Exact(2)
Daisey, whose excerpt from his The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve Jobs monologue was broadcast on This American Life as journalism and then retracted when it turned out to be, in no small part, art, knows more than a little about when fiction is passed off by reality.
Vick (whose excerpt is not included above) and Newton make a ton of mistakes, no question.
Similar(58)
Like Ballet Theater, the American Ballet Company (as it is called in the film) has a repertory of classics and new works, whose excerpts are performed by Ballet Theater dancers.
It was written by Vinidarius, whose excerpts of Apicius survive in an eighth century uncial manuscript.
The same feel of reined-in physical power and control is evident in the Dunham excerpt, whose slow-drag dancing, by a saucy-eyed Cleo Parker Robinson and two of her performers, teasingly hints at delicious sensuality.
Robert, whose infomercials are excerpted in the movie's opening scenes, is the quintessential TV pitchman, at once blusteringly self-confident and transparently disingenuousness.
For his part, Mr. Woodward, an assistant managing editor of The Washington Post whose book was excerpted by the newspaper, said he did not have enough time for extensive analysis.
According to Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, whose work Graeme Gibson excerpts in THE BEDSIDE BOOK OF BEASTS: A Wildlife Miscellany (Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, $35), the appropriate reaction is to "walk purposefully away at an oblique angle without exciting the lion"; or, hope that the lion, too, would rather avoid a skirmish and will muster the decency to saunter off himself.
"It was the glitter era, and everybody wanted to be part of the bisexual revolution," singer Chuckie Starr told Andersen, whose book is excerpted in the New York Daily News.
"There is a huge crowd here," said Elsa Varona, whose choir sang an excerpt from Giuseppe Verdi's Nabucco overture as the marchers arrived.
I admire Chesterton the critic, whose literary essays were excerpted at greater length by WH Auden in an anthology of his non-fictional prose published in 1970.
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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