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"reread" Definitions
  1. to read (something) again

532 Sentences With "reread"

How to use reread in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "reread" and check conjugation/comparative form for "reread". Mastering all the usages of "reread" from sentence examples published by news publications.

You reread each book you longlisted, and you've just reread the shortlisted ones.
I don't reread works of history — not including looking things up — but I do reread Arendt.
"Many-Faced Poem" shifted in meaning many times as he read and reread (and reread) it.
And oddly enough, I never reread my books, but I had to reread "Mother's Milk" the other day for BBC Radio 4 Bookclub.
I reread the readout of our meeting - spot on.
Recently, I went back and reread many of his letters.
We must reread these innovative interpretations today with historical hindsight.
You may even have to come back and reread it.
Reread that if it didn't sink in the first time.
I still visit her page; I reread messages from her.
I carefully reread to make sure I didn't miss something.
He made the decision after he reread all his books.
I'm always a little guilty when I reread a book.
Then I reread it again and it gave me perspective.
I reread his first novel, "Wolf" (1971), not long ago.
DM: All I'm going to say is, reread those books.
I reread this book often and recommend it to everyone.
I've recently reread it, and it holds up just fine.
I'd like to go back and reread it, in fact.
" I still go back and reread parts of "Huckleberry Finn.
They are certainly not the books I reread the most.
I want to reread it before reading the new book.
I don't think I have ever reread this entry before.
That Lent, I reread all my journals detailing our courtship.
That's always a fun one; I like to reread that.
I need to otherwise I / reread Dubois / I double myself / I-I reread him twice > RECOGNIZE: your fists are a fight response { I feel I should have died, but instead I ended up here, and . . .
He's read and reread that letter from MIT dozens of times.
Over the years, I've often reread Hegel's great lectures on aesthetics.
He might need to reread his job description one more time.
When she began studying the Quran, he decided to reread it.
I reread my once clean copy for strange words or misspellings.
The halting final couplet prompts a pause, a silence, a reread.
I'm going to reread "A Wrinkle in Time" with my daughter.
When I reread this statement recently, two painters came to mind.
Did you reread "The Handmaid's Tale" before you wrote "The Testaments"?
But every year, I reread it and learned more each time.
But tonight I'll reread your words and attempt a deeper response.
What I underlined and reread: Are they her thoughts or mine?
I am planning to reread "Histoires extraordinaires," by Edgar Allan Poe.
I hardly ever reread books, but I might do this one.
It took a fair bit of explaining, but my father loved explaining, and I cannot reread the story (and I do reread the story) without hearing his voice, full of delight in every aspect of the setup.
You don't get up at the Washington Monument and reread the Declaration.
She would reread the backs of shampoo bottles in French and English.
I reread the note and realized the authorities were looking for someone.
He reread Maxine Hong Kingston's "The Woman Warrior," and it helped him.
It'll be easier to understand when you reread it the second time.
Did you have to reread the book and really get in there?
I looked over some notes again, reread certain parts and so on.
AR: I just reread [Rainer Maria Rilke's] Letters to a Young Poet.
"I went and reread the rules of professional responsibility," Mr. Bertling said.
I read and reread certain pages and lingered on the final ones.
Read the book if you haven't; reread the book if you have.
Save your darkest thoughts for a journal, and never reread this journal.
I reread the Bible, the Quran and some Buddhist and Taoist books.
I recently reread "Neuromancer" and some other William Gibson for an essay.
I don't know how many times we read and reread that book.
Now I am at an age in which I reread some books.
This would be a good time to read or reread Bob Dylan's Chronicles.
I reread the HP series every year and am on Prisoner of Azkaban.
"The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay," Michael Chabon I almost never reread novels.
"The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald The novel that I reread the most.
I reread the "Selected Poems" of Antonio Machado recently, after my wife died.
I thought, I won't reread the play straight away, I'll get a film.
Yet when Nanette reread it recently, "It just blew my mind," she said.
And every summer I try to reread one Big Book from the past.
In transit, I reread "Submergence," Ledgard's second novel, which was published in 2011.
"Possession," A.S. Byatt This challenging, deeply satisfying read is also a wonderful reread.
REREAD PETER POMERANTSEV'S first book today and you experience a sense of vertigo.
I'm going to go back and do my homework and reread and rewatch.
She also sincerely doubts that you will ever reread any of your books.
I read and reread voraciously — particularly the Betsy-Tacy series by Maud Hart Lovelace.
Having that knowledge added a vibrancy to the melancholy of Ned's chapters on reread.
Which do you reread because, at different stages of life, they reveal new insights?
Each of these campus novels will have you itching to reread your old notebooks.
Recently, I reread "Lolita" and once again marveled at Nabokov's amazing, feverish, riotous sentences.
Will be sure to reread it when I finally make my trip to Russia.
I reread "The Grapes of Wrath" and "Life of Pi" with the girls, too.
His book is a small treasure, one to be read and considered and reread.
I check the book out so I can reread it when I get home.
Deep Work may be the only book I both read and reread this year.
Flores, in response, says she encourages Muñoz to go back and reread her essay.
Dr. Ali took Jane Austen's "Persuasion," because he hadn't reread it in a while.
Reread that story -- the January 2 bombshell report that kicked off this year -- here.
"That said, this whole episode has made me want to go reread his work."
And if I did get around to it, I never reread what I wrote.
And what kind of revelations would emerge once I had time to reread them?
Read and reread your email a few times, preferably aloud, before sending it off.
They then reread and argued over those thirteen titles to choose the final six.
Readers who know her love her and reread her books over and over again.
Reread today, the passage (it goes on for pages) may seem a touch overchoreographed.
So before I solved today's PandA by Sam Ezersky, I reread Mr. Shortz's analysis.
I have reread mysteries numerous times and I don't even remember who did it.
Once you fall in love with it, you can reread it over and over.
This summer I started my first reread since 2011, and those books are something else.
I'm trying to read and reread classics because I never appreciated them in high school.
I worry when he starts to reread not only favorite books but also favorite series.
My finger hovered uncertainly over my iPhone screen as I read and reread her text.
It's why, when you've just started dating someone, you might reread a text ad nauseam.
Participants also reported being more likely to reread academic materials if they were in print.
When you do reply, reread your draft as if you were in another person's shoes.
Probably not (especially if you had to reread the last two sentences more than once).
Aliza is about to begin her quest to reread the entire Harry Potter series again.
I read and reread the statistics and was amazed to understand how each person died.
SULZBERGER: There's Nixon's quote right there if you'd love to reread it — TRUMP: I know.
He was the author who taught me to reread stuff as often as I wanted.
Reading it made me gasp, reread the joke, and then maniacally giggle on the subway.
At one point when I reread, post-injury, what I had written, I was shocked.
To reread a book we love is to have a conversation with our earlier selves.
An avid rule follower, I reread the resident handbook and found no rule about this.
I reread it a few years ago, and I still think it's a great novel.
That's why it pays to read, and then reread, your emails before firing them off.
But Brontë's Gothic classic deserves to be reread once you've passed out of your teens.
I recently reread "Fort Red Border," by Kiki Petrosino, one of my favorite contemporary poets.
Bill Gates "The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald The novel that I reread the most.
I reread it recently, and it seems to have gained even more potency through time.
I reread some old season 5 recaps before I start the first episode of season 26.
Aliza is about to begin her quest to reread all of the Harry Potter books again.
I reread "All the King's Men" recently, in the wake of the Ohio and Florida primaries.
But it makes you want to reread the book, to see if there were earlier clues.
I recently reread Rebecca Solnit's essay "9/11's Living Monuments," based on interviews with survivors.
The easiest way to avoid this is to reread the subject line before you hit send. 
I keep it on my phone, where an alarm reminds me to reread it each month.
I saw the movie again, and then I reread my transcript, and this time I understood.
In an interview with The New York Times, Bob Woodward mentioned he had recently reread it.
I reread it recently, and it's not a bugger-off, you-are-just-like-us poem.
One book that both of us love and reread regularly is "Little, Big," by John Crowley.
Mr. Benioff then questioned Mr. Dorsey's philanthropy; Mr. Dorsey insisted that Mr. Benioff reread his arguments.
It makes me want to reread the novel, which I haven't done since I was small.
I reread "The Kiss" recently and was struck by its high-literary artiness and gauzy restraint.
