Surely a book's narrative should suffice to make its point, instead of relying on this self-indulgent twaddle? |
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Ullman's 10 steps are listed in a preface to the book's introduction and then spelled out over the course of eight chapters. |
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In the book's presentation, the images appear in size from full-page bleeds to roughly the dimension of a passport photo. |
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Gide, being the moralist he is, otherwise pays heed only to the book's intent and not to its consequences. |
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Indeed, a photograph of Pinka posing as Flush in a Victorian interior serves as the book's frontispiece. |
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The book's 246 pages are divided into two forewords, a preface, eight chapters, and seven appendixes. |
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The book's illustrations, many of them blow-ups of wild floral designs, are psychedelic in their intensity. |
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The book's long-term perspective will make this work exceptionally valuable to specialists and non-specialists alike. |
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One clue may be found in some of the book's chapter headings, which repeat the marriage vows from the Book of Common Prayer. |
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Now the book's no work of art, but it's certainly tightly plotted and nice and tense, which is all it set out to be. |
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Introductory sections were added to provide integration within each of the book's four main parts. |
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The book's first two parts are excellent expositions on ancient religions and modern physics. |
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Le Grand is one of the commentators selected by the editors to introduce one of the book's four parts. |
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The book's four parts cover truth as fact, fiction, relationship and mystery. |
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Interestingly, the book's title is also the title of the second of the book's two parts. |
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The book's grand aims are filtered through his muddled mind, which has the unfortunate effect of making his spiritual quest seem mundane. |
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Pat McGowan, the book's hideous central character, is unencumbered by any moral code, even the criminal. |
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So for an essay in popular science, the book's style is distinctly unfashionable. |
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He joins Fred Schepisi and Lasse Hallstrom in that not-so-exclusive club of directors scared off by the book's growing reputation as unfilmable. |
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We are pleased that he seems to be alone among reviewers in his nonrecognition of the book's argument. |
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Since the Vietnam era, he's been an unrelenting critic of US foreign policy and this book's no different. |
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The search will produce a web page containing the book's table of contents, a sample chapter, and a list of the corporate sponsors. |
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The book's author is a historian and geologist who writes of the prehistory of the area, its geologic formation, and its native inhabitants. |
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The book's 395 plates include a wide variety of contemporary depictions of events. |
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Not long after the book's publication, Gadamer came to be a visiting professor at Syracuse University where I was teaching. |
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The copyright page of my Random House Collegiate Dictionary, like the book's cover and spine, disappeared years ago. |
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I didn't find the plot particularly gripping, but the level of period detail in the book's descriptive passages was excellent. |
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You can track your book's progress around the world, and it all sounds very lovely and whimsical. |
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He wants Jenny to babysit the fugitives in return for a cut of the book's proceeds. |
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As I look back on decades of chairing parish and diocesan meetings, the book's purpose hits home. |
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The other city in the story is a scene of a violent and brutal revolution that wreaks havoc on the lives of the book's main characters. |
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The list of famous acquaintances and friends bulks large in the book's index. |
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Since not every priest is a good confessor, one of the book's most interesting chapters deals with finding the right guide. |
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Curiously, his weakest section is the book's centerpiece chapter on the phenomenon of confessional Protestantism. |
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The book's conclusion is a model and does much to make the reader forget the earlier organizational infelicities. |
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From the description of this book's contents, I agree that the compiler is clueless. |
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The quadrumvirate of men who provide blurbs for Kirby's fifth collection, read like a who's who of the book's poetic influences. |
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Mostly the book's given over to the impossibly quaint eccentrics Edwin encounters in London. |
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A half-painted background illustrates an appropriate degree of incompletion, and makes for a literal interpretation of the book's title. |
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The sheer impossibility of summarising Oracle Night is in fact a mark of the book's strength. |
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The book's very title implies acceptance of the classic distinction in philosophy between matter and form. |
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The book's main heroes are conservatives who block the appointment of an accommodationist Secretary of State. |
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A quick look at the book's references persuades me that the book provides no support for the fallback position. |
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But really, those are minor quibbles compared to the book's overwhelming strengths. |
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The book's acknowledgements and introduction do not get it off to a good start. |
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That's got to be as poor a metaphor as I've ever seen, and if it's one of the book's quotable high points, the volume is in trouble. |
