1. A new voice has interrupted and is howling slogans like a revivalist preacher. 2. For example, Dickens is fond of parenthetical constructions which allow the generalizing authorial voice to interrupt the narrative flow. 3. A little voice interrupts. 4. A relentlessly cheery voice interrupts your evening to doggedly hawk a new credit card, a long-distance carrier or, say, T-bone steaks delivered right to your door. 5. A voice interrupted my reverie. 6. Then a voice rudely interrupts. 7. A month later, missed messages and strange clickings seemed minor when a disembodied voice, eerily distorted by computer, first interrupted a call to make himself known. 8. A month later, missed messages and strange clickings seemed minor when a voice, eerily distorted by computer, first interrupted a call to make himself known. |