Word: detailing
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...SHOWN THAT DIANA IS A COMPASsionate and sensitive woman. Every detail of her life has been publicly exposed by the media and, worst of all, by people who should have been loyal to her. Why can't the press forget about the therapy, the clothes and the health clubs? Women the world over need to see how Diana can emerge from her suffering whole and caring about others. GLORIA VALDES Santiago...
...show's catalog gives some bizarre detail on this, including the case of an obsessive Corot collector in France, a Dr. Jousseaume, who died in the early 1920s and left a collection of 2,414 works by Corot, every one of which turned out to be phony. And then there were the innocent copies, the homages to Corot by later artists and the copies of Corot by Corot himself. No wonder that even certifiably genuine Corots began to look just a little suspicious...
...course not--such a rule makes perfect sense within the context of the NBA's meteoric rise in popularity over the last ten years. After all, attention to detail has been the hallmark of Commissioner David Stern's extended tenure...
...that Hillary, in a fierce argument with Bill, had smashed a lamp in the family living quarters. The story spread like wildfire, embellished with the claim that Hillary had actually thrown the lamp at Bill in a raging argument. Hillary assumed the story came from the White House security detail, confirming her fears about their loyalty, and was upset that no one from the Secret Service came forward to deny it. The story soon appeared in Newsweek, and Hillary and Bill vented some of their anger on Foster and Watkins for failing to act on her earlier concerns. They were...
...cannot be tossed off as another American Psycho, the famously godawful Bret Easton Ellis novel to which it has been likened. Ellis' treatment of sadism has a dopey campiness that Homes is incapable of. She takes her crazed protagonist very seriously, describing his every abhorrent desire in mind-boggling detail that amounts to a twisted, writerly artfulness all its own. And as in her last book, In a Country of Mothers, the story of a psychoanalyst's debilitating obsession with a young patient, Homes shows a knack for intertwining two characters' pathologies. In Alice she has created a compelling ally...