I got off the telephone and reread Falwell's statement, which nearly swelled with charity for McCaw.
It wasn't until I read -- and reread -- Ford's account that I gained some sort of clarity.
You really got to go read Gibson's book "Neuromancer," because part of the story ... Reread it.
Charles Krauthammer, you know, I went to the funeral yesterday, and I reread a column about dogs.
When she reread the novel as an adult, Gerwig was struck by how modern its dialogue felt.
I just reread your book, and I'm curious about your effort to remake the culture of Microsoft.
Now is a good time to read and reread these two important founding American documents (linked below).
Always reread what you've written before hitting send to make sure your email conveyed the intended tone.
She did not dislike him, though she'd never reread his letters, which often included lists of instructions.
"If I want to understand childbirth as a transcendent experience, I will reread 'Anna Karenina,' " she said.
Math needs to be done, data read and written and reread and rewritten and confirmed and hashed.
I have reread "Moby-Dick" five times, and with each reading I garner something new and enlightening.
In a 2018 Facebook post, Gates wrote that Nepo's book is one of her favorites to reread.
So much so that I make a mental note to reread The Crucible when I get home.
After a career in teaching literature and writing, I found Mark Twain's book a treasure to reread.
This is an amusing book to reread, since even the smallest details are assigned a narrative purpose.
Most readers are likely to think somewhat differently about a book if they reread it years later.
By this time I had reread and lent out the book enough that the binding started to strain.
On the same day that I decided I was ready to reread Alaska, I found the above email.
I'd also like to reread "Crime and Punishment," which I tried to do two years ago, and failed.
I slunk home and figured I had two choices: I could cheer up, or I could reread Thoreau.
We were playing such complicated women that when you reread the book, you feel it was written yesterday.
" "As with Morrison, I thought I'd reread this novel before I started, but decided it would intimidate me.
Neville's slow-burn character development is one of the most satisfying things about Harry Potter upon every reread.
If you reread the clue as "Stick with ___," you're much closer to guessing that the answer is TAPE.
This is why I tell you we don't need to rewrite the Constitution — they need to reread it.
Plus, if you find that you can't explain it, you may want to go back and reread.10.
Mr. Hertmans read and reread these notebooks, and he retells his grandfather's life in his own modern voice.
If you think one of the above options is a good one, then you need to reread it.
Each essay is insightful and poetic, lyrical, a joy to read and reread, an enduring primer for me.
But I enjoy the hunt; looking for one book, I always discover something else I'm eager to reread.
One of these stories is about two women, old friends, and the favorite book they read and reread.
The Enthusiast The Enthusiast is an occasional column dedicated to the books we love to read and reread.
And then, I reread his criminal justice plan and realized, for my district, South L.A., it works great.
When I was about 23, I reread it and realized it was maybe the greatest American play ever.
For the last three years I have read and reread the same book on every trip I've taken.
In the dark days of the second world war Winston Churchill found it comforting to reread "Pride and Prejudice".
I've recently begun to reread an older book that's been all the rage lately, American Gods by Neil Gaiman.
Reread everything I said above about Larson and apply it to DiCaprio, minus the "up and coming ingenue" bit.
Or perhaps it was even longer ago still — say, upon your hundredth reread of your favorite Harry Potter novel.
He reread his answers painstakingly, corrected punctuation mistakes, and rewrote words he was afraid he hadn't written clearly enough.
Then, inspired by our revisit of To Kill A Mockingbird, we discuss books that change when you reread them.
Before you panic and conclude that there's no name listed, go back and reread the job posting very carefully.
Challenge students to reread some of the Shakespearean soliloquies they have studied and consider what resonance they have today.
Before leaving for Standing Rock, I reread Renata Adler's reporting from the March from Selma in The New Yorker.
Sometimes you'll find yourself needing to reread a word, a sentence or even a paragraph to understand its meaning.
Ken Follett's "The Pillars of the Earth," which I reread recently after watching the DVD of the mini-series.
Having reread the book to look for "Trumpian intimations," Ms. McArdle takes no issue with its politics or realism.
I reread the Lymond Chronicles a few years ago after I finished my doctorate, and it was pure joy.
I spent the next two weeks, putting together this program and trying to reread all the books and stuff.
Every time I reread it I'm struck by how dear and awful and filled with carnal longing he is.
It's great, you should go reread all the stories, you should go listen to The Daily podcast, it's great.
To fully understand what Wallace was up to, the book bears being read, and reread, with Talmudic focus and devotion.
I plan to reread Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders, because I loved it so much the first time.
We've been to the studios in Watford, we've reread the books countless times and are fans of the films too.
Why we all need to read - and reread - '1984' We are living in this state of flux in real life.
" —Hayley Starshak "I'm about to reread Good Omens to get ready for the Amazon Prime show that's coming out soon.
I reread it in confusion instead of with the pleasure I felt through the rest of this elegant ­page-turner.
They become keepsakes we can reread whenever we like, a way to evoke wonderful memories of times we spent together.
If you want a suggestive perspective on these two great exhibitions, buy his Journal or reread Baudelaire's incandescent memorial essay.
I recently reread "Embroideries," by Marjane Satrapi, a graphic memoir about the lives of women in her extended Iranian family.
When it came time to write the travelogue section of the book, I reread those files with a sinking feeling.
I've gone back to reread the last 50 pages multiple times now, whenever I need it back within my heart.
When Mr. Gosford reread his copy of the book in 2011, however, the section on fire-spreading caught his eye.
And if you reread the book and ask yourself, what is the period of American history that most resembles today?
I reread the clue and realized that those "things doctors see when patients say 'aah'" was calling for a plural.
You can go back and reread the subtext of "Parasite," scouring for more clues and details scattered throughout the film.
Once I reread the clue and solved around it, I realized that the answer was APR, for Annual Percentage Rate.
For instance: ■ If you are in doubt about your humor, sarcasm or criticism, then reread, rethink and resist the temptation.
I reread the pages several times, shocked that the truth was so different from romantic tale I wanted to believe.
"It's like when you reread the same sentence over and over again without understanding what it means," I said, finally.
As I reread HJNTIY last month, I kept stopping to highlight, and to read resonant passages out loud to my girlfriend.
I am a 45-year-old woman, and I still sneak into my 12-year-old son's room to reread them.
There are underlying layers and raw thoughts and emotions beneath those words that have me wanting to savor it, reread it.
I pulled out my phone and searched "human microbiome" to reread Wikipedia's introduction to the trillions of microorganisms currently inside me.
On my recent reread of The Best of Everything, I found Mr. Shalimar to be less compelling than I once had.
But when I reread it recently as an adult — 100 years after J.D. Salinger's birth — I just felt sorry for him.
The first time I reread it after having children, I was gobsmacked to find a chapter on sleep-training a baby!
I read and reread scenes from the "Little House on the Prairie" series, marveling over the popcorn balls and peppermint sticks.
I guess I reread all of his letters because I was in a place where I needed to feel loved again.
Actually, it wasn't until we reread many of these books as adults that we noticed their more subversive themes and elements.
Which means that it's time to reread one of the great works of American rhetoric: Truth's "Ain't I a Woman" speech.
This summer I reread "Night of Camp David," the 1965 novel by Fletcher Knebel (co-author of "Seven Days in May").
I'm trying to share more of my books with my community and keep only those books that I know I'll reread.
I recently reread "The Street" and I just can't figure out why this work is not more widely read and celebrated.
It's a good time to reread Somini Sengupta's insightful piece on what his victory could mean for global climate change policy.
Searching for a suitable answer, I raided my bookshelves and reread a pile of my favorite books from my teenage years.
"When I reread it, I remembered that it says something incredibly profound about the things we all share," Ms. Frankcom explained.
Yes. I've reread Marcus Aurelius' "Meditations," Seamus Heaney's "The Cure at Troy" and William Butler Yeats's "The Collected Poems" several times.
The judges must reread the shortlisted novels one more time before choosing the winner that is to be announced Oct. 14.
I recently reread a fantastic book called 'Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think,' by Peter Diamandis and Steven Kotler.
It's a strange experience to reread a book that was formative in your childhood—as potent as revisiting a lost place.
If the loose threads still nag at you at the end of the designated rest period, then reread what you wrote.
Obsessed with mythology as a girl, I read and reread the "Book of Greek Myths," by Ingri and Edgar Parin d'Aulaire.
