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Popular memory finds parallels between Evita's life and the lives of the saints, because she did it all for someone else.
It's a singular moment, in which Mr. Nauzyciel, peeling back the layers of a haunting memory, finds sensation and pathos within a single, unwieldy sentence.
His memory finds the triumph in everything, which must go a long way towards explaining the longevity of his campaigning, the fact that he has never thrown it in for a desk job.
The memory finds its way verbatim into his 2006 novel, Swimming to Ithaca, when the young hero steps off the aeroplane into "the heavy hand of heat, like a slap in the face", but the moment appears to have set off deeper reverberations.
In an unfavourable review for Fraser's Magazine, Henry Hewlett complained that "The narrative seldom rises above mediocrity...the memory finds little to carry away, and the ear still less to haunt it".
That's when your memory finds it easier to recall things in the place where it learned them.[1] So if you study there one night, studying there the next will make it easier to recall what you studied before!
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Only beneath all those layers is personal memory found.
Rousso, a supple reader of such social memory, found himself haunted by the image of an African-American female officer locking manacles on the ankles of the deportee.
Some spectators during the Biennale's opening week, which coincided with the worst heat wave in Venetian memory, found it overwhelming.
That memory found me again last year, while I sat outside a hotel on the Aran Islands, off the west coast of Ireland, talking to the night manager and having the first cigarette I allowed myself in a long time.
However, not all studies of autobiographical memory find gender differences.
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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