Thus, unshaven or ill - dressed, unsmiling or mid-dalliance, faceless you write your books a dozen times each day for me to read, perhaps with like to let you know that five by five
I read your prose and passionate emojis.
When
I read the prose leading in I get the sense of some lone guy working who is trying to sound like an organized group.
It is very likely, this could be the last generation to
read their prose.
I could
read his prose on salary, but not Jane's.
If you only
read prose novels, give a graphic novel a try.
It can be transcendental, and I believe can put one in touch with a deeper part of ourselves only reached through artistic meditation — what some might call the creative process, that joy of discovery wherein
you read your prose a few months after writing it and think, crap, did I really write that?
Read the prose of a potential beta readers.
Today
I read your prose about «being able to question beliefs, ideas or theologies that are passed on to us».
Otherwise they just won't
read prose - type texts without knowing where the text leads.
It is instead probably because, like the rest of the reading world, pastors, theologians and engaged laypersons rarely read poetry — maybe because it requires a different set of skills from
reading prose, maybe because these readers choose not to embrace the indirection of metaphor, and maybe also because they have read examples of bad religious poetry that make the whole endeavor seem like a waste of time.
I definitely don't think that way, I'm always
reading your prose with the picture, and I don't have any «oh no!»
My dearest Marjan, you can't imagine what a pleasure I get from
reading your proses, whenever I click on your website and look around.
Not exact matches
Read the full post, and find your mind being tweaked and re-tuned by his deceptively spectacular
prose.
He
read the papers in his office with us sitting in a hard chair next to him, shredding our
prose, our word choices, and attention to details.
If you can not write in
prose that has some measure of wit, best not to try at all...
read some Shakespeare... he was a master of using the written word to express a wide variety of emotion and tone.
We should understand some of the mistakes we have made in replacing an oral
prose with book,
prose, a public language with a private one not written, to be
read aloud.
This
reading, as we have noted, was Italianate, Ultramontane, highly emotional and frequently expressed in passages of purple
prose, which, as Wilkinson opines, occasionally topple over into «silliness».
All those hours spent
reading by dim firelight the same book over and over (the way little children still like to be
read to) were to contribute to Lincoln's being the foremost master of
prose among our Presidents.
A quick glance at her sources reveals just how well -
read and smart the author is, though her
prose is not for a moment stilted or heavy - handed.
And in
reading these we become aware that sometime between the ages of fifteen and seventeen, he acquired an almost freakishly mature mastery of English
prose.
The
reading pleasure that results from this conversation — different for different readers — is not merely the simple pleasure of hearing a good story, but the complex pleasures of strong feelings — sometimes violent disagreement, sometimes frustration and sometimes a euphoric recognition, produced by Augustine's text, of the «beauty so ancient and so new,» to which Augustine points through the beauty of his
prose.
Rushdoony's
prose is ponderous; probably even most Reconstructionists have never
read Institutes of Biblical Law.
We didn't understand that when we
read ancient Hebrew
prose poems (like Genesis 1), wisdom literature (like Proverbs), or apocalyptic literature (like Revelation) as if they were science textbooks, we were actually obscuring their meaning.»
The stories and
prose read like a narrative, but the book is quite informational as it explains what has happened to the Bible in modern America.
For here we are not
reading flat
prose about the end of the space - time universe.
Expansive and yet vacuous is the
prose of Kahlil Gibran, And weary grows the mind doomed to
read it.
Reading his deathless
prose is more painful than any dry socket.
(As Yeats once said, «It gave me the devil of a lot of trouble to get into verse the poems that I am going to
read, and that is why I will not
read them as if they were
prose.»)
Given the clarity and power of its
prose, Geertz's essay was important in its own right; nevertheless, it entered an ongoing stream of theoretical discourse in the sociology of religion, and, like any such contribution, its significance lay not only in what it said but also in what others
read into it.
Oh, the places we go after
reading your persuasive
prose!
It's easy to maneuver around in, your
prose is articulate, and your recipes are simple to
read.
Your story reminds me of when I was
reading «Heat» and wanted to run right into my kitchen and try some of the recipes Buford described (first the Italian lady's pasta, one egg, one etto of flour — see, easy, I remember, then Batali's pasta that he didn't publish in the Babbo cookbook, then a seafood pasta... and all with really no recipe, just
prose.
It looks like you're very hesitant about the crumble and the filling, which I know isn't the case from
reading the (always delightful)
prose.
It reminded me a bit of the Laurie Colwin books in that you are drawn in by the wonderful
prose and daydream about the food as you keep
reading.
Jan 04,2016... Michael Tobin subscribes to the theory that good
prose, like good poetry, deserves to be
read aloud...
Therefore, I have
read just about every article or
prose that was ever written on the subject of sleeping (i.e. Ferberizing, the Sears Method, etc) and have not only considered statistics (and yes, even those given on the SIDS website and the AAP website), but I have also taken into account what is best for not only me, but my baby.
«I've been
reading your book today and wanted to tell you that you have great
prose, so easy to follow and fun to
read!
Heather Shumaker's graceful
prose and storytelling skill make it entertaining, unforgettable
reading.
Shashi Tharoor wrote in Time Magazine that the book «reveals a side of Churchill largely ignored in the West and considerably tarnishes his heroic sheen», noting that «Mukerjee's
prose is all the more devastating because she refuses to voice the outrage most readers will feel on
reading her exhaustively researched, footnoted facts.»
By
reading the fine print hand - in - hand with on - campus researchers, the office helps translate solicitations into more familiar
prose and keeps the submission process on track.
The
prose reads like a mix of boilerplate statutory code and scenes from an Ian Fleming novel: «SECTION IV A jury will meet on a hidden, off - world island, owned and maintained by Linden Lab.
Write it in fairly short
prose, but make sure you include their keywords; make it sound like something they will want to
read.
It didn't help that his two - volume work, The Theory of the Earth, was written in
prose so impenetrable that hardly anyone
read it.
Dave Lucas is the author of Weather and co-director of the Market Garden Brewery
Reading Series, Brews +
Prose.
I mean, nobody is
reading these books for the literary
prose.
Our patented Compatibility Matching System ® is the key differentiation between our service and that of traditional black dating... to meet other singles with whom you share common goals, interests, and backgrounds within your... In their pitch, a little booklet called «I Am The Bihar Museum», a
prose - poem... XXX BlackBook — Adult Dating
Read More...
Fincher reinstalls the concept of the personal (not to mention the visceral) to the often - depersonalized
prose that accompanies media descriptions of serial murder; It is not enough to
read or hear that a victim was tortured; Seven grabs the audience by the scruff of the neck, turns its collective face to the murder scene, and unrepentantly compels its members to contemplate what the concept of torture really means.
Certainly more work than
reading a review off of a teleprompter or arguing with a colleague in front of a set live - to - tape, or — dare I say it — writing
prose.
Running just over 80 minutes, it's essentially an adaptation of Fuller's memoir of the same name, divided into chapters, with a selection of famous names
reading the filmmaker's
prose.
Marketing aside, Ready Player One also has the disadvantage of being adapted from Ernest Cline's dreadful novel, which
reads less like
prose and more like a laundry list of pop culture references colliding into each other.