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Instead of Philosopher's Stone's mindless parade of the book's high spots, there's an actual story here and it's not half bad. |
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This book's a success, it's true, even though it's about commas, apostrophes, colons, dashes and other marks. |
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The book's adaptors were Spanish playwright Pablo Ley and English dramatist Allan Baker and the director was Josep Galindo of Spain. |
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He elevates Wesley and Wesleyanism to too momentous a role in British history although this is necessary to build up the book's importance. |
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An introduction sketches the book's key terms and thereby adumbrates its themes, especially the principal pair of beauty and the infinite. |
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On the book's cover, we see Riel on that same hilltop, staring raptly into the sky. |
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The book's final pages are dedicated to memories of famous personalities and places that are no more. |
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The singer showed off the book's colourful illustrations to the youngsters, but ended her reading after five minutes. |
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The book's thesis emphasizes the supremacy of air power in shaping the battlefield. |
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The book's perspective that leadership can be learned through exposure to the experiences of others comes through loud and clear. |
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Part of the problem stems from the book's function as a memoir of the author's personal quest to discover whether her father was a Klansman. |
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The real surprise is that there is a book's worth of information on the subject to merit publication. |
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There are almost four hundred references given in the book's concluding section, which is itself an important contribution. |
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When we excerpt full chapters, we often put the book's color jacket online to help increase readers' interest. |
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Our book's approach is literary and writerly, focusing on the form and acknowledging the literary impulse in nonfiction. |
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I made this choice because the charts labored the point and didn't add anything to the book's content. |
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The book's exultation of romantic selfhood and all-consuming passion was another source of worry for Victorian critics. |
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She deploys their concepts flexibly and insightfully to enrich the book's content without encumbering its style with jargon. |
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In certain instances, this is the book's weakness in that it falls between two stools, being truly neither one nor the other. |
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Even at the book's launch party, over glasses of poor quality House of Commons wine, one or two people doubted this was what had really happened. |
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In analyzing some of the book's sections, we would have to parse each sentence! |
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The artist chose the book's landscape format, which is reminiscent of old volumes recounting geographical explorations. |
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It is as far from a literal rendering of Akhmatova's verse as it is from the book's dominant temperament. |
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The book's cover reproduces a 1789 print of the famous fight between the Anglo-Jewish Daniel Mendoza and the Gentile Humphrey. |
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The meat-happy book's unintentional humor peaks with diagrams of different animals' anatomies. |
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In another of this book's chapters, Roberts traces the interplay of crystals, mirrors and enantiomorphic pairs in Smithson's art. |
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For all this fascinating detail, though, the perceived need to create interest where no such need exists drags at this book's heels. |
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It has a matte, grainy cover made from a soft paperboard, with no paper jacket and a title only appearing on the book's spine. |
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This book's hours with the poets offer not so much the aesthetics of the avant-garde as those of the guard's van. |
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His frustration over the book's reception seems almost anticlimactic in comparison with the frustrations he was now facing. |
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The book's eye-glazing repetition suggests the manuscript, too, was treated reverentially. |
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These lucid scientific interjections compensate rewardingly for the book's relatively weak cultural sense. |
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The book's design nicely complements its meticulously researched and elegantly written contents. |
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The book's success was so surprising to Stowe, she claimed that she did not write the book so much as take dictation from God. |
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The book's strength is its convincing argument that religious groups often act like a single organism. |
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The book's second half focuses on the ethics of prophetic and apocalyptic literature. |
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The absence of such a discussion detracts somewhat from the book's overall contribution. |
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He was at the University of Chicago yesterday to road-test some of his book's arguments. |
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In the book's music section, Rodriguez writes about the Panamanian-born singer and actor's political activism. |
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But the book's message, and its roller-coaster style, ultimately triumphs over such complaints and concerns. |
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The book's treatment of the Synoptic Gospels is much too brief to be enlightening. |
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The film rights were snapped up by Miramax even before the book's publication. |
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The book's second part provides accounts of the customs and histories of the Catawbas, Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, and Chickasaws. |
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Readers will likely find the book's practical advice as rudderless as its ethical principles. |
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At the time of the book's publication, the Declaration was novel and untested as to its character and significance. |
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Toward the end of a book's life, before it goes into paperback, you end up with some overstock. |