But I reread them religiously, every few years, for the rest of my childhood, and even a few times post-college.
She laughs before I can finish listing them off to her, like you do when reread old diaries from middle school.
I can't wait to cover my face in acid and also read and reread all the instructions and ingredients, probably while peeing.
Instead, she should reread the entirety of her past in Wind Gap, from her traumatic home life to the hunting shack incident.
With the press of a button, you can fan them out in front of you, letting you easily reread them for clues.
And they asked the judge to reread the charges and replay a 911 call, which brought some of Gurley's relatives to tears.
I then reread the issue with the blog in mind and could see what Coates was trying to achieve with Stelfreeze's collaboration.
If you don't want to reread a whole book, try highlighting some parts of the text that you can go back to.
The legislature first accepted, then rejected, her oath in October, but she was sworn in this month after she reread it normally.
There's the story about the lost children on their crusade, and their march across jungles and barrenlands, which I read and reread. . . .
I first directed it in Aix-en-Provence in 1994, but when I reread the libretto I felt completely differently about it.
" Everyone should also read or reread Sherry Turkle's excellent "Alone Together: Why We Expect More From Technology and Less From Each Other.
Then she collected herself and reread her book several times, examining the plot and characters to see if the critics were right.
I reread the portions of the book that correspond to these first episodes, and Ferrante mentions beatings, however severe, only in passing.
Roald Dahl's "Danny the Champion of the World" was the first little novel I read that I then read again and reread.
Today I've rewritten until my brain feels like a used teabag & I daren't reread in case I can't sleep for hating it.
I wouldn't want to reread the Hardy Boys, Tom Swift or "Tom Brown's School Days," but I liked them as a child.
I didn't mean to reread Samuel Pepys's diary again, but I picked it up and inhaled it like a Popeyes chicken sandwich.
Because of that, I'm saving my reread of the classics for a time when life isn't too crazy and I can focus.
Alaska earned a reread during college, when I made the classic mistake of falling in love with someone who didn't love me back.
I read and reread a story about psychedelic integration three times before giving up and sending some half-assed notes to the writer.
I recently reread "The Age of Innocence" in 2018, at age 40, on a writing fellowship at Edith Wharton's estate in the Berkshires.
Inspired by HBO's Michael B. Jordan-led remake of the Ray Bradbury classic, we decided to reread Fahrenheit 451 for the MashReads Podcast.
Each task force member was responsible for a chapter of the approximately 200-page document, which would then be reread by their colleagues.
And if credit reporting companies, health clubs or Internet providers have their claws in your plastic, reread those bills, each and every month.
Same for Elizabeth Alexander: achingly beautiful story plus a delicious recipe that I have eaten many times and crave every time I reread.
I have my favorite writers — like I love Paulo Coelho, I love Irvin D. Yalom, I love Nietzsche — so I'll reread those books.
A pathway to a good healthcare bill is available, but members of House leadership need to reread their campaign brochures and take it.
But nearly two decades later, in 2009, he was approached about adapting the book and reread it on a long flight to Tokyo.
"Tenth of December," George Saunders There is something George Saunders said in an interview that I reread many times while writing my novel.
But when I finished and reread the book, I did suddenly realize how much this kind of structure owed to, particularly, Agatha Christie.
I've reread this passage several times in the couple of years since I found it, and I keep discovering new things in it.
"Frankly I'm so disappointed in my hero for getting so many facts wrong, and I really hope that she will reread the legislation."
For most of my adult life, I haven't had a lot of time to reread books, no matter how much I loved them.
I'm not sure what makes a book "great" but I just reread "Infinite Jest," and as always David Foster Wallace blew me away.
Also, I just reread Hannah Rothschild's art-world caper "The Improbability of Love" and think maybe it ought to be on your list.
I reread the book recently to my kids, and I was dumbfounded by how self-centered, petulant and cruel that little rodent is.
While we were on the road with "Camelot," Moss read us excerpts from that memoir-in-progress, which I have since reread often.
I miss the days of AIM and Gchat; I regularly reread n+1's fantastic essay on the history and rise of chatting.
Some of the more abstruse passages in the novel made sense to me; others did not, even when I reread them several times.
Harris leads us through the April showers in Chaucer's prologue to "The Canterbury Tales" with so much joy it inspired me to reread them.
Clinton says that after the election she reread former Czech Republic president Václav Havel's essay about how individuals can fight back against authoritarian regimes.
It's why a book can feel like personalized therapy, the spine cracked because of how often it's been reread like an self-help manual.
After lunch, jurors asked to the judge to reread the charges, and replay the 911 call -- which brought some of Gurley's relatives to tears.
" I love to reread, so my night stand also holds Ralph Waldo Emerson's "Essential Writings," Chuck Palahniuk's "Fight Club" and Laurie Colwin's "Home Cooking.
It took time, and editor who was willing to take all of those old books and reread them and give them a second life.
And then I am going to reread what I wrote and realize that I was optimistic and problem solving when I began to write.
I wanted revenge on Heinemann's novel, until I reread it as an adult in preparing for my own novel, and realized he was right.
Warm notes can be amazing in times of trouble; they give the heartsick more control over when they read them (and often reread them).
Not long ago I reread "The Great Gatsby," and was impressed again by the beauty of the prose and the distinctiveness of the style.
One night, he decided to reread the first five pages of "Victoria," but could not stop until he finished the book the next morning.
Students: Read the entire article, then tell us: — Did the article make you want to watch the show, or read or reread the book?
After following the show for four seasons, I decided to dive back into the books and reread them all, including ADWD for the first time.
But even an unemployed Rory of the past would have used the time to challenge herself; she could have reread the complete works of Shakespeare!
"I recently reread the book Tiger Lily by Jodi Lynn Anderson (which touched my heart) and then decided to paint the orange florals," said Gan.
Whitehead talks about his inspirations for the book, and why it was a mistake to try to reread Toni Morrison's "Beloved" while he was writing.
They're immersed in the book, and I had only a hazy recollection of it, so I reread it, and it's riddled with references to Lear.
You don't just read this paragraph; you reread it and take it apart, your curiosity driven by the desire to see what makes it tick.
Some people rolled their eyes at this; the literati swiftly leapt to his defense, some saying they'd rather reread Joyce than attempt a graphic novel.
Once you're in a calm and rational state of mind, write the real email, reread it, and when you're sure it won't backfire, send it.
I rarely reread books, but a few years back, I was cleaning out my closet and found a box of old paperbacks from my youth.
When I first finished "The Bus on Thursday," I threw it down in frustration, only to pick it back up and reread the final pages.
" Make sure to read, reread and then read again Sabrina Tavernise's amazing report from western Arkansas, a story of vandalism and forgiveness, "The Two Americans.
I have reread the "The Gospel According to Jesus Christ," by José Saramago and "The Devil to Pay in the Backlands," by João Guimarães Rosa.
Every few years, I reread a Jane Austen novel, and I'm not alone, according to "Among the Janeites," Deborah Yaffe's playful exploration of Austen obsession.
Chris Bear initially hibernated on the north fork of Long Island, reread Great Gatsby, scored High Maintenance, sporadically tinkered with music, and became a father.
"To The Lighthouse," Virginia Woolf I reread this book every once in a while, and every time I do I find it more capacious and startling.
After the release of A Clash of Kings I went back and reread A Game of Thrones and that's when it clicked into place for me.
She had idolized Jo as a child, and as she reread the story, she found herself measuring her adult life against the expectations of her girlhood.
Volunteers can reread their new version to their classmates, with a question-and-answer period after the reading to discuss the rationale of their book's recreation.
Answer is "The Orchid Thief," by Susan Orlean (actually a reread, prompted by a recent trip to the Fakahatchee Strand, where the book is partially set).
If you're not familiar with the antics of dancing pumpkin man, then just reread the three words that come before the comma in this very sentence.
He remembers the poems he has read and reread over the years and long stretches of dialogue and images from movies he saw as a child.
Parent emails take me a while to write because often I reread them several times to ensure I communicated the information clearly in a friendly tone.
He recalled the essay she had given him that so poignantly described the challenges of her mental illness, titled "Living With Schizophrenia," and then reread it.
And the last time I reread it, I liked the focus on mixing up pronouns: I have been thinking of wandering among pronouns a lot lately.
Finally, tell us more about what you think: Reread the article, looking for statements made by David Coleman, chief executive of the College Board, about resourcefulness.
