Sentences with phrase «in beautiful prose»

You may remember from our discussion about the velocity of money, when I wrote in beautiful prose that infinite banking is already happening all over the world under the radar.
Imagine drafting an agreement in this beautiful prose!
In beautiful prose, she weaves the story of her own pregnancy into a scientific report on the critical moments of those nine months, when developing fetuses are most sensitive to chemical exposures.
Arundhati Roy writes incisively and in beautiful prose.
And in beautiful prose, Miller sheds light on her complicated yet loving relationship with her parents that has thrived in spite of the odds.
In beautiful prose, Plus One explores the possibility we all have of finding connection and peace in the lives we are living.
It was a gift wrapped in beautiful prose with intent to shroud its venomous contents.
In practice, the justice secretary was the canary down the mine of Westminster opinion, setting out in beautiful prose the reasons for his dramatic breach with Cameron.

Not exact matches

On the whole, Maritain wrote a beautiful prose, a prose that reaches the heart and the imagination more than that of most philosophers, even while manifesting a Thomist love of exquisite clarity, particularly in the making of distinctions.
It must be said that it is a book whose rhetoric is flawed, and one finds it more than a little strange that the beautiful precision and economy that generally mark his prose in his work for The New Yorker and in his major books at so many points in his latest work give way to a profusion of jargon and a bloatedness of syntax that disfigure the whole.
The film owes a debt to the immaculate prose of Patricia Highsmith's 1952 source novel — not to mention her social daring in writing a sophisticated and beautiful novel of love between two women at a time when that love was defined legally and morally as «obscene».
A truly elegant novel told in beautiful elegaic prose.
Those familiar with Boylan's bestselling memoir She's Not There: A Life in Two Genders will be unsurprised by the dark humor and beautiful prose that drive the narrative.
Marisa Silver writes beautiful, seductive prose that always manages to be both wise and fleet; her inventive, romantic novel is compassionate and moving in wonderfully surprising ways.»
The horrors of the Civil War are also made immediately felt through the characters» lives in quiet but such graphic prose that it made me feel I was understanding it for the first time as a fellow human being rather than a student of history... One beautiful passage at the end of the book stays with me and seems particularly relevant, perhaps, to our current political moment: «So much blood has been spilled that redemption may be out of reach in the end.
In beautiful clear prose and free verse that remains true to the child's viewpoint, first - person, present - tense vignettes fill in Lakshmi's storIn beautiful clear prose and free verse that remains true to the child's viewpoint, first - person, present - tense vignettes fill in Lakshmi's storin Lakshmi's story.
In a crowded historical fiction market, Last Christmas in Paris stands out not just for the beautiful prose, but also for the characters that literally shimmer on the pagIn a crowded historical fiction market, Last Christmas in Paris stands out not just for the beautiful prose, but also for the characters that literally shimmer on the pagin Paris stands out not just for the beautiful prose, but also for the characters that literally shimmer on the page.
The prose may be beautiful, but as a Dutch - born Caucasian living in Australia with a limited experience of the Negro, I found it difficult to relate to this book.
Through the beautiful prose of his narration, we join Jason in boyish adventures and coming - of - age rituals (first cigarette, initiation rites, first kiss), and we learn of his ambitions (poetry, forestry) and his anxieties (stammering, the Falklands war, his parents» relationship, girls).
In prose both brainy and beautiful, she follows her characters as they struggle to save each other.
Written in beautiful, creative prose, this story is about two strong women struggling with motherhood (in all it's glories and difficulties), identity, love and family.
BookPage has praised Franklin's «mastery of evocative language» and «taut and beautiful» prose, and I think you'll find that's the case in this excerpt.
Skipping around in time, knitting together the different points of view with astonishing dexterity and beautiful prose, Maggie O'Farrell has created a story of love and family relationships that is reminiscent of the very best of Edna O'Brien and Mary Gordon.
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