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An evidential rushed effort to complete telling the tale seem to plagued the book's finalising chapters. |
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Whether one does or does not acquire the book depends upon the overlap between the interests of the reader and the book's topics. |
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Most of them want a slice of the pie or over-state their role in the book's production. |
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But Hollinghurst doesn't rely on tabloid-inspired plot machinations to keep the book's engine ticking. |
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Despite the implication of the book's subtitle, McWilliam does not take a monographic approach either. |
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Many of the book's strongest elements are only tangentially concerned with music. |
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But what a wasted opportunity, nevertheless, if it turns out the film has made a hash of the book's lighthearted yet moving charm. |
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The book's closing story, for example, is about Mohanji, a gentle and gifted singer trained in classical Hindustani music. |
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After the book's publication, it was treated as an example of ethnographic research. |
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The book's extensive citations are a gold mine of information for those studying creative industries. |
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It is a testament to the book's quality that one can disagree with its thesis while thoroughly enjoying its argument and prose. |
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Even the program book's supplementary material avoids any mention of the depravities endured there. |
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For those able to overlook glaring textual errors, the book's photographs are deeply rewarding. |
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The book's themes of character and self-improvement were developed from his years swimming for Dartmouth. |
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The Preface sets forth the book's pedagogical goals, conceptual structure and formal organization. |
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Not one of them acquires the slightest depth of characterization in the course of the book's 300-plus pages. |
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The book offers few broad programmatic prescriptions, but several follow logically from the book's evidence. |
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In one of the book's most titillating revelations, she writes about engaging in sexual threesomes. |
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Thus, even the book's most ghastly events are stripped of their horror, and so of their dramatic power as well. |
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However, the title page did list the names of the book's sellers, William Rogers and Clarke Brown, as well as that of the printer, Samuel Hall. |
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And the book's protagonist, Tomas, is nothing if not a bed-hopper and question-asker. |
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The silkscreen prints command a beefy price, but the book's meat is the bleak, brilliant comic at its centre. |
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The book's overall dimensions, font size, and uses of bold print make it very user friendly. |
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The seven deadly sins and their antitheses, the four cardinal virtues and three heavenly graces, provide the book's organising principle. |
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This is, as has been pointed out in the myriad good reviews the book's received, high-concept stuff. |
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Arguably this lack of shading also counters the book's themes of moral shading. |
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Personally, I found this book's exclusively middle-class viewpoint annoyingly narrow. |
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This book's similar mixture of the raw and the studied gives it a surprising force. |
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Fifth, the book's discussion of the Asian crisis seems shallow compared to its analysis of Japanese capitalism. |
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On the other hand, I got a lot out of the book's part about South America and the Middle East. |
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All of the book's heroes inspire readers to take action in our own neighborhoods and situations. |
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Useful appendices and an extensive bibliography add to the book's reference value. |
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I thought I was beyond shockability but the book's revelations were stupefying. |
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The book's tone is unashamedly celebratory, and it is hard to resist the writer's enthusiasm. |
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The book's letterpressed cover is debossed with gold ink on a red bookcloth. |
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The book's dedication presents three names-of the poet's parents and of her former husband-accompanied by birth and death dates. |
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The book's strengths include the quality and range of the reproductions utilized. |
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As a matter of publishing curiosity, did the legal carry-on do anything for the book's sales? |
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I say I think I can recommend the book because, belonging as I do to the hairy-eared old-timers, I may not be in the book's true target audience. |
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Niko laughed at me when I ran my fingers across the book's spines and flipped through the pages in order to breathe in the scent of crisp parchment. |
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Even then, the book's sympathies are more with his foot-soldiers. |
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Much of the book's appeal derives from the personality of its central character. |
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The book's central thesis is that propaganda influences the masses in important ways. |
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Assuming that Hansen is sick of rehashing seemingly ancient events, however, the book's recount of the two years leading up to her arrest is outstanding. |
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It's a testament to this book's unusual ability to straddle fantasy and literary realms that this moment creates a real knot of emotion in the reader's chest. |
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While This Far by Faith tells good stories, readers who wish to use the book for quick reference may find the book's loose organization a bit frustrating. |
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In fact, the book's lacunae are in some cases not inconsiderable. |
