Sentences with phrase «painful reading»

His analysis of the last two years of the Major government makes painful reading.
I was such a slow reader and didn't like how painful reading could be for me until this app changed that.
In fact, when you look at the list of players, in a Daily Mail that Arsenal could have had at the club, it makes very painful reading for us Gooners and, I'm sure, Wenger himself.
[return][return] This is a brilliant book, but it was a very painful read for me.
It is almost painful reading CNN's attempts to pander to Islam.
It makes painful reading because, like their German counterparts, they did so little to oppose the deportation of French Jews.
It's always so painful reading ice cream recipes on blogs and beign unable to recreate them.
His response, and Gyllenhaal's complex, painful reading of the moment, pave the way for a later scene where Bauman and company, again at a bar, are confronted by drunks offering their theory that the marathon bombing was an Obama conspiracy.
Reacting to the report, shadow transport secretary Theresa Villiers said: «This shocking indictment on road safety will make painful reading for ministers.
The new figures will make painful reading for the Treasury, as it reels from a badly received Budget which cut taxes for those earning over # 150,000 and imposed harsh new measures on pensioners.
His book is sometimes a painful read, but the prescription he offers is much needed.
His latest comments are a painful read for any Gunner, as he talks of motivation from our rival's manager, as well as talking up his relationship with now City assistant manager Mikel Arteta.
It's painful reading for Real Madrid fans, with the score at 2 - 0 at the time of writing and Messi set to enjoy all the headlines if the result stays as it is.
Painful reading for Members of Parliament will be Robert Winnett and Gordon Rayner's No Expenses Spared (Banton press # 16.99).
That's partly what makes the Lib Dem manifesto such a painful read.
This morning's front pages will make painful reading for the Prime Minister.
For many Conservatives, the book will make painful reading, reminding them of what happened since their party abruptly ceased to be the most effective electoral machine in the history of democracy on Black Wednesday in 1992.
This book was a slow, painful read, delving into monotonous minutia — there's even a full chapter on a congressional filibuster — but there was also gen
Conjuring up the points of capitalism, the erroneous history of Jay Shafer, the cost of building a tiny house, the use of the term «normal»; it was a painful read.
«The report was painful reading, to me personally and to all of us at...
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