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De Kerangal is a master of momentum, to the extent that when the book ends, the reader feels bereft.
By the time this book ends, the reader has been caught up in a plot of Dickensian intricacy, the Ibis readied for whatever its mission may be, and the characters firmly enveloped in new, self-created identities.
Similar(58)
By the time the novel reaches its cleareyed climax, cleverly undercutting its own promised happy ending, the reader is left with the impression of a work that hums with human life.
Neither plot ends the way the reader — or Irina — might expect.
But so gifted is her storytelling, so deft and light her touch, that the reader ends the book with hope.
And when he says that the literary process ends with the reader, I wonder.
There, however, the similarity between "Three Tales" and "A Possible Life" ends, and the reader is left with questions.
What it does not have is a neat little ending where the reader comes to believe that a wronged man is in jail.
This ending leaves the reader wondering what the officer sees in the toilet.
For an especially dramatic ending, warn the reader, or make a "call to action".
This ending leaves the reader wondering what the officer sees in the toilet, and if the finger was real or a figment of Howard's imagination.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com