Not exact matches
Unfortunately the
story, a relatively disconnected series
of incidents
none of which are
particularly compelling, works only in brief spurts.
None of them
particularly stand out, rather their
stories all speak to each other to give War Horse its rich and memorable depiction
of heroism.
As I mentioned earlier, Attack on Titan's
story is just enough to help pull you through the
story missions the first time, but
none of them are
particularly noteworthy or fun enough to warrant multiple playthroughs.
This roster makes it all the more baffling just how vacuous this romantic comedy is, in which
none of them are
particularly likable while in a universally recognizable
story about what music means to others.
So far,
none of this
story is
particularly human; the same thing likely happens on a more local scale with baboons, which are monkeys that have adapted to treeless settings but will happily invade woodland.
There are theories and models (and as a theorist, I just love to tell
stories) but there aren't any
particularly successful theories or models and there is a lot
of competition between the
stories (
none of which agree with or predict the empirical data
particularly well, at best agreeing with some gross features but not others).
Up to this point in the abrupt climate change
story,
none of the broad conclusions is
particularly speculative.
Although Sheehy notes that
none of them are
particularly exciting on their own, «collectively they're telling a great
story.»