In class, he remained seated, spoke with his hands, and told us to "put pressure" on our prose. He taught us that writing was everything.
He eventually sent us a copy of the book, inscribed with a thank-you note that read, "There's 'adways' a mistake or two, but I hope it's as well written as it was proofread."
Unusually for a biographer, she herself plays a prominent role in her life of him, but this seems justified because of their closeness, and because it also demonstrates the respectful attention he paid to women students.
Certain details about Maclean's life that appear in Schulz's article can only be found in McCarthy's biography. To find this source so crucial and then effectively dismiss its quality in one sentence is unpleasant.
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