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The first book's title, he admits, was a deliberate attempt to get it listed first in an alphabetical list of walking books being produced at the time. |
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Brown annotates every deliberate inaccuracy in the book's notes. |
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An attempt at tragedy in the book's last quarter all but tips the book into oblivion with the revelation of a family secret so silly that Sunset Beach would reject it. |
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Could this mean that the differing titles were all the result of a long-dead library clerk having incorrectly entered the book's title details on an index card? |
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Nor, on a quick skim, are the rest of the book's pirates notably rhotic. |
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This attractive book's nostalgic appeal is entirely seasonal. |
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The editor has not only extended the book's coverage by ten years but has included artists primarily known as etchers, engravers and lithographers. |
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The book's sad and enigmatic title appears under an arresting cover photograph of a Yolngu warrior, Witiyana Arika, playing the traditional clapsticks. |
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Student nurses will benefit from the book's logical flow, which allows readers to assimilate information presented by the content and exhibits in each chapter. |
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Secret White House backchannels are used to support the book's contention. |
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The reader with an eye for colourful detail and elegant prose, not to mention for racy scandal and rumour, will no doubt forgive the book's shortcomings. |
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While some of the book's guidelines are common sense, others are banal. |
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The book's title comes from a sententious line of Henry James's, and the opening preamble announces that multiplicity is going to be an important theme. |
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The book's chapter titles are the names of the continents, and within each continent the English language experience of each country is described. |
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The book's title is, of course, a metaphor for what she as a writer does. |
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Given that the book's climax describes a showdown between sharecroppers and planters, one might imagine that class constituted a major fissure in the county's history. |
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Marie shredded the book's pages, enclosed the shreds within gel capsules, put the capsules inside a glass druggist's bottle, and sealed the bottle with a cork stopper. |
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The template for this book's monologues is the on-screen navel-gazing of TV contestants, and it requires of its reader a similar concern for triviality. |
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A recipe is merely a guide, and this book's recipes are full of signposts. |
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You could start by going to her book blog, which is a valuable resource in itself, or you can go to the book's own web site and work on from there. |
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He wrote that he knew the topography of each book's blots and dog ears and could trace the dirt in it to having read it with tea and buttered muffins. |
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Brilliantly though the power of war to destroy, corrupt and degrade everything it touches is conveyed, the book's unrelieved grimness will be a problem for some. |
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Indeed, this book's special virtue is to historicize and demystify the material conditions of everyday life which industrial culture has tended to naturalize. |
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There is another aspect of Arcady that is more difficult to describe, but which owes primarily to the disarming simplicity of the book's lexicon and spareness of its phrasing. |
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Rigg's subject is fascinating and his material is rich, but the book's organization makes it problematic for undergraduate or non-specialist readers. |
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To make the book most useful to Nunavummiut, the book's authors included only the most common plants that could be found near settlements in most parts of the territory. |
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The phrase is used as a section heading in the book's table of contents. |
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While I marvel at this book's heaviness and complexity, I too am a product of the disillusion climate, and I can't pipe down when I feel I'm being oppressed. |
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Shteir dwells much more on the lives of actual striptease artists than on windy abstractions or academic arguments, and this is the book's great strength. |
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Ultimately, such flaws are vastly outweighed by the book's contributions. |
|
The book's eleven chapters are divided into three thematic parts. |
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Select some pretty paper scraps, and overlap them on the book's cover. |
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The section of notes, by the way, contains no references to the book's pagination, and it can be quite a struggle to find a note when you think you need one. |
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I am amused by the attack on the book's statement about the use of vermilion in the hair partings of female terracottas in very early contexts in Baluchistan. |
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The book's mix of code-breaking, art history, religion and mystical lore has helped it sell 25 million copies since it was published two years ago. |
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The fate of the book's heroes, Chris and Rowland, is so predictable and facile that it undermines what little complexity existed in their relationship throughout the novel. |
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Probably the book's greatest strength is its spirited defence of the creativity of pick-and-mix personal religion as compared with more traditional forms. |
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The publishers have also been extremely fastidious in their selection of the book's 325 illustrations, providing a pictorial record spanning over a century and a half. |
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Students are also asked to describe the impact the book had on them in terms of perceptions regarding spirituality and how it was contextualized by the book's author. |
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Crucially, Capildeo's descriptions of arid, dormant inwardness reveal a preoccupation with the static or unchanging, which relates to her book's encounter with myth. |