Among the books stacked in my 1940s Hillcrest apartment were the seven Chandler novels, which I repeatedly reread because they now seemed so much less fantastical.
The ending of "Disappearing Earth" ignites an immediate desire to reread the chapters leading up to it: incidents and characters that seemed trivial acquire new meanings.
I also recently reread Courtenay Hameister's wonderful memoir about anxiety, "Okay Fine Whatever," and laughed (and cried) even harder than I did the first time around.
Because we'd previously discussed meeting regularly to talk shop, I opened the book before I left home and reread Calhoun's tips for forming quasi-professional groups.
I read and reread the book when I was quite young (battered paperback, white cover, lavender trim, picture of a dark-haired girl in white pinafore).
In her retirement, Ms. Roston, 72, decided to reread the book, which she had kept on her bookshelf for years, when she noticed the library's markings.
One thing that I find fascinating is to go back and reread the transcript of Trump's presidential bid announcement in light of what we now know.
I read All Over but the Shoutin' by Rick Bragg when it first was published many years ago and just recently reread it for my book club.
As I reread the book nearly a dozen times over the years, I grew to respect how Ender's empathy was as great an asset as his intelligence.
The entire future of Caribbean prose is mapped out in this collection of stories, and I don't know a single Caribbean writer who doesn't reread it often.
As months went by and I read and reread the novel upward of a half-dozen times, it became clear that I would never give it up.
I reread Sontag, and by the end, despite her brilliance in identifying it, she makes camp seem fairly large and elastic — and it's become only more so.
On reread, one thing I find striking in the story is the good humor of the townspeople as they assemble to ritually murder one of their own.
Familiar Faces Among Canada's literary treasures are writers whose work I have reread so many times it feels as if I am stalking them on the page.
In Gariseb, at last, we learn the cause of Rebecca's trauma in a scene so brutal and eloquent that I reread it several times, astonished and awed.
I got a first edition Thurber for my birthday this year, and that was the last book to make me laugh out loud when I reread it.
He carefully reread Frank Herbert's "Dune" while working on it, and read some of Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch detective novels to study how mystery novels are structured.
I had read and reread the Narnia series since I was in third or fourth grade, and I loved the movie versions that sometimes aired on PBS.
When ter Kuile was in divinity school, he reread Harry Potter for the first time since he was a teenager and was shocked at how religious it was.
If you reread the previous sentence three or four times you will figure out everything that happens in this movie, and spare yourself the chore of seeing it.
I recently reread Miller's "Quiet Days in Clichy" and Cendrars's "The Astonished Man," which are both more involving than "Paris Vagabond" because they are built around developed characters.
The chapters that take place on Nilt are comparatively straight-forward and easy to follow, so much so that I've reread the Shis'urna chapters at least three times.
D.A. and I traded our last emails in June, after he had reread several of my articles from India and elsewhere about the final efforts to eradicate smallpox.
Extra credit: Reread Farhad Manjoo's column from last week on Saudi Arabia's complicated relationship with the tech industry, some of which is interwoven with its Vision Fund position.
I do remember that the third time was the charm, and now I reread Heschel each year as a reminder to slow down, that time is a cathedral.
Some of the writing is so beautiful that I often reread sentences, but there are also passages so purple that they (and you) turn near-red from embarrassment.
But when my daughter reached the age I had been when Salinger sought me out, I reread his letters for the first time in more than two decades.
After leaving the theater, I went home to reread a long reconstruction of the negotiations — a ticktock, in newspaper jargon — that I had written in early September 1993.
I have read and reread this story, looking for some glimmer of reason for why they continue to watch and participate in the game that killed their son.
American Express was always the first stop, and the letters could then be ordered by postmark date, each letter read and reread and then tucked into our backpacks.
As a high school student, Bejtlich had been captivated by a paperback copy of The Cuckoo's Egg, and he reread it during that time in the Air Force.
Below, they talk about authors who inspired and disappointed them, favorite books they reread this year, how (and if) fiction should be addressing our political times and more.
The answer was ROLLING IN THE DEPOT; if you sound it out, and reread the title of the puzzle, you'll see what Mr. Ries is going for here.
But as I've reread the books through the years, I've come to see it as the key to the series, what lifts it into the realm of classics.
At any moment, Ruffin can summon the kind of magic that makes you want to slow down, reread and experience the pleasure of him crystallizing an image again.
Word and Image emphasizes that a page — any page — can be read and reread many times, and in many ways, over the course of its own life history.
But knowing that may not make it easier to get rid of those books you will never reread, or those vacation photos you will never look at again.
I reread Joyce Cary's "The Horse's Mouth" a few weeks ago, about the wild-and-crazy painter and scam artist Gulley Jimson, his genius and rejection by nearly everyone.
On Friday and Saturday, I'd stay up extra late to watch BET Uncut or reread my beloved Teen People magazines — fifth grade was hard, and I deserved it, okay?
It was in the late '90s, and I got a copy of "Northanger Abbey" to reread, and they had "Lady Susan" and some other fragments in the same edition.
"Whenever I am stumped for a new dessert, wherever I am in the world, I can open that book and reread it for inspiration," she wrote in an email.
I recently reread Bland Simpson's fine "The Great Dismal: A Carolinian's Swamp Memoir," beautiful writing by someone who knew this famously forbidding tangle of canals and legends from childhood.
The Little Prince will premiere on Netflix August 5, the same day it will also be released in theaters, which gives you plenty of time to reread the novella.
She now wears glasses because, she claims, lacking access to books in solitary confinement, she was left to reread a tiny-print pocket Bible until her vision permanently blurred.
I thought she assumed we'd get along as friends, so I agreed, but moments before leaving the house, I reread the email and realized it was a blind date.
I laughed out loud as I reread the more-than-a-decade-old conversation from my desk at The New York Times, where I work as a visuals producer.
We were like all the other families at graduation, filled with the complicated feelings of pride and separating from our children, of closing a chapter that we can't reread.
Flipping through my paperback now, I smile as I reread the dog-eared pages, their margins overflowing with comments to the effect of: How can he possibly know that?
When the attending radiologist reread it, he noted a tiny bright spot on the left side of the man's brain, in the area responsible for making and retrieving memories.
Kennard, 26, a linebacker out of the University of Southern California, reread the books along with his followers, and posed questions that he thought might generate the most discussion.
And all I can come up with is something I reread, which was "Memoirs of Hadrian," by Marguerite Yourcenar, which is actually great, and by great, I mean forever.
When I joined the ASOIAF community on Reddit, I was blown away by all the thoroughly researched new theories and conspiracies that I had once again missed on my reread.
" She adds, "I still keep all of the letters I received when I get breast cancer in a basket, I take them out from time to time and reread them.
He then went back and reread all his works "to see whether I'd wasted my time," he said in a 2014 interview published in the New York Times Book Review.
Instead, the film allows Arendt's decades-old arguments, presented through carefully curated quotes, to linger on the screen, asking the viewer to read, reflect, and perhaps reread before moving on.
For The New York Times "By the Book" feature last week, the conservative maverick shared his thoughts about books he admires, has reread and works that influenced his world view.
Feeling that this horrid woman could no longer hurt me, I reread my email draft and came very close to sending it — maybe with a blind copy to her boss.
He then went back and reread all his works "to see whether I'd wasted my time," he said in a 21995 interview published in the New York Times Book Review.
To reread the book under the current administration is to engage with a parable of sorts, a folk song about the challenges of being a person whose birthright defines him.
I also reread Erving Goffman's "The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life," in which, as the title suggests, Goffman lays out a framework of self as a kind of performance.
Decades ago I wrapped it in a cloth to protect it; sometimes I check on it, maybe reread it, but most often just stare at it, then set it away.
I knew nothing about that history in California, so I reached out to local historians and reread the writings of people like Mark Arax about black farmworkers in the region.
If you're the type who keeps a journal, it may be in your interest to reread your entry from that day and see what was top-of-mind for you then.
We tell that story and I got emotional when I reread it… There are [also] two other really difficult moments outside of [long] distance that were big challenges and learning curves.
The other approach is more subtle: Reread your character's archive, gently realign his portrayal by attending to heretofore overlooked elements, and simultaneously create new supporting characters who facilitate the new direction.
