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Word: asleepe (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Wolves. Just as I was entering my teens, though, I discovered my father's collection of mystery novels. I snuck the works of Chandler, Hammett, and others up to my bedroom and read them under the covers late at night, when I was sure that my parents were asleep. Ellroy's The Black Dahlia, which he calls "a valediction in blood," left me sleepless and staring at the ceiling for weeks, sure that I would come to an immediate and gory end if I so much as closed my eyes...

Author: By Jessica Hammer, | Title: GROWING UP NOIR | 4/9/1998 | See Source »

When I--drained by all the noise, shouting and epileptic seizure-inducing strobe lights--fall asleep in a chair during said party, comments about my having passed out are passed along to me the next few days...

Author: By Murad S. Hussain, | Title: A Teetotaler's Thoughts | 4/2/1998 | See Source »

...into a clinic for the study of sleep disorders. Having never met Terry during their college days, Dudden doesn't find it at all odd that the now well-respected film critic has agreed to visit the clinic after sitting through a 10-day film marathon without falling asleep once. In fact, it is Dudden's distantly-familiar female colleague, Dr. Madison, who makes the connection that both men once lived in Ashdown, the first of several oddities she reveals throughout the story. Meanwhile, on the other side of London, Sarah has taken a teaching position, after having kept...

Author: By Glenn A. Reisch, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: When Sleep Eludes The Weary | 3/20/1998 | See Source »

Last Monday, 18-month-old Jonathan Waldick of Kissimmee, Fla., was asleep, wrapped in a blanket, when a tornado roared through his room. After the twister passed, Waldick's great-grandmother, Shirley Driver, along with several neighbors, began a frantic search...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Twisters, Tragedies And Miracles | 3/9/1998 | See Source »

...Garoon '98 was young, his favorite baseball team, the Texas Rangers, would often play late into the night (well past his bedtime). His parents would send him to bed, but they'd always let him listen to the end of the game on the radio as he fell asleep. Growing up, Garoon began to idolize the radio commentators who talked him to sleep on so many nights. Still, he never imagined that one day he'd get to be one himself...

Author: By Jonathan B. Stein, | Title: Calling the Shots | 3/5/1998 | See Source »

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