I believe this initial assessment of the whole book, rather than reading only a chapter or two, is the best way to see how the author sustains the narrative arc — creates the premise, develops the action, resolves the problem — and brings the reader to some kind of satisfying personal experience,
an emotional landing place, whether it's inspiring, happy, tragic or just plain informative.
But nevertheless, it's essential to provide
an emotional landing place, so the reader can put down the book with a sense that «Yes, it may not have happened to me actually, but my life is richer for having read this.
Not exact matches
Though [Rains is] strong in The Fixer, willing to push his character's initially endearing curiousity into aggressive and stubborn
places and show real
emotional confusion in a foreign
land, the picture is otherwise a mixed bag.
Yet, it stays grounded and dark enough for it's
emotional wallop to
land like a well
placed haymaker.
But after Coco transports viewers to that familiar,
emotional Pixar
place with just a few seconds of footage, the trailer opens up wide to introduce the massive
Land of the Dead, where Coco and his loyal canine sidekick will have the bulk of their adventures.