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The answer is yes, "excessively interesting" is correct and usable in written English. You can use it to describe something that is too interesting, or extremely interesting. For example, "I found the book I was reading excessively interesting, so I stayed up all night reading it."
Exact(2)
It's a feat of empathy, balanced between the harsh and the tender, which survives the momentary wobble when an excessively interesting minor character is introduced two-thirds of the way through ('Amy's face had great delicacy.
But Westlake is also a card with characters, and he flashes that talent to terrific effect here with droll profiles of the vulpine lawyers, crooked casino operators, lying petitioners and outraged Indians who file before a beady-eyed judge with a distinct aversion for cases as "excessively interesting" as this one.
Similar(57)
"So not excessively excessive.
Milhaud's adaptation is generally considered an interesting failure, excessively talky and too heavily scored.
Nothing here seems excessively ambitious or showy, but the cocktails are definitely interesting and well-made.
Thirty years from now, it will be interesting to see if that little town seems excessively sad, richly luxurious or spot on.
He apparently always needs to have eight ways to jump, not because he is excessively prudent but because that is what makes the game interesting.
He has no time for the suggestion that Jesus was merely a good human being who offered an interesting new interpretation of Jewish teaching that had become excessively rigid or chauvinist.
A reasonable lower bound of δt might seem to be the time of the shortest individual reaction event found in the time courses, however this is often excessively short, extending the frequency spectrum orders of magnitude above the interesting phenomena.
"It's interesting right now to look at ridiculous imagery and concepts, the excessively blobby electronics, or predictions of endless prosperity," Collins says.
Drama can be interesting, and perhaps good to some degree, but it gets out of hand excessively easily.
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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