• Copywork365
  • Posts
  • 22-OCT-2025 | Excerpt from Stephen King’s “Firestarter”

22-OCT-2025 | Excerpt from Stephen King’s “Firestarter”

Toolbox by Copywork365

Liking the daily exercise?
Wait till you see this.

Toolbox is your swipe file on roids.

It’s a database of world-class excerpts just like the ones we cover right here on the daily.

Browse through hundreds of pieces (and growing!) spanning ad copy, webpage copy, and literature.

Each and every one comes with granular analysis on what makes everything tick and why it works.

All the tools, techniques, and psychology we touch on here, but in their full depth. Making it even easier to master these “devices” and apply them to your persuasive writing. And filtering by author or brand means you can steal the secret sauce from your very favorite writers, copywriters, and brands.

So if you’re looking to level up with a forever resource, I’ve got a forever deal for you.

Join the waitlist to get lifetime access for a single flat fee — when Toolbox launches.

Oh and I really do mean lifetime.

Even if the internet ceases to exist. I’ll work day and night to ensure you receive a physical book copy. Hell, clay tablets, if it gets that bad 😅.

Even when it’s 100’s of thousands of excerpts. Pinky promise.

Excerpt from Stephen King’s “Firestarter”

What do I do now?

He didn’t know the answer to that. He was tired and scared and it was hard to think. They had caught him at a bad time, and the bastards probably knew it. What he wanted to do was just sit down on the dirty curbing and cry out his frustration and fear. But that was no answer. He was the grownup. He would have to think for both of them.

What do we do now?

No money. That was maybe the biggest problem, after the fact of the men in the green car. You couldn’t do anything with no money in New York. People with no money disappeared in New York; they dropped into the sidewalks, never to be seen again. 🏁

Each italicized thought ratchets up the tension in the paragraphs which follow.

The series of shorter sentences feels frantic, the longer final sentence creates something closer to despair.