The answer from Bryan Watts is elegant and simple. He implicitly refers to the array of strings created by the Split().
Also note its extensibility if you are reading a file, and want to massage the data while building an array.
string sFileA = @"C:\Documents and Settings\FileA.txt";
string sFileB = @"C:\Documents and Settings\FileB.txt";
// Trim extraneous spaces from the first file's data
string[] fileAData = (from line in File.ReadAllLines( sFileA )
select line.Trim()).ToArray();
// Strip a second unneeded column from the second file's data
string[] fileBData = (from line in File.ReadAllLines( sFileB )
select line.Substring( 0, 21 ).Trim()).ToArray();
Of course, you can use the Linq => notation if you prefer.
string[] fileBData = File.ReadAllLines( sFileB ).Select( line =>
line.Substring( 0, 21 ).Trim()).ToArray();
Although my answer should have been posted as a comment, I don't have enough reputation points to comment yet. But I found this discussion invaluable in figuring out how to massage data while using ReadAllLines().