News0 min ago
Saying the most with the dewest words.
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I am a huge fan of Stepehn King since reading Salem's Lot on publiction, and then sleeping with the light on the night i finished it!
I am re-reading it now, for about the fifth time in the intervening years, and I was struck by the wonderful economy of his usually bountiful and flowing prose - at the end of a chapter when it is apparent that Mr Barlow is in town and has caught his first victim, King ends with the words 'It became unspeakable.'
How's that for summing up the death of a child at the hands of a monster in three words?
I'd give a lot to be able to write like that.
I am re-reading it now, for about the fifth time in the intervening years, and I was struck by the wonderful economy of his usually bountiful and flowing prose - at the end of a chapter when it is apparent that Mr Barlow is in town and has caught his first victim, King ends with the words 'It became unspeakable.'
How's that for summing up the death of a child at the hands of a monster in three words?
I'd give a lot to be able to write like that.
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Have to admit when I saw the OP title in Latest Posts and the poster, I thought it was a reference to this!
http:// www.the answerb .../Que stion11 34431.h tml
Not read Stephen King in years TBH.
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Not read Stephen King in years TBH.
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