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Ishiguro made a point to read a chapter featuring pixies, noting: "[I figured I would] come straight out and be proud of their presence and not apologise" – an allusion to some accusations that The Buried Giant is a genre novel.
An early Oxford-set chapter featuring a library meet-cute between an obsessive-compulsive professor and a woman who insists on sitting at "his" desk is pure Richard Curtis.
The book becomes increasingly disjointed — a later chapter featuring Slater's dog, the blind shiba inu that her husband estimates has cost them $60,000 over the years, is punctuated with musings on the evolutionary relationship between dogs and humans, and on whether it is acceptable to love a pet as much as one's child.
Founded in 2010, Startup Grind organizes monthly events for each city's chapter, featuring speakers such as founders from Pinterest, Atari and Y Combinator.
Here skeptical questioning of what we think we know, especially what we think we know about people and who is good and has something to offer to us are questioned in the chapter featuring stigmatized individuals, often with feet amputated (a common criminal punishment of the time), who turn out to be masters drawing as many students as Confucius.
(They're not alone: Five Wisconsin school districts lost nearly $200 million in a similar scam. See The Looting of America. The first chapter featuring the Wisconsin school swindle is posted at here).
Similar(53)
Each chapter features an original art work, commissioned by Cockayne.
This chapter features a small 3D modeling project of a tapered, shelled, and filleted wastebasket.
The chapter features a small 3D modeling project of a tapered, shelled, and filleted wastebasket.
This chapter features a 3D modeling project of a tapered, shelled, and filleted wastebasket.
This chapter features another nonstandard GLMM where the random effects distribution is different from normal, namely Poisson.
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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