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Once heard, it is unmistakable: an echo of "Somewhere" that rises from the ceaseless tide of shrieks and moans in the subways.
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Tonally, it's closer to The Commitments than Dreamgirls, with an echo of Mark Rydell's often overlooked For the Boys lurking somewhere in the background.
"London," he says, in the poem "November", "– there's a rhythm to the name, its ending an echo of its beginning, as if London were the name for somewhere full to the brim with its own echoes".
Somewhere deep inside her was a primal sadness she called "an echo of the pain of the world".
There's an echo of Dante here.
Again, an echo of the misbegotten Iraq.
Is there an echo of Amir here?
Still, for readers who simply can't get enough of Bogart (or members of younger generations who have been dwelling in an Internet echo chamber somewhere), this is a perfectly engaging book.
As Cohen pulled at the melody of a gently swung "Mack the Knife," with Osby shadowing her every step, the song's familiar shape was stretched somewhere new, marking a gentle echo of a festival that strives to follow the same path.
(Most present-day depictions of the dread-filled workplace and dead-end family life, from "The Office" to "Mad Men," have echoes of it somewhere).
Somewhere between the louche and the larcenous, a literary echo of both Damon Runyon and Ring Lardner, Joey inhabits the sleazy and desperate outskirts of American longing.
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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