Your English writing platform
Discover LudwigSuggestions(3)
Exact(3)
How swanky that felt, to read Milton all day, the relatively colorless and hard-to-memorize pentameters of "Paradise Regained," and, in sight of the other undergraduates disembarking, to be met and embraced on the platform by a girl — no, a woman — wearing a gray cloth coat, canvas tennis sneakers, and a ponytail.
Until, that is, he decides he is done with her… I feel that words, no matter how powerful, cannot comprise what I felt while reading Bombmaker; the chills it sent up my spine, the compulsion I felt to read each page faster and once I was done, simply open it again, the times it made me smile and the horror I felt.
This sudden falling away of adult involvement in our lives, the experience of openness, blankness, sometimes even a desperate boredom, made everything remarkable and different and stamped it in memory: the way it felt to read a book all day, stopping only for meals.
Similar(54)
There was something of that, she felt, to reading.
How did it feel to read about yourself in a novel?
It feels, to read her, uncanny – a bit reminiscent of reading early Atwood three decades ago.
"The Wallcreeper" possesses an unimprovable opening sentence — "I was looking at the map when Stephen swerved, hit the rock, and occasioned the miscarriage" — which doubles as an introduction to how it feels to read Zink: swerve! crash!
That is roughly how it sometimes feels to read "One World Divisible," David Reynolds's sprawling new history of the postwar world, all of it, absolutely all of it, from Adenauer to apartheid, from the Beatles to Bosnia.
At heart, his books are about how it feels to read something that is made up of imagination and lies, that could be half true, some of it, but who's to know for sure?
There is no way to explain the way it feels to read or hear a death threat directed at your child until you have.
Radford goes on to say that although you may feel 'obliged to write, nobody has ever felt obliged to read'.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
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