This fable of mice and (wo)men manages to be warm, whimsical, and spine-tingling all at once; I reread it every Halloween and find myself deliciously creeped out every time.
And a weekend holed up in your apartment with a book, if it's a new book, will seem longer than one where you reread an old favorite for the hundredth time.
I once believed that unapologetic confessionalism would heal me, but as I reread and delete my past posts of pain and suffering, I lament my decision not to have any secrets.
She would lie in her little twin bed, her glasses perched on her nose, and read and reread a thin sheaf of pages, while I sat in the armchair beside her.
As I reread "A Tramp Abroad," knowing that Twain had arrived in Germany under a cloud of shame and failure, it seemed to me that he had faced a similar challenge.
On a practical level, this is a great time to clear out junk that's been accumulating in your home: shoe boxes filled with paperwork, magazines you'll never reread, your ex's sweater.
Lovell's career had first become known to me through his wonderful memoir, "Of Spies and Stratagems," beloved by my nonfictional, scare-quoteless grandfather, whose old Pocket Books edition I now reread.
I think … this all may be beside the point and that it's time for you to reread the I.R.S. guidelines on what constitutes a contract worker and what constitutes an employee.
Occasionally after enough time had passed, I'd reread one, pretending I didn't remember the ending, and then I'd congratulate myself for figuring it out, feeling significantly smarter the second time around.
"To reread and to rethink Rich's prose as a complete oeuvre is to encounter a major public intellectual: responsible, self-questioning and morally passionate," the book's editor, Sandra M. Gilbert, writes.
I put an end to that after I reread Jake Knapp's post on how to make your iPhone distraction-free (John Zeratsky wrote one for Android) and plugged that time hole.
To reread "The Flight 93 Election" today is to understand what has gone wrong not only with the Trump presidency, but also with so much of the conservative movement writ large.
Ibrahim Gyang said in an interview that at one of his disciplinary hearings, an officer called as a witness had to reread the ticket because he could not remember the case.
I start rereading a Tamora Pierce book I read when I was 113 (I know I should read something else, but it's just weirdly comforting to me to reread these books).
" She later added, "What a fitting person to be chosen by our Postal Service, mentioned by the way in our Constitution, something we should all read and reread in today's times.
Garland, one of our most committed auteurs, said he didn't even reread the book to prepare; he made the movie based on his sense memories, his impressions, of VanderMeer's foreboding themes.
Of all the books I have reread to comfort myself, I have turned most often to Hardwick's "Sleepless Nights," not without a little bitter tang of irony because of its title.
Ms. Steel said that she and Mr. Schmidt first reread all of the articles by a team of reporters at the Boston Globe who exposed widespread sexual abuse by Catholic priests.
I have reread these emails every year or two with as much joy as I have had rereading letters I sent my parents while I was traveling abroad in the 1970s.
Kondo does suggest that your books will probably spark more joy if you get rid of the ones you have always vaguely planned to read or reread and probably never will.
The galling thing is, if I had only reread my own words, written nine years ago to another aspiring candidate, I would have taken the Trump candidacy more seriously from the start.
After reading Machado's memoir, I went back and reread her previously published work with a different eye, and it became clear that she's been thinking about telling this story for a while.
Rather than belting out Beethoven and settling down to reread the Schuman Declaration, European politicians were forced to spend the day mulling euro-denominated credit lines and the dangers of secondary sanctions.
We studied it in a class called "Poetry and Poetics" where we unpacked the craft of Rankine's writing—but I have read it and reread it as a piece of cultural criticism.
Photograph by Richard Avedon As I read and reread those sentences—sentences that described looking and time and the loneliness endemic to both—Baldwin's strong rhythm burrowed its way into my bones.
And so I did and I thought, "Oh, God, I want to reread them," but I can't afford my own books, so I found some really tatty Penguin paperbacks from the 1980s.
I reread "The Deathly Hallows" on the flight to London from New York, and I was amazed at how naturally what I saw on the stage seemed to flow from the page.
Which is where my agitation began, but not where it ended, as I began to reread the original message and wonder: Had I used too many exclamation points, making me sound unserious?
"When I go back and reread newsletters from past years, I'm so surprised at what I had forgotten we did that year or what a certain child was like," Ms. Trimble said.
There are the devotees, who reread particular titles for comfort, flock to online chat rooms to revisit favorite poisonings and confer with fellow obsessives over the merits of respective portrayers of Poirot.
It got me excited to read the novel and, because art-world fiction is a real and wonderful thing, to reread Samantha Peale's "The American Painter Emma Dial" while I'm at it.
As a girl, I loved the Sherlock Holmes stories, and read and reread Arthur Conan Doyle's erotically measured lines about the famous seven percent solution of cocaine: Like him, I enjoy the waiting.
When I reread Judge Oetken's Doe opinion after talking to Josh Block, I understood what Block meant about the common decency of using a litigant's preferred pronouns instead of writing around the issue.
"Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance," Robert M. Pirsig One of the few novels I've ever read twice (though it's been about 20 years, so it might be time for a reread).
I was in San Francisco for the Thanksgiving holiday, and we had read and reread the letter he was planning to send to my father, changing a word here and there, rearranging sentences.
I own a copy of every serious book ever written about British intelligence and the Kim Philby affair, and recently I reread them all as part of my preparation for a forthcoming novel.
My New York journal grew and grew as the years passed but I never reread it — not until I decided to write a memoir about my life in New York and with Oliver.
If you want more Harry Potter:  37 hidden clues I only spotted when I reread 'Harry Potter' in my 20s Here are the last words spoken by 'Harry Potter' characters before they die
I reread Sarah Schulman's "Conflict Is Not Abuse," about the very human tendency to conflate discomfort with existential threats, which is a subject that seems to get more and more relevant every year.
And strangely, of all the books I have reread to comfort myself, I have turned most often to Hardwick's "Sleepless Nights," not without a little bitter tang of irony because of its title.
I've watched Fried Green Tomatoes several times in the past few weeks, reread the book for the first time in 30 years, and immersed myself in what was written about them at the time.
So it might be a good time for anti-Brexit MPs thinking about voting to go through with it to reread their Weber and think about what adopting an ethic of responsibility really means.
Nearly 20 years later, many Potter fans reread the books to prepare for the newest installment, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, a script of the stage play that opened July 31 in London.
Eleanore was 12 when she started reading the Mellon Chronicles in 2002, and when the Hobbit movies came out a few years ago, she wanted to reread them, but found the original site gone.
Blaming "damned dishonest" reporters for the racial tension in America, he dramatically reread his past statements on Charlottesville — but omitted the "many sides" and "both sides" assertions that drew criticism even from top Republicans.
So now is an ideal time to reread — or perhaps pick up for the first time — three excellent books by people who are particularly good at explaining the building blocks of a solid portfolio.
When a famous writer gets a famous prize, we readers are given an opportunity to reread their books, but also to rethink the thoughts that we have had in the past about those books.
Colin Callender, whose company, Playground Entertainment, produced the series (in association with City Entertainment and KippSterEntertainment), said that the novel's resonance for today had struck him when he reread it a few years ago.
Reading is visually and cognitively complicated; it's OK to reread a line because it's confusing or, better yet, to linger on a phrase so beautiful that it makes you want to close your eyes.
Noting that the two new hospitals built in Wuhan in record time earlier this month were named after Taoist deities who punish evil, Mr. Zhang reread the Taoist classics, and then wrote his song.
" The one part of the book I found difficult to reread was written the most straightforwardly — a litany of regrets Alison writes to her son after he dies: "I am sorry you are gone.
The Heads of the Colored People, Nafissa Thompson Spires, 2014Sometimes, a voice comes around that is so singular, so funny, so wholly original, that you go back and reread each story once you finish it.
The only way to convince him was to show him that the law was on the other side (usually by peeking nervously over his shoulder as he read, and questioned, and then reread the cases).
In today's puzzle, roughly half the letters make up the theme, as you will discover if you reread the clue for the revealer at 65A: "Every other letter in this puzzle's grid" is a VOWEL.
Join us as we discuss To Kill A Mockingbird, Harper Lee's portrayal of racism in the south, if Atticus is actually the hero we all say he is and why you should reread this book.
When we read a novel or poem or essay, we read one word at a time, in order, and even when we reread books, we understand them in terms of the sequence of the whole.
The Wonder Woman film made me want to reread Azzarello and Chiang's issues again, and explore the relationships they portray between love and violence, between physical strength and gender, and between Diana and her family.
