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By joining the Ulms he could be "sucked up, subsumed into something greater, historical, eternal".When reading a Joshua Ferris novel, it is best to suspend disbelief at the unlikely narrative and relax into his geek-smart prose and wry humour.
What has changed since then is that trans-Atlantic exchanges have accelerated to the point where one of the chief avatars of what was once considered the big American novel (complete with gritty urbanism, broad historical canvases and roiling, street-smart prose) is the English writer Martin Amis.
With just a couple of exceptions, Feinstein has doggedly followed the same formula that made his first book so successful: pick a sport, spend a year covering it, then write about it with smart, snappy prose.
Shakar can write smart, electric prose, but some of the best passages of the novel come when Ursula is simply sitting by her sister's hospital bed, trying to get through to her, trying to penetrate "the frantic haze of Ivythink".
"You won't get any lectures or shaming," Kass writes in his smart, chatty prose.
Rating, out of ten: 7. Clark's debut loses steam as it nears the conclusion, but his smart, clever prose and the thoughtful, terrifying questions he raises about how Americans eat now make the full read worth savoring.
In London's Olympic year, Zadie Smith's NW (Hamish Hamilton, £18.99) came closest to a full-spectrum capture of the city's kaleidoscopic energies, although even her dynamic, street-smart, immersive prose couldn't quite sustain its inspired first-half evocation of a mixed-up time and mixed-up people.
Farah ("Hiding in Plain Sight") writes smart, surprising, elegant prose.
Reid, whose previous books include "If I Don't Six" and "Midnight Sun," writes smart and direct prose: Marshall, hiking alone in the woods, sees in the dying day "a woozy rain-socked glow"; as Fitch anticipates sex, he hopes for the sublime but decides "he'd settle for quick and dirty and maybe even something painful".
McGonigal marshals convincing evidence in smart and snappy prose, delivered in an old-fashioned book for techno-peasants such as me.
The prose is smart, canny, and often quite beautiful.
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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