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The book's long, ponderous descriptions of southern landscapes and sub-Faulknerian dialogue led some readers to suspect that the hero was in no hurry to see her again. |
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The book's protagonist, Luther Green, is an icy cosmopolite with strong connections to his family and the inner-city neighborhood of his adolescence. |
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This is one of the book's best sections because of its quiet reflections on the possibility of actually dropping out of society and embracing a new way of living. |
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Because the book's community is defined implicitly by the text as an internal colony, theories of postcolonialism serve to highlight colonial structures embedded in the text. |
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These ideas come to a crescendo in the book's final collection of essays. |
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The book's introduction speaks of the thinkers and free spirits, inventors and entertainers who have populated the county, and they are liberally scattered through the work. |
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The images in the 15 black-and-white photographs, measuring roughly 24 x 20 inches in the original, are difficult to make out in their reproduction as the book's frontispiece. |
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Laidler provided a preview of this book's thesis in The Golden Age. |
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The book's underlying premise is that there must be a processual approach to understanding the dynamic nature of the interaction between patron, artist, and art. |
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Add to the author's own notes the glosses and historicizing of the book's editor, and you have a book with nearly three times the length of commentary as of text. |
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Without a much more thorough linkage between theory and fact, the book's central historical and theoretical propositions must be viewed as unproven. |
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Though the book's elaborate details might make slow going for many readers, it will serve as a valuable resource for scholars and political activists. |
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The chapter is thus neatly brought full circle and sets the pattern of the book's discursive style, weaving the threads of memory into the present. |
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The gutter, that tight space of the spine that is pinched by the binding, is the one irrefutable physical fact of a book's existence as an object. |
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In fact, fully half of the book's pages are devoted to endnotes, although these seem to include references to every book and article she came across during her research. |
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While the book's format lets us meet many fascinating people, it has the unfortunate effect of making individual experience disjointed and fragmentary. |
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It now expunges records of a book's last reader after 30 days. |
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The book's subtitle, 'Her Voice in Paradise', has a double meaning. |
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Supporters of the book's basic accuracy countered on the points raised by skeptics such as footbinding and the Great Wall of China. |
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Even though Gaiman thought he had done a terrible job, the book's first edition sold out very quickly. |
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Rare book cataloguer Ken Gibb traced the book's history by tracking down the owners of several bookplates left inside it. |
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Aksyonov, a dissident writer who emigrated to America shortly after the book's samizdat publication, is now lauded as a prophet. |
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Central to the book's 11th chapter, called Sirens, are two barmaids and their occasionally bawdy customers. |
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He's the first person mentioned in the book's acknowledgments. |
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The editors both work in paper disciplines, so the book's museological vision includes archiving as well as the collection of objects. |
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The book's epigraph is a quote from Robinson Crusoe, and like Crusoe, Adam Pollo suffers long periods of loneliness. |
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The author departs from standard source critical and redactional critical explanations for the book's chaotic shape. |
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First published in 1990, this special anniversary edition celebrates the book's quinceanera with an additional painting and a larger format. |
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Quibblers might also find fault with the book's incomplete treatment of the Safeguards Agreement. |
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The book's organization is based on the core groups found in the periodic table. |
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The book's layout is designed to look like a real file with paperclips and notes. |
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Besides a pantoum, 16 of the book's 50 poems, including its opener, are 18-liners arranged in ABBACC heroic sestets. |
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The numerous picture plates added to the book's appeal and usefulness, particularly when pertaining to things found in nature. |
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The book's brightly coloured endpapers in a feather design are in sharp contrast to the limited palette used for the story pages. |
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Piper's photos on the book's endpapers give a better clue to his sensibility than the cover does. |
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But coming to that assumption may take, in my experience at least, dealing with the book's unabashed, even shameless style of total idolization. |
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The book's organization parallels that of Abbas and Lichtman's textbooks, Basic Immunology and Cellular and Molecular Immunology. |
|
Once McEwan loses his grip of the book's otherworldliness and dream-like brilliance, there's only one to way to go. |
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His academic training is evident in the plentiful citations of research in the book's references. |
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The book's quizzes reveal your Affluence Intelligence Quotient and show how you may be sabotaging your financial well-being. |
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There is a biographical sketch of the author on the book's back cover. |
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Past is everywhere present in Homage, and the book's blend of reverence and ironizing gamesmanship regarding that past is announced on the cover. |
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Although the book's subject is football, I wonder if possibly other athletic contact sports could affect the brain. |
