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"Hurry, go note it in Bob," he'd gibe every time I closed a book.
When I closed a book, sometimes it took me a moment to remember where I was.
A couple of houses away, Don O'Shall had just closed a book and was walking into the dining room.
(I merely closed a book one day, and it was enough to make three pathetic wanderers leap at me, whispering ferociously, "Can I have your desk?") Less grand libraries, too, are booming: in 2005/6, 361m books were loaned from all public libraries across Britain.
But I grew up when you felt like you'd achieved something, a reward, when you closed a book after going on its journey.
No one else seemed to know, seemed to notice that whenever I closed a book I was concluding an adventure, fresh from the success of one character or the death of another, overwhelmed by the journey I had just taken.
Similar(52)
You can always close a book.
Not that there's anything wrong with any of that, but I dislike closing a book with the sense that I've been had.
The anterolateral split wedge fragment is then folded over like closing a book.
The feeling you get when you close a book you're engrossed in, like you've left a world behind, is far more intense in VR.
Then fold 1 half over the other half as though closing a book.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com