Exact(60)
Its last chapter, where these issues are raised, is cursory.
Mr. French is the president of the FarmHouse chapter, where all but one member are McCain supporters.
The chapter where Maddy cradles her (dead, smelling, about to drip juices before exploding) kitty was hard to read.
"Cleantech is moving from its first chapter, where it was all about wind farms and solar panels and these huge industrial things," he said.
I particularly enjoyed the chapter where you pinpoint 1965 as a year when "the prepossessing sanity of the old ruling class was everywhere in doubt".
I started to relax again, especially when I got to the final chapter, where Broad explores the intersection between yoga and creativity.
He said his early departure would give his successor a better shot at opening "a new chapter where important decisions must be taken".
I was struck by the chapter where Rush, one of the children, stops to watch a large snow-blower at work on a Manhattan street.
But the criticism starts to flow as early as his second chapter, where Stiglitz contends that Obama chose a conservative strategy that he calls muddling through.
This weakness is most apparent in the penultimate chapter, where he turns to the ways in which our minds/brains fall apart.
There's even a chapter where Waters writes his own death, a hilarious tale of a maniac who intends to murder every living cult filmmaker.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com