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A full discussion of the provenance of each poem is included in the definitive editions of the book's contents poems by Marged Haycock. |
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In this slipcased edition, Meehan's text accompanies photographic reproductions of the book's original pages. |
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The book's title is an echo of a line from an old folk song. |
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The book's bubble-gum pink cover and pages in pastels really makes the text jump off the page. |
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Some of the book's adventures may have been based on or influenced by people, situations, and buildings in Oxford and at Christ Church. |
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The book's last chapter was one of the earliest things she wrote in the entire series. |
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Stacy also said family members of the late Libyan strongman Moammar Qadhdhafi owned shares in the book's publisher. |
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Sturgess offers an important context for the appropriation of Shakespeare in the book's assessment of Anglo-Saxonism in America. |
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Readers who deem the book's liberties too free can stick to the tonnage of Watergate memoirs, transcripts, investigative reports and marginalia. |
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Readers should forgive the book's polemical chapters and enjoy Donne's life, here retold in fine Waltonian fashion. |
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Your character doesn't understand any of the Zorkian languages in which the book's jokes are written and must have them translated by others. |
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The book's owner, Maurice Conchis befriends Urfe and brings him into his vortical universe. |
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One of the book's thought experiments involves Jim, a botanist doing research in a South American country led by a brutal dictator. |
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Ainsworth used Turpin as a plot device, describing him in a manner that makes him more lively than the book's other characters. |
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Within the book publishing, the publisher of record for a book is the entity in whose name the book's ISBN is registered. |
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The book's principal character, 'Andrews', travels by foot across the Downs to reach Lewes and attend the Assizes. |
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On 23 July, riots erupted in Edinburgh upon the first Sunday of the prayer book's usage, and unrest spread throughout the Kirk. |
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I found it hard to follow the convolutions of the book's plot. |
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The book's development began in the early 1980s for former Anglicans within the Anglican Use parishes. |
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In August 2006 the contents of Domesday went online, with an English translation of the book's Latin. |
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The exception appears in the book's middle, where a different sort of text is accompanied by rough crayonings of a couple making love. |
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I liked the story but I didn't really agree with the book's message. |
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The exhibition will explore the book's themes and spans Cockrill's evolution from early photorealism to expressionism and abstraction. |
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No doubt these stylistic infuriations reflect the book's dissertational origins. |
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There is also some jargonizing obscurity in the book's own language. |
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Though many of the book's passages more than hint at an Austrian storyline, the authors rely explicitly on monetarist theory, which features the quantity theory of money. |
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At this book's inception, when we came to, we found ourselves already traipsing around Penrose steps, already reactively enclosed in an unceasing loop. |
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Since the book's publication, many have viewed the book with skepticism. |
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The book's examples are exclusive taken from Canadian English and represent one of the more extensive collections of variables for Canadian English. |
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In other words, there was no way to correlate a book's barcode number, by which it was filed in the computer, to its copy number on the shelf list. |
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They may also need some maps as the book's only ones are on the inside of the dustjacket, an unfortunate oversight for a resource aimed at those who need maps most. |
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Pickover illustrates the usefulness of mathematics by setting the book's story in a pizza parlor and considering problems that Luigi, the owner, might face on any given day. |
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While the films follow the book's general storyline, they do omit some of the novel's plot elements and include some additions to and deviations from the source material. |
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However, your reviewer became apprehensive when reading the book's cover notes which describe how the programme has witnessed some of football's greatest moments. |
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This edition credited Mary Shelley as the book's author on its title page. |
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While some of this engaging book's comprehensive statistics highlight the extent to which he could 'drop anchor', Trevor Bailey was more than a stonewaller. |
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The book's chapters examine the development of schooling supported by the commune, lay confraternities, religious orders, the episcopate, and parents. |
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This book focusses mainly on the experiments and research done by the book's author, James Carey, on the life spans of approximately 5m Mediterranean fruit flies. |
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The book's 15 sections describe surgery in various organs and body regions, including the spleen, the breast, the endocrine glands, and vascular surgery. |
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Considering the book's focus on oaths, one would have liked a longer examination of the Nonjurors who would have provided a useful contrast to the Covenanters. |
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But the book's metaethical insights have been more controversial. |
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The book's many adages, while thought provoking, would have been more accessible and possibly had more impact if they'd been made briefer and crisper. |
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