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The screams of men skewered to the ground rose harrowingly.
But if the Westies seem like ghosts, they are harrowingly real.
His approach is harrowingly direct, often fueled by righteous anger.
In this honest and at times harrowingly introspective portrait, nothing is off the record.
It was a harrowingly narrow victory, desperately needed after months of adversity, hard won.
Some photos in that show, and the book that followed, were harrowingly graphic.
"Edie" never builds, becoming less harrowingly affecting by the minute.
As Flanagan's disease finally catches up with him, and he enters the hospital for the last time, the movie becomes harrowingly sad.
Most teachers would immediately have sounded the alarm had they encountered the harrowingly thin 10-year-old, who weighed only 28 pounds when the police found him.
It was after all so simple, so harrowingly simple.
The sky seemed endless and harrowingly still.
The strongest poem here is public and private at once: it is also harrowingly confessional.
She delivered a characterization that was full of nuance and complications while remaining harrowingly direct.
No one knows why the mask is so harrowingly gaunt, an attribute that may have helped speed the wearer into the next world.
Then the universe went harrowingly black.
Putin's paradox can, harrowingly enough, be tellingly illustrated by the Chechen tragedy.
The harrowingly realistic production was filmed in Calgary, Canada.
In the film's most harrowingly funny scene, he is dragged kicking and screaming across the floor to perform his homicidal duty.
Mr. Schroder's performance stays, harrowingly, at a level of excruciating tension.
They weep openly and harrowingly, unlike middle-class parents who are seldom willing to appear, seeing their grief as more private.
Between these dates unfolds a drama that is at once harrowingly private and revealingly public at every level.
The first scene is harrowingly desolate; the second has plenty of spirit and even some humor, as Matt finds himself leading a revolt.
"Guapo have conjured a harrowingly complex and unflinchingly epic piece of work.
The book opens, harrowingly, with the violent death of a child in the white working-class ghetto of South Philadelphia.