Last year, he reread his 25-minute State of the Nation speech to Parliament in its entirety, apparently not realizing that he had already read it to the same body of lawmakers a month earlier.
And when I returned from Foglo, I opened "Ice," Ulla-Lena Lundberg's 183 novel (translated in 2016 by Thomas Teal) set in the post-World War II era of Aland, and reread some favorite passages.
He went to counseling, read C. S. Lewis's "A Grief Observed" and reread the part of Stephen King's "On Writing" that describes struggling to work after a debilitating injury, taking satisfaction in finishing one page.
So I wasn't surprised to discover that Lethem attributes his "fascination with Singapore" to the movie adaptation of "Saint Jack" and that he, no surprise, reread Graham Greene as he was dreaming up this tale.
But it is a great pleasure to read this material in the gentle atmosphere of Ms. Beasley's beautiful piece, and then walk through it, sitting here or there, occasionally returning to the light to reread.
But his fans — from middle schoolers picking up the books for the first time to millennials who still reread the young adult novels as not-so-young adults — will find plenty that registers as familiar.
The result has been that between the months of June and August, I have no idea where anything is, and am forced to just buy a second copy of any book I want to reread.
"With the recent passing of V.S. Naipaul, I reread 'A House for Mr Biswas,' the Nobel Prize winner's first great novel about growing up in Trinidad and the challenge of post-colonial identity, " Obama wrote.
My last Great Book was "Nostromo," by Joseph Conrad, which is admirable in all kinds of ways, but not as great as "Austerlitz," by W. G. Sebald, which I seem to reread every two years.
I could hear Dr. Singh saying I shouldn't get out my phone, that I mustn't look up the same questions over and over, but I got it out anyway, and reread the "Human Microbiota" Wikipedia article.
You know, in preparation, I reread a number of your transcripts from your last two earnings calls and it struck me as to how much change you're bringing to this organization, in so many different ways.
It would have been nice, of course, to have more time with the permission Rose gave me to love gossip — more seasons to reread it and remember how the same stories change each time they're told.
Removing a book from the iPad does not delete it from your library of purchased books from Amazon's cloud servers, and you can download it to the iPad again if you ever want to reread it.
And when I was in elementary school, I read and reread "Mary Jane," by Dorothy Sterling, a 1959 novel about an African-American girl who faces down an angry crowd to integrate a Southern high school.
Spectrum does deserve some credit for this; Verizon Fios makes you call a 1-800 number, reread your contract for instructions, and then navigate two separate sections of your account preferences to achieve the same results.
Heads of the Colored People By Nafissa Thompson-Spires Out April 163Sometimes, a voice comes around that is so singular, so funny, so wholly original, that you go back and reread each story once you finish it.
Having recently reread it, I emailed my instructor asking if she would inform the class that the book described incestual sexual abuse - something not at all expected from a lyric based on a very short Greek myth.
And if they falter, they would do well to reread the words of one of the greatest moral leaders of our time who reminds us of our common humanity and the values that connect as a family.
" A House for Mr. Biswas by V.S. Naipaul, which Obama said he reread after the author's recent passing: "The Nobel Prize winner's first great novel about growing up in Trinidad and the challenge of post-colonial identity.
His version of "Merchant" has a plotline so complicated, so overpopulated with players and ideas and unrelated riffs, that I will confess I had to go back and reread it before I could make sense of it.
If the term is new to you, here is how the National Writing Project defines it: Mentor texts are pieces of literature that you — both teacher and student — can return to and reread for many different purposes.
And when I decided to take it on I was like, you know what, now that I went back and reread the scripts and watched the show, I want my girls to have this character in their life.
They had asked the judge to explain the requirements for filing a foreign bank account report with US authorities; the judge reread the instruction he gave them before they began deliberating and did not provide any other guidance.
And when I decided to take it on I was like, you know what, now that I went back and reread the scripts and watched the show, I want my girls to have this character in their life.
I reread lines that are stunning, take my time moving through books where I feel like the writer really cares about words but isn't letting that desire to write beautifully get in the way of moving the story.
I was so underprepared and didn't know how to learn that I basically committed to sleeping only three hours a night and reread the same chapters in the textbook three times to force myself to memorize the material.
"Because of the qualities of the author that come through on every page, one is forced to reread his novel in the belief that there must be some important point or purpose that was missed," Mr. Frankel wrote.
There, on seven acres of land, he spent the rest of his life concretizing words and passages he read (and reread) into sculptures and art works, which were then integrated into different gardens and areas that he carefully cultivated.
Mr. Schamus, the Oscar-nominated producer and screenwriter here making his debut as a director, urged her to reread Sylvia Plath, since there's some evidence that the sexually forward, darkly comic yet tormented Olivia was inspired by the poet.
I had reread the beginning of "Crime and Punishment" the night before, and part of the magic of looking at the place now was how it made you see through its middle-class present into its more rugged past.
Of course, you can reread or re-watch those classics to absorb Ephron's brilliance, but you'll also get a chance to learn more about her in March, when Everything Is Copy, a documentary about her life, premieres on HBO.
A great suspense novel should be, on some level, destabilizing; at least once, even as the narrative propels you onward, you should want to go back to reread a passage that's been completely recontextualized by something you just learned.
One of those things it takes: a willingness to reread our most challenging and complicated stories, and re-evaluate, with ever-expanding hindsight, the people we turn into the protagonists and the villains of our most pitched cultural dramas.
I reread it recently, and felt a sensation I associate with reading Atwood: nothing was really happening, but I was riveted, and fearful, as if someone were showing me footage of a car crash one frame at a time.
After he graduated from Syracuse University, one of the ways he taught himself dramatic story structure was by closely studying the 1962 movie of "To Kill a Mockingbird" and comparing it with Ms. Lee's novel, which he reread repeatedly, he said.
Her heroine Selin starts her freshman year at the exact moment that it becomes terrifyingly possible to stalk your crush across the wilds of the internet, to read and reread email threads for every possible shade of nuance and double meaning.
Image: AmazonDigital editions aren't consumable so anyone seeking to reread a piece of their middle school curriculum can easily do so on an e-reader or use Amazon to purchase used and out-of-print copies through third party sellers.
He was never taught to read properly; years later he confided that he had never read a book, neither the ones on which he collaborated nor even the Quran, although he said he had reread certain passages dozens of times.
There was this part about my father that I thought might be an emotional read, and then when I went back and reread it before turning it in to my editor, I sobbed on my couch for a good few minutes.
"I went back and reread '100 Years of Solitude,' and it made me think about what it would be like if I didn't turn the dial up to 10, but kept the fantasy much more matter-of-fact," he said.
Sports of The Times As a child, I read and reread a Ray Bradbury short story about a hunter who traveled back to the distant past to bag a dinosaur, illegally stepped off a levitating walkway and mistakenly crushed a butterfly.
"The Great Gatsby," F. Scott Fitzgerald I am not sure if I believe in the green light, like Gatsby, but I always feel an elegiac intimacy with New York and the dark fields of the republic when I reread it.
And while she knew that rewriting "Pride and Prejudice" was professionally risky, she was driven partly by the same impulse that compelled devoted Austenphiles to reread the novel dozens of times: She wanted to spend more time with the characters.
But to those on the Right (most likely) who believe no perception problem actually exists, I would say: Reread this article when a party other than your own is in control of the White House and preparing for re-election.
I reread "All the King's Men" every few years, and I think it's more relevant in this surreal historical moment than it was in the late 1940s, when it was written and Huey Long was still fresh in the American mind.
Here's the evolution: After going on a cable TV show to promote climate skepticism, Taylor told me, the opposing guest pushed him to reread the 1988 congressional testimony of climate scientist James Hansen, former director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies.
Lemon honed in on the part of Trump's speech where the President reread remarks he made immediately after a car drove into a crowd of counterprotesters at a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia earlier this month, killing one and injuring 19.
"The words were perfect," Trump claimed of his first statement about rallies in Charlottesville, Virginia, which pointed to hate and anger on "many sides" and drew widespread criticism, two key words he omitted Tuesday when he reread parts of his original statement.
Having not had the chance to reread that report and go through Netanyahu's claims one by one, what I would say in general terms is that everything that he said appeared to be broadly consistent with what the IAEA had previously reported.
