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DARGIS I don't know about an entire chapter, maybe a paragraph.
"We would read one chapter, maybe three, and then watch the video," he says.
It was not methodical: the first thing I wrote would never be the first chapter, maybe it would become the fourth or fifth chapter.
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And in Mishima: A Life in Four Chapters, maybe the best writer biopic ever made, Ken Ogata looked nothing like the Japanese author, but Paul Schrader got under the man's skin by taking off into flights of artistic delirium that Gus Van Sant and Stephen Soderbergh can only dream of.
I was startled to read in it a short chapter -- maybe six pages long -- that while in her thirties Helen had a love affair, became secretly engaged, and defied her teacher and family by trying to elope with the man she loved.
Start with the most difficult chapter or maybe the biggest chapter.
You should have one to three subjects per chapter or maybe multiple chapters per subject in some cases, like the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 5-7.
I hope they'll help you, too -- and, if you have any strategies of your own to share, please do! 1. Start Your Book Somewhere New For the last three books, whenever I've been brought to my knees by the process of pushing word boulders uphill, I start the book somewhere new -- generally around fifty pages deeper in, maybe Chapter 3 or Chapter 4. And then, like magic, things start to come together.
At the book's center is a chapter that begins, "Maybe there are things I should explain".
Chapter 11 was maybe weeks away.
So for a student, instead of just reading a textbook chapter and then maybe answering some questions at the end, you get a more personalized experience, where the questions are timed in a way to reinforce the key concepts so that you actually remember them.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com