Đánh Thức Trái Tim Bởi Vũ Thanh Lịch
Đánh Thức Trái Tim tải về miễn phí cuốn sách
Trên trang này chúng tôi đã thu thập cho bạn tất cả các thông tin về Đánh Thức Trái Tim sách, nhặt những cuốn sách, bài đánh giá, đánh giá và liên kết tương tự để tải về miễn phí, những độc giả đọc sách dễ chịu. Thông tin tác giảVũ Thanh LịchVào trang riêng của tác giảXem tất cả các sách của tác giảDường như không phải tác giả đang viết mà là từng dòng kí ức thì thầm trên trang giấy. Bạn hãy đọc cuốn sách này thật chậm nhé, để cảm nhận thiên nhiên, cảm nhận cuộc sống, được đắm mình cùng thế giới kỉ niệm ngọt ngào, thân thương cùng những điều quen thuộc mà mới mẻ, giản dị mà đẹp đẽ, quen lắm, gần gũi lắm mà nhiều khi ta chưa từng thấy rõ…“Cũng như khi ta đã lớn và tung cánh bay xa, ta yêu quê hương như yêu tuổi trẻ của chính mình. Nhưng bao nhiêu người trở lại để sống trọn vẹn với tình yêu và tuổi trẻ của mình, hoặc nếu có trở lại, liệu có bao nhiêu người cảm nhận được tình yêu mà quê hương dành tặng cho ta và ta dành tặng cho đất?” – Vũ Thanh LịchMời bạn đón đọc. Cổng thông tin - Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn hy vọng bạn thích nội dung được biên tập viên của chúng tôi thu thập trên Đánh Thức Trái Tim và bạn nhìn lại chúng tôi, cũng như tư vấn cho bạn bè của bạn. Và theo truyền thống - chỉ có những cuốn sách hay cho bạn, những độc giả thân mến của chúng ta.
Đánh Thức Trái Tim chi tiết
- Nhà xuất bản: NXB Kim Đồng
- Ngày xuất bản:
- Che: Bìa mềm
- Ngôn ngữ: Tiếng Việt
- ISBN-10: 9786042098991
- ISBN-13:
- Kích thước: 14.5 x 20.5 cm
- Cân nặng: 154.00 gam
- Trang: 104
- Loạt:
- Cấp:
- Tuổi tác:
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Đánh Thức Trái Tim Sách lại
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charmeridores
Charmaine Meridores charmeridores — This was a really good book. There are lots of characters, but they are easy to keep straight. This book spans many years, but it is also easy to follow when everything is happening. There is definitely magic in this book, but it is more understated, and is, somehow, not the only thing going on, even though that may be the way it seems in the beginning. I like the main characters and the relationships they all develop over the years.
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lukaszgrudniewski
Lukasz Grudniewski lukaszgrudniewski — I wanted to give this book more but I couldn't. Within the pages is a good story but alas not the one that was published - ok that might be a bit harsh but honestly the book is too young with more and more wrong turns being made that just start to make the whole thing predictable - if the publisher had taken half the size of this book it would've been a good story! It's about 3 lost souls all searching for something coming together for a cross country road trip across america that is a bit of a disaster to be honest - no one achieves what they set out to do. The story of Candy Cane is one of sadness, her Father is a monk and her step dad forced her to take part in porn films at a very young age - so one extreme to the other - her step dad is chasing her across the country ready to kill. This drags Gina and Shelby into the mess. And then the book goes on and on about religious quotes and one bad move after another. The concept was good but the outcome didn't really appeal to me, it's a shame as there is some good writing in here from time to time.
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_ollofroz
Ruba Alash _ollofroz — I gave it three stars because it was a pleasurable read. I liked the style of the book; it was charming. When I stopped to think about the content it was a bit strange to read a fluffy book about the fallout of the WWII. Does that make sense? Cute read but I couldn't tell my dude to read it--it's too girly. I let my mother-in-law borrow it. :) Lauren, I think you should read it next. Thanks for the book!
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ravinnyfag
Ravinny Fagundes ravinnyfag — Loving this series. The relationships and characters develop more, making the series more enjoyable. A few swear words in this one, but very minimal like the first. Ash makes my heart skip a beat.
