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His first book, "First Light," was about astronomers, and he says he learned a valuable lesson while doing research in pitch darkness: be careful not to write over your notes.
Go back over your notes and see if all of your questions were answered.
Go back over your notes for any deposition you attended (or read the transcripts if you ordered them).
Q: You just spent five months in a federal detention center after refusing to hand over your notes about a 1997 murder that you'd been researching for a book.
Also be sure to schedule a few minutes before meetings to go over your notes and remember the items you want to discuss.
See where your visions take you, let it ALL out ― draw whatever comes to mind, write every thought, love, passion, and idea that pops into your brain, and doodle all over your notes ― no rules here.
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And with House, that is doubly true: you might not want to buy him a drink, but you definitely want him checking over your medical notes.
You can review your outline much faster than you can read the whole text or go over all your notes.
Don't simply copy your notes over and over again.
Look back over your lecture notes.
Go over some of your notes from last year to get you ready.
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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