Tủ Sách Giáo Dục Trong Gia Đình - Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con Bởi Hải Nguyên
Tủ Sách Giáo Dục Trong Gia Đình - Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con tải về miễn phí cuốn sách
Trên trang này chúng tôi đã thu thập cho bạn tất cả các thông tin về Tủ Sách Giáo Dục Trong Gia Đình - Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con 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 giảHải NguyênHải NguyênVào trang riêng của tác giảXem tất cả các sách của tác giảCuốn sách Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con như một người thầy, một người bạn đồng hành cùng các bạn trẻ trên con đường trưởng thành. Các em sẽ không còn buồn phiền,lo âu và hành động thiếu suy xét trước bất cứ biến cố nào trong cuộc đời. Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con còn giúp các bậc phụ huynh,các thầy cô giáo xử lý tốt những mâu thuẫn tồn tại giữa hai thế hệ, biết thông minh dạy dỗ cho để có sự trưởng thành lành mạnh của con em mình đang bước vào tuổi vị thành niên.Mời 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 Tủ Sách Giáo Dục Trong Gia Đình - Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con 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.
Tủ Sách Giáo Dục Trong Gia Đình - Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con chi tiết
- Nhà xuất bản: NXB Thanh Niên
- Ngày xuất bản:
- Che: Bìa mềm
- Ngôn ngữ: Tiếng Việt
- ISBN-10: 8935075937567
- ISBN-13:
- Kích thước: 13 x 20.5 cm
- Cân nặng: 198.00 gam
- Trang: 192
- Loạt:
- Cấp:
- Tuổi tác:
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Tủ Sách Giáo Dục Trong Gia Đình - Những Điều Cha Mẹ Chăm Sóc, Khuyên Dạy Con Sách lại
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yxw123
先森 木易 yxw123 — I had a plan. It was a good plan, really. Knowing what I knew of the Fever series, I thought it was even a wise and sage plan. See, I stumbled across Darkfever not too long ago when it came up as a free Kindle download. I didn't like it. No, that's not exactly true. I thought the story was interesting and I had a very Jerry MacGuire, he-had-me-at-hello experience with the wildly wicked Jericho Z. Barrons. But....I vehemently opposed MacKayla Lane's continued existence. I hated her. Hated. Her. She was every stereotypical self-absorbed, brainless southern belle cliche rolled up into one nagging, whining and very pink ball. She was my first awful brush with a lead character that I thought was truly TSTL...and as Darkfever was my first introduction with Karen Marie Moning's work, I was certain just why Darkfever was offered to unsuspecting readers at the bargain-basement price of $0. The only reason I even pondered the second book, Bloodfever, was the aforementioned Jericho Z. Barrons and the belief, judging by the Mac's narratives in Darkfever, that MacKayla Lane wasn't going to stay TSTL. And she didn't. Thank hell. To make a really long and totally boring story (mine, not Moning's) as short as I can, I ended up liking Darkfever enough to know that I would continue with this series, and paid closer attention to some of the reviews for the following books. I wouldn't say that Darkfever and Bloodfever ended on cliffhangers, exactly, but I had noticed they really didn't have an encompassing story arc that was concluded at the end of each of them. I found out why. Moning has intended from the beginning to give this story to readers in a five-book increment. The Fever series is not like Moning's other works. They are not encapsulated stand-alone stories with a thread of over-all series arc running through them. This is, in fact, one monster epic of grand proportions - with war, death, magic, mystery, hate, betrayal, love, loss, family, friends, enemies, and all manner of frustrations and triumphs...split into five pieces. Not everybody likes that. I understand why, I really do. Spending X amount of dollars on five books to tell one story could be a bit of a put off, especially in these trying economic times. That being said...I've read four books now...the expense is totally worth it. TOTALLY. Yes, one story=five books. But each book is a masterpiece of plotting and pacing that I couldn't even see just by reading the first in the series. Like Mac, I was TSTL - with a very narrow world view - and like Mac, as each book has progressed, I've learned more and appreciated more, and come to understand just what a truly amazing gift this series is for avid readers and fans of the genre. Not everyone's going to like it - that's okay. Some people even feel really cheated out of their money. I can even understand that, though I agree with some reviewers who indicated that since it's been well elucidated by author and reviewers alike exactly how these books are set up, that starting to read it uninformed, or going into it informed and still complaining, shouldn't really result in a criticism of the author's decision to write them and publish them this way. Personally, I love it. I love everything about it. I even love (though perhaps a bit wryly) those glimpses of the TSTL Mac that we occasionally see through Faefever, glimpses that seem to morph into more of a cautionary tale in Dreamfever, where Mac has been put back together (with some Jericho Z. Barrons assistance) but perhaps with too much blood under the bridge, so to speak (there's nothing as innocuous as water left in Mac's world by that point), to ever be even a shadow of her former amateur-sleuth-Barbie self. Every single one of these books are filled with a layered plot and rich, full storytelling. Complex, thoroughly original, indescribably imaginative, and driven by a cast of characters that are intensely detailed (if often inexplicable) and utterly real, the Fever series, and Dreamfever in particular, is a frustrating and fantastic delight. And that leads me right back to my good - nay - brilliant plan. Following Bloodfever, I knew I was at risk of burning through all four published books only to be left languishing for almost a year for the conclusion, so my plan was to read just a chapter or two of Faefever and Dreamfever at a time, between other books. That way I could stretch out Faefever and Dreamfever for at least a few months, seriously cut down the wait time to the last book. It...really was a solid plan...a piece of cake. And that brilliant plan didn't last six chapters into Faefever. Not only did I completely blow off that other book I was reading, I hit the end of Faefever, quickly downloaded Dreamfever, and kept racing through Mac's and Jericho's world with, dare I say, fevered intensity, only to come to a screeching and scream-filled stop as the last page of the book slammed into my mind and chest with the force of a Hunter on a rampage. My plan? I still say it was brilliant, darn it. It was just...well...utterly usurped by the ever-growing intensity of Karen Marie Moning's Fever series. Ripped to shreds, really. And devoured like so much Unseelie flesh. ~*~*~*~ Reviewed for One Good Book Deserves Another.
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_avilah_oncepts
Steve Lee _avilah_oncepts — I saw