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erhardschweitzer
Erhard Schweitzer erhardschweitzer — a very solid book on cryptanalysis. it's just a little dry the entire time (you must have your own motivation to get through this one) and hard to follow (most of the time).
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edmundmamaril
Edmund Mamaril edmundmamaril — God, where to begin with Monkeybicycle 8? In not one, but two stories in the issue, narrators lose a finger. But for very different reasons. In Aaron Burch’s “Sacrifice” the main character removes his own finger seemingly as a way of mourning his brother’s death. But in Matt Briggs’ “Hunger,” the narrator loses his finger to a girlfriend who nibbles bits of it away little by little. What this says about the issue as a whole is profound. No journal editor ever thinks it possible to include more than one story about a lost finger. But now Monkeybicycle has done it, and new ground has been broken. Historians and journal editors should take note. This will not happen ever again in the same way. Other monumental moments occur in this issue. Here are just a few. A man defies the odds against killer robots from space in Summer Block’s “The New Yorker Fiction Section Presents: Killer Robots From Space” to see the woman he loves, but who will not love him back. It’s stunning to see him so oblivious to the carnage and the Armageddon-ish happenings around him in New York City as he takes the train in from the country just to see her. It certainly spoke to this narcissistic age we’re living in. As does Donald Mason’s hatred for Dan Lowery, who has no ill will towards him and eventually turns out to be his savior, in “Donald Mason’s City Inspection and the Stakeout Standoff” by Blake Kimzey. It left me wondering: Does Mason even really know Lowery? Has he even been paying attention beyond his own feeble mind? I have never felt so yucky and so touched at the same time as while reading “jesusangelgarcia meets ticktockclock” about a guy just answering an internet personal from an insatiable lady. It was totally enthralling what occurs between these two. Equally enthralling was Scott Geiger’s “Inventory” about a man named Nolasco who dies and whose life seems totally empty aside from his job in inventory at a warehouse. But there’s a secret with this man that must be uncovered. The build-up to the ending of Curtis Smith’s “Lenin!” is a thing of beauty. There’s a secondary Igor-like character in this story I somehow related to for his devotion but also rooted against. Michael Hickins’ “The Score,” about a big fucking drug deal in the ’70s, has some of the best dialogue I’ve read in a long time and feels, as a whole, totally real, like it’s going on in the apartment next to me as I write this. Or maybe, like it went on there in the ’70s. I learned more than I ever would in school about biology and psychology in Annam Manthiram’s poem “Variations on a Blossoming Marriage.” I was reminded in this issue that being near death does weird things to people (to put it lightly). It makes untruths real sometimes, as we find in Vincent Scarpa’s “The End of Jimmy.” Meanwhile, truths come to light in other places, as in Ben Nickol’s “Exceptional Red Canoes” about Hannah’s rocker dad’s demise and her ex-boyfriend Dennis’ sentimental remembrances of her. The exceptional and ordinary are juxtaposed well in this one. Steve Himmer’s narrator, the hermit in “Rattle My Leaves” from his book, The Bee-Loud Glade, is about to have his world shaken when actual people enter his realm. The monster comes out of the child’s closet, the universal hiding place for all monsters, and surprisingly befriends the child in Ben Loory’s “The Monster.” It seems to learn a lot from the child. A paradigm shifts. Someone raised in my hometown is in this issue: E. Michael Desilets. Read his poem “Maro and Raquel.” Or, read Ori Fienberg’s poem, “Clockwork Dog,” which is also great. Or read both, plus the rest of the great poems in this issue. Or just read Laura McCullough’s “A Descent.” Whatever you want to do. (The poetry mix here is varied and gorgeous.) These are just a few of the highlights, but all of Monkeybicycle 8 is a must-read. All of it is surprising, clever and filled with depth. I can’t say this about really anything. Every writer, every story, every poem contained within this issue is masterful. As a final, parting note, I would have to say “Dolores Threnody,” by Jonathan Redhorse, is a story unlike any other I have ever read in my life. Its structure includes a random correspondence with the President. And Dolores has an ability to communicate with inanimate objects. Ottomans and sofas seem easy to talk to, while reticent public benches are noted for often being surly. Where else would this happen but inside the pages of Monkeybicycle?
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