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- He expresses a broad variety of emotions through understated, unexaggerated gestures.
- It was hailed as one of the best German novels and praised for its sturdy but unexaggerated realism.
- The thing is, as " Crumb " provides samplings of the cartoonist's work, these comparisons come to seem entirely unexaggerated.
- Her acting was a direct and unexaggerated expression of emotion . . . she achieved a fine piece of work in the part and her actual singing was superb throughout ."
- The glossy black hair has gray in it now, but thanks to what Curtis calls " an unexaggerated hair piece, " it has turned white for the new show.
- The Kuwait Stock Exchange, whose price index has seen record highs this year, needed a correction to set prices at " realistic and unexaggerated levels, " it added.
- Mrs Oliphant's " Life of Laurence Oliphant " ( 1891 ) has not been shaken in any important particular, and Oliphant's own portrait of Harris in " Masollam " is apparently unexaggerated.
- She writes well, if not exceptionally, and captures the essence of the composer when she says that " ( his style ) was quintessentially Viennese _ spacious, yet with exceptional rhythmic precision, unexaggerated but full of humanity, tenderness and warmth ."
- The literary historian Oliver Elton believed that the " Journal " s high place in English literature was secure : " Whatever else of Scott's may lose its colour with time, the " Journal " cannot do so, with its accurate, unexaggerated language of pain ."
- Mr . Mackey was inspired by Parker's real-life school guidance counselor; Parker, who provides the voice for Mackey, said the real-life counselor was similarly thin and wiry and that Parker's voice for Mr . Mackey is an exact, unexaggerated version of how his counselor spoke.
- He described their writing as having " machinegun tempo, tight writing, unexaggerated hardness " and said it was a " highly satisfactory debut of new publishers and new writing team . " A more recent reading by Richard Moore found that " modern readers would need to overcome instinctive reactions to racial and other slurs " but that " This was a stunning debut novel.
- Following the American publication, James T . Farrell, writing in " The New Republic ", called it " genuine, unexaggerated and intelligent, " while Herbert Gorman wrote for the " New York Times Book Review ", " He possesses a keen eye for character and a rough-and-ready'styleless style'that plunges along and makes the reader see what the author wants him to see . " In contrast, the reviewer for " New English Weekly " wrote, " This book [ . . . ] is forcefully written and is very readable, yet it fails to carry conviction.