Coralee Williams Wildwood, Mo. To the Sports Editor: Re "A Comeback Chant: 'Ali Bomaye,'" June 11: Amid the sadness of Muhammad Ali's passing, it was wonderful to reread Dave Anderson's excellent analysis of Ali's 1974 triumph over George Foreman in Kinshasa, Zaire.
The last great book I reread would be Shirley Hazzard's "The Transit of Venus," which looks more and more like one of the most important postwar novels: epic and microscopic at the same time and stitched in prose of gorgeously sustained intensity.
"I hate to say it — if he hadn't killed people, if he hadn't been a psychotic who thought it was O.K. to mail bombs to people, if you went and reread it, he's talking about machines taking over our life," Mr. Hersh said.
History is recorded and can be read and reread, which is why we know not only of Russell's reputation as a master of parliamentary procedure in the Senate, but also how he used those skills like a police baton on civil rights legislation.
The strategy is an adaptation of Peter Elbow's work, and in the activity, students first read an article for genuine points of agreement and then reread the same article to find value in a viewpoint that differs from that of the author.
I have tried (and continue to try) as a father to impart my love of reading to my children, so the books I loved as a boy — Tolkien's "The Hobbit," for example, or Stevenson's "Treasure Island" — are books I have reread multiple times.
I reread the book after watching the Handmaid's Tale pilot and was surprised to realize that the first episode contains moments that don't crop up until way further in the story — like that crucial, brutal Scavenging of a man who allegedly raped a Handmaid.
While most die-hard Harry Potter fans merely reread the series and/or regularly binge-watch its film adaptations (no judgments here!), sisters Isabel Beltran and Ximena Larkin transformed their passion for the subject into a buzzy yoga class at an Austin, Texas brewery.
She has read and reread the deeply personal Facebook post in which Sheryl Sandberg, the chief operating officer of Facebook, wrote about the sudden loss of her husband; the post led to Ms. Sandberg's new book on resilence in the face of hardship and suffering.
I was, and I had so many and jotted them down so sloppily while watching, eyes wide open, in the dark, that at one point I actually turned a low light on my notes to make sure I'd be able to reread them later.
Constance: I agree that this is a novel we're going to see people reread a lot, and I think one of the big pleasures of rereading will be getting the chance to change your mind about that ambiguous ending and then fighting about it. So!
I also recently read Grace Paley's "Enormous Changes at the Last Minute" — I'm working on short stories, and she knew so well how be free in them — and reread "The Little Virtues," by Natalia Ginzburg, which I found to be just as great as ever.
I am going to the South of France in June, and I shall reread "Tender Is the Night," by Scott Fitzgerald, which is so wrenchingly nostalgic for a geography and a time and a love so fragile that it could only exist for a moment.
When all else fails, refer to the definition and then reread the Constitution, our legal DNA, the Bill of Rights, which strengthens and supports our individual rights and their protections and the promise of a nation made in the Declaration of Independence, our cultural DNA.
Her editor sent the manuscript to Chinua Achebe, who had been intimately involved in the Biafran struggle, to whose novel "Things Fall Apart" she had written a story in tribute, and whose novel "Arrow of God" she read over and over, although she did not reread books.
Working on the reissued middle grade and chapter books for Atheneum/S&S gave me the excuse to reread old favorites, but I also discovered some new titles I had never read, like Starring Sally J. Freedman as Herself and It's Not the End of the World.
I reread Jim Lynch's excellent Seattle novel "Truth Like the Sun" recently, after talking about it with two strangers on a bus in New Orleans, and it would make a fine present for you or anyone who thrills to language and plot and newspapers and power.
I went back and reread that first Lovecraft novella from my teens, "At the Mountains of Madness," and found it even more disturbing than the first time around, mostly because I realized that Lovecraft is, in many ways, like one of the alien remnants calcified in the frozen mountains.
After I finished my first reading of Dunce, but before I went back to the beginning and started all over again, I decided to reread an interview that Ruefle did with Caitlin Youngquist for the Paris Review (December 12, 2016) when her collection, My Private Property (2016) was published.
My fear about including the story of my mother's imprisonment in the diary is understandable, but when I first reread it I was stunned to discover that it contained no mention, either, of Bobby's illness or of my parents' marital situation, two topics that never left my thoughts.
" I reread a section of one of her books and could feel my facial muscles forming a rictus when I got to certain passages, like the one in which she called women "master deniers" and conceded that people who had suffered domestic abuse were victims but also "dopes.
I lay on my thin bed in that hostel, which reeked of boiled cabbage, and read and reread that novel as if my life depended on it, which in a way it did, if life is who you are and what you do with the possibilities available to you.
I keep old, new, and books I like to reread nearby, so in no order: "Blindness," by José Saramago; "Autumn," by Ali Smith; "When the Elephants Dance," by Tess Uriza Holthe; "A Guide for the Perplexed," by Dara Horn; and "To a Young Jazz Musician," by Wynton Marsalis.
Reagan claimed both men as major influences—he read and reread "Witness" until, Oppenheimer notes, "its cadences were native to him, memorizing entire passages, quoting and paraphrasing them at length in political speeches"—but their pessimism sat uneasily next to his sunny faith in the providential American future.
The start of December is when I generally reread Julia Moskin's excellent treatise on Caribbean black cake and resolve to cook a double batch of her recipe: one to give as a gift, the other to savor under the tree with hot, sweet tea and dreams of trade winds.
Here's a section that I've read and reread a few times while letting the single loop in my headphones: And, a little later: This album will taste like Ting and white rum; it will feel like the ocean breeze; it will transport you, momentarily, to a half-decent resort somewhere.
But it's hard not to be aware of everything we're missing — especially because, with nine novels still to adapt, Netflix's A Series of Unfortunate Events offers fans an excuse to reread the books to regain the essence of a story that even the most faithful adaptation can never quite capture.
How exciting, when you've just reread "Deathly Hallows" and been reminded of what happened, to see what Ms. Rowling does: She thrusts us back into that concluding scene, making it the first scene of the play and putting us on Platform 9¾ as the characters wait for the Hogwarts Express.
" I'd reread the book that accompanied his previous collaboration with Clark, "The Concise Dictionary of Dress"; Clark's catalog for her exhibition on Chloé at the Palais de Tokyo in 2012; half of Phillips's book "Missing Out"; Susan Sontag's essay "Notes on Camp"; and, on the flight to London, watched "Zoolander 2.
" (I reread it last summer after Morrison died to see if it was as great as I recalled, and it was greater.) Having missed it when it first came out, I also read Alice McDermott's terrific "The Ninth Hour," which stretches and coils time in a similar fashion to "Beloved.
One of my first bits of business after I was chosen to be The Times's new restaurant critic in 2004 was to reread his best-selling book "Kitchen Confidential," about his culinary coming of age, including his ribald, randy years as the executive chef of Brasserie Les Halles in Manhattan.
"It was so much fun and so empowering — even as a 5-year-old — to be able to pick out books I wanted, bring them home and write my name in the inside cover, and line them up on my shelf and read and reread them," Newman, of Montclair, New Jersey, tells PEOPLE.
I encourage everyone to stop talk a breath and reread what has been written and if it is or can be read as hurtful or if it tears someone down, as opposed to supporting someone else and building them up, then I suggest rewriting it or maybe just discarding it all together.
Thinking about Josh and Daniel, I reread the Melissa Broder poem "Hope This Helps," which was published in The Iowa Review in 2014 and contains this nugget of advice for people who are alive right now: I don't think this is a story about blaming grown-ups for the ways we are ruined.
Either way, I've been shocked to find that I — the girl who reread each Harry Potter book when the next one came out, the girl who dressed as Hermione four Halloweens in a row because she was the only book character with curly hair like mine — am quitting the Harry Potter universe.
Every time I reread it, I'm so overwhelmed by them that I forget everything else: families eating onion sandwiches on Sunday; girls piling their hair over "rats" to make big elaborate pompadours; aspiring writer Betsy stowing her stories-in-progress in an old cigar box she keeps in an actor-uncle's theatrical trunk.
But while the world examined Ronan's facial features, I read and reread Dylan's interview in the piece, feeling as if I deserved to do penance for every time I gushed about Manhattan; for the paper I wrote on Annie Hall; for cuddling up with my boyfriend to watch Love & Death on a cozy Sunday night.
