Hill has the ability to
move a story along quickly, considering the length, with involving secondary characters and poetic prose.
Not exact matches
It's ridiculously long (about 2000 pages all together) but the narrative
moves along so
quickly and the
story is told with such economy that it's never slow or boring.
It's nice that this book looks at those relationships and expands them in a
story that
moves along quickly with smart writing and easy prose.
The
story does a good job of
moving you
along in your journey, albeit in a predictably linear fashion, but as the
story develops, you
quickly forget about the places you visited previously as you focus on helping those in immediate need.