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Printed episodically in magazines, Dickens's cliffhangers triggered desperation in his readers.
As Neil Duxbury notes, Holmes consistently provokes strong reactions in his readers.
And while Gatewood instills sentimental expectations in his readers, the story's trajectory is darkly, ferociously doomward.
Grisham seems to want to instill in his readers a respect and perhaps even a sneaking affection for the legal profession.
Hume sprinkled his gunpowder through the pages of the "Dialogues" and left the book primed so that its arguments would, with luck, ignite in his readers' own minds.
The latter view -- that sense of wonder, awe and unease provoked by MIT -- is surely the one White wants to evoke in his readers.
Similar(27)
While some literary writers bang home their themes, Mr. Rubenfeld has more confidence in his reader.
Without enough drugs in his reader's system, Burroughs's prose falls flat on its face.
Paterson's lighter, more intent, versions make Rilke sound interested in his reader, rather than merely in himself.
Coetzee's lack of faith in his reader's ability to trace his meaning without such interjections becomes almost insulting.
It's also the sort of boredom that some of Wallace's tortuously long and deliberately difficult descriptions invoke in his reader.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com