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The reports compose a portrait in futility: the enemy was strong, the post's ranks were small and counterinsurgency efforts had no traction.
In "Chronically Unfeasible," Mr. Bianchi uses several representative figures -- including a cranky college professor, a waiter with an anarchist streak, an Indian woman who has reinvented herself as a capitalist and a black woman who works as a maid for a white woman who was her childhood friend -- to compose a portrait of a country on the brink of breakdown.
Mantello's staging provides a kaleidoscope of such resonant silences, which collectively compose a portrait of a family struggling to stay afloat, economically and emotionally, at a time of jarring middle-class insecurity.
With his new documentary, The Lure, British documentarian Tomas Leach employs a quiet lyricism to compose a portrait of these fanatic treasure hunters and their relationship with Fenn, the wizened old man with a twinkle in his eye pulling the strings on their feverish quest.
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Taken together, these memory vignettes composed a portrait of an artist as a young entrepreneur.
With novelistic thoroughness, Mr. Padilha and Mr. Lacerda take the audience on a tour of the slums, the courts and the jails, composing a portrait of the hijacker and the world that formed him.
After all, a writer must have a fine sense of narrative balance in order to compose a convincing portrait of deeply depressed people without deeply depressing her readers.
By the end of this intermissionless evening, these quiet, loosely overlapping scenes gradually cohere to compose a collective portrait of contemporary urban isolation that feels uncommonly wise and tender and true.
The resulting volume, City of the Saints (1861), showed that he could write with sophistication about the nature of the Mormon church, compose a vivid portrait of its leader, Brigham Young, and also be dispassionate about the Mormon practice of polygamy, which was then outraging most Americans.
But how could she — or why would she — once she decided to compose a group portrait of Allen Ginsberg and his bliss-seeking crew during the poet's 15-month spiritual quest (and bodily adventures) in the land of a zillion mystics early in the decade running from Kennedy through Nixon?
The crinkly eyes, the delicate, slightly uncertain tread, the hands that flutter nervously as they reach for another chocolate: There is unerring truth in all the little details, and they collectively compose a homey portrait that makes the sting in Ms. Cho's deftly wrought play so painful.
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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