The Book Of Kennedy
chapter 4..
..Dwelling on the mundane, or even clearly happens from time to time bad or negative days, or those good times - in the "math" of life so-to-speak were "good deeds and good days" perhaps worth a larger value in the overall equation getting to that balance-sheet sum-total? The day to day, a butterfly effect, the small smiles shown to another that made their day better..
Note from the author: this book contains not one line of dialogue. I feel it important to say that because a reviewer of my “TERROR STRIKES: COMING SOON TO A CITY NEAR YOU” novel once wrote that she didn't think there was enough dialogue in it. Well in all interviews I'd ever given regarding that book I never promised it to be a dialogue laden book. In fact that while having some dialogue it is heavy narrative style - as this book is entirely in narration style - versus Plato's Dialogues, Philip Roth's "Deception," Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath," which known extensive use of dialogue [courtesy Google].