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The Queen died. The King died.___he Queen died. And the King died of a broken heart.__he first line was fact. The second line was a story. It placed the facts in context, added emotion and made us connect to it by making it memorable.
Daniel H. Pink A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future
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The Queen died. The King died.___he Queen died. And the King died of a broken heart.__he first line was fact. The second line was a story. It placed the facts in context, added emotion and made us connect to it by making it memorable.
DP
Daniel H. Pink

A Whole New Mind: Why Right-Brainers Will Rule the Future

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It's in The Lord of the Rings, I think, where one of the characters says that "way leads on to way"; that you could start at a path leading nowhere more fantastic than from your own front steps to the sidewalk, and from there you could go . . . well, anywhere at all. It's the same way with stories. One leads to the next, to the next, and to the next; maybe they go in the direction you wanted to go, but maybe they don't. Maybe in the end it's the voice that tells the stories more than the stories themselves that matters.

"

Woolrich had a genius for creating types of story perfectly consonant with his world: the noir cop story, the clock race story, the waking nightmare, the oscillation thriller, the headlong through the night story, the annihilation story, the last hours story. These situations, and variations on them, and others like them, are paradigms of our position in the world as Woolrich sees it. His mastery of suspense, his genius (like that of his spiritual brother Alfred Hitchcock) for keeping us on the edge of our seats and gasping with fright, stems not only from the nightmarish situations he conjured up but from his prose, which is compulsively readable, cinematically vivid, high-strung almost to the point of hysteria, forcing us into the skins of the hunted and doomed where we live their agonies and die with them a thousand small deaths.

FJ
Francis M. Nevins Jr.

Night and Fear: A Centenary Collection of Stories by Cornell Woolrich