a local coal company.
It was a dying area dotted with tarpaper shacks and tiny bungalows.
At some point after the 1940's, someone gave up on the sloping, glazed roof, and it has been repeatedly covered with tarpaper.