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stories really-romantic heard
But I didn't know about the other story." "What other story?” "About how you and Adrian Ivashkov are—" "No, whatever you heard it’s not true." "But it was really romantic" "Then it’s definitely not true. Richelle Mead
stories scene holmes
Every Sherlock Holmes story has at least one marvelous scene. Rex Stout
stories
It's the story that counts. Vincente Minnelli
stories individual our-lives
Our lives, our stories, flowed into one another's, were no longer our own, individual, discrete. Salman Rushdie
stories censorship crime
An attack upon our ability to tell stories is not just censorship - it is a crime against our nature as human beings. Salman Rushdie
stories might matter
No matter how close to personal experience a story might be, inevitably you are going to get to a part that isn't yours and, actually, whether it happened or not becomes irrelevant. It is all about choosing the right words. Roddy Doyle
stories
You don’t choose a story, it chooses you. Robert Penn Warren
stories modern myth
I wanted to connect a modern story with a myth that I had read. Wally Lamb
stories fame fortune
You'll be a poorer person all your life if you don't know some of the great stories and great poems. Walt Disney
believable element headline memory offer promise reader
The headline is the most important element of an ad. It must offer a promise to the reader of a believable benefit. And it must be phrased in a way to give it memory value. Morris Hite
believable believe buying course example expressed golf interest lands potential public remain saying today whether
Whether or not (Torrey Pines) is a believable example, do believe me when I say today that (people) have expressed interest in buying Torrey Pines Golf Course and some of the other lands that I believe should remain in public hands. I'm just saying the potential exists. Donna Frye
believable both dare dominated family flawed fully hilarious human marriage partners sitcom thus ways writers
ABC's intelligently hilarious sitcom 'Modern Family' depicts a gay-male marriage in which both partners are refreshingly dimensional, believable human beings. The writers dare to make them flawed and thus fully delineated, but they're not flawed in the silly, stereotypical ways that once dominated such portrayals. Tom Shales