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Otherwise I'm not a great rereader – or at least, I'm a failed one: I decide to reread something I read 20 years ago and then give up because the original experience, presumed forgotten, turns out to have been mysteriously preserved, like a leaf between the pages.
On those rare occasions when I'm obliged to reread something I wrote a long time ago, I often don't recognize the person who wrote it.
The system knows where your eyes are and how fast you are going, so it keeps your place centered on the screen, scrolling automatically as you go, even if you jump back to reread something.
But I recently decided to reread something else by Lovelace: her one stand-alone young-adult book, "Emily of Deep Valley," published in 1950, in which the shy protagonist of the title becomes Deep Valley's premier advocate for the Syrian immigrants who live on the outskirts of town.
It is okay to reread something if you do not understand it fully the first time.
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Some examples of comments are: ◦ Need to go back and reread something in accordance with the whole spiral of learning!
I always reread something, choosing between Little Women, I Capture the Castle or the Anne books by L M Montgomery.
This morning, as I thought about Osama bin Laden's death, I reread something I'd written more than a year ago, in a state of dismay over Attorney General Eric Holder's comment that we'd only ever read Miranda rights "to the corpse of Osama bin Laden".
The only thing worse than not sleeping is rereading something I have written in the day and it making me go to sleep.
JASON ZINOMAN (Peter alone, reading, a book, a textbook probably. He is absorbed; turns a page, frowns, turns back, rereads something, turns forward again. Repeats this. Ann comes in from the hall to the kitchen, a towel in her hand. No rush. Intention nonevident. She comes up behind Peter -- not too close. He does not notice her).
It might have been my 42nd birthday, or maybe it was the words "don't panic", which supporters of liberal causes are muttering with dwindling confidence these days, but something impelled me to reread The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.
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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