I think fetishistically about the ways I might refine my own process into its most efficient form, a form that produces only the artifacts I can stand to look at, stand to reread; a process that leaves a tolerable number of lines and sentences sitting untouched, unfinished but maybe salvageable, under my metaphorical house.
But after watching this episode, I reread the comic it's based on, and I realized that the problems of TV Negan are similar to the problems of Comic Book Negan — and that it's possible there was never a way to bring this character to the screen and have him be anything more than a collection of malevolent tics.
It brought to mind the English poets who had written about roses—Thomas Campion, Andrew Marvell and his favourite of all, John Clare—poets whose works he read and reread in the library of his granny's house, which in turn inspired his own verse, gathered together in 2014 into a slim paperback called "The Breathing Earth".
We reread the review, this time focusing on the restaurant information at the conclusion of the article: the address, the restaurant website, the recommended dishes, the price symbols and what they stand for, when it's open, whether the restaurant takes reservations or can accommodate a person with a wheelchair, and how easy it is to find a parking spot.
" And whereas French argued that "you can read the entire executive order from start to finish, reread it, then read it again, and you will not find a Muslim ban," contributing editor Andrew C. McCarthy apparently disagreed: "[W]e should not hide under our beds in shame every time an Islamist, a Democrat, or a media talking-head spews: 'Muslim ban!
Cold brew can't go a day without a long, luxurious bath, while iced coffee can barely swing a quick shower; cold brew has read "The Goldfinch" (and is planning on a reread before the movie is released later this summer), but iced coffee unfortunately never had the time — what with work and the kids — though it has seen the trailer on mute.
"Five on a Treasure Island," Enid Blyton I grew up reading the "Famous Five" books, and recently I reread the first one and was shocked to realize it contains the first trans person I ever encountered, and also how much its almost fetishistic description of food had everything to do with the rationing that Britain was ensuring at the time.
And to take this thought a little further: Over the past few years the poet Jamie McKendrick has been producing new translations of the works by the great Italian writer Giorgio Bassani that go to make up his "Il Romanzo di Ferrara," and something, maybe McKendrick's understanding of the poet in Bassani, means that the reread is a kind of new discovery.
I read it when I was in college and now, many decades later, have reread it only to find myself dismayed not only by how much I got wrong but by how much in the book is wrong — the sexual naïveté, the rhetorical posturing, the hand from the grave all read like hokum today — and yet how absorbing this novel of novels still is!
" At the moment of supreme tenderness, both reader and protagonist engage in an act of reinterpretation, "whereby she suddenly and clearly sees that the behavior she feared was actually the product of deeply felt passion... Once she learns to reread his past behavior and thus to excuse him for the suffering he has caused her, she is free to respond warmly to his occasional acts of tenderness.
A Wall Street Journal front-pager, "AUTO MAKERS IN THE CROSSHAIRS," counts the ways he has rattled Detroit: Ford CEO Mark Fields said he reread Trump's 'The Art of the Deal' over the holidays and that the company has been "rattled" by a series of Trump's tweets accusing Ford of not being sufficiently committed to U.S. jobs and investment, given their heavy reliance on overseas production.
To the Editor: Re "Trump Confirms Aborting Plan for Airstrikes on Iran" (front page, June 22): Those who feel the need to compliment President Trump on his last-minute decision to call back an airstrike on targets within Iran in response to that country's downing of an American drone would do well to reread the comment of a person described as "familiar with" Mr. Trump's thinking.
Besides books I've reread for work or research, I often find myself returning to books because of prompts from news events ("The Power Broker," by Robert Caro; "Nixon's Shadow: The History of an Image," by David Greenberg), the release of a new movie (Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451," Plath's "The Bell Jar") or by happening across a new edition of an old favorite in a bookstore.
Reread The Great Gatsby as an adult who has read outside of the canonical framework we're presented and you'll realize why so many young people hate to read; because, if nothing else, they can just as easily absorb the exact same sort of story on most any channel on TV. What good's an imagination, after all, when our "greatest novels" seem secondhand to reality's script?
Some of these blog posts read like an Amy Sedaris script, like this incredibly detailed set of instructions on how to set up a "coffee station" that I bookmarked and am compelled to reread on a weekly basis ("Now there are all kinds of goodies you could stock your coffee station with," blogger Margo of Joyful Homemaking writes, "but of course, first and foremost is a coffee maker").
I reread Anita Shapira's biography of David Ben-Gurion rediscovering the greatness of this founding father of Israel who, as early as the beginning of the 1930s, recognized the rise of Palestinian nationalism and its fierce resentment toward Zionism, and conducted a series of painstaking meetings with Palestinian leaders, trying in vain to formulate a far-reaching compromise between two legitimate national movements, both rightly claiming the same tiny homeland.
In researching Anne of Cleves, the fourth wife of Henry VIII, for my forthcoming novel, I reread the "Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, of the Reign of Henry VIII" and the standard biographies by Elizabeth Norton, Mary Saaler and Retha M. Warnicke, and detected a hitherto unnoticed thread of evidence that merited further investigation, which led to my evolving a new — and probably controversial — theory about her.
OK, now reread it, but pretend it's a note from one elementary school-aged kid to a sibling during a fight: Late last night, President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE issued a warning to Iran after its president threatened the United States. http://bit.
I do tend to keep a rotating selection of longtime favorites near or in it, to dip into before sleep — "The Little Prince" (which I reread at least once a year every year, and somehow find new wisdom and pertinence to whatever I am going through at the moment), "The Lives of the Heart," by Jane Hirshfield, "Hope in the Dark," by Rebecca Solnit, Thoreau's diaries, "How the Universe Got Its Spots," by Janna Levin.
Reading Dillard was (and continues to be, in fact) a truly ecstatic experience — I must have reread every single page as I went along, pausing to stare into space or jot things down in my journal or just shake my head in awe — and it took me quite a long time to finish even as I couldn't put it down (by the end, incidentally, I had decided I had to be a writer; or die trying).
" Shaughnessy can also write the kind of line that is confusing in its beauty, whose beauty exceeds its sense, which is the thing I go to poetry for — lines that can be read and reread without exhausting their potential meaning: "What could be queerer than this queer tug-lust for what already is, who already am, but other of it?" she writes in the book's first poem, a kind of awed love letter to the rising sea (we can't blame it for killing us): "If there's anything bluer than the ocean it's its greenness.
I just read two great books at the same time: I reread Jean Stafford's "The Mountain Lion," which is one of the strangest and angriest novels of the 20th century, and for the first time I read Morgan Parker's "There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé," a brilliant poetry collection playing so cunningly with pop culture that it reminded me that pop culture is astonishingly deep and fascinating and is only considered frivolous because it — like caretaking careers and the domestic sphere — is devalued for being considered primarily feminine.
It's not just that you went home and read Thomas Merton and reread a line you'd underlined in his book "Seeds of Contemplation," which stated in no uncertain terms that humility was the only antidote to despair—that you read it a few times and then went into a deep contemplation out on your back deck, smoking a cigar, wondering if there was a way to become humble before the preordained humiliation of a chemical addiction, wondering if the narrative thrown around your brother would look just as absurd when folks in the future found out that it had nothing at all to do with the way the compounds locked into receptors but originated with something else that was, at that time, out on the deck, out in the world, as mysterious to you as it was to everyone else.
My nightstand is a disaster zone — a perpetually toppling tower — in part because it holds a mixture of books I'm excited to read (Andre Perry's forthcoming essay collection, "Some of Us Are Very Hungry Now"), already beloved books I'm excited to reread (Jamie Quatro's glorious "Fire Sermon," Mary Ruefle's "Madness, Rack, and Honey," Shirley Hazzard's "The Transit of Venus"), and books I've recently read but keep coming back to because I can't shake them and don't want to: Lynn Steger Strong's brilliant upcoming novel, "Want," about friendship and bankruptcy and hunger of all kinds; Mishka Shubaly's achingly felt and darkly funny and strangely luminous memoir, "I Swear I'll Make It Up to You"; Jordan Kisner's piercing essay collection, "Thin Places"; Kate Zambreno's thrillingly digressive lectures in "Appendix Project"; the journalist Jeff Sharlet's aching portraits of ordinary strangers in "This Brilliant Darkness"; Nam Le's recent monograph on David Malouf, which is unbearably, uncomfortably acute on Australianness, artistic liberty, refugee politics, identity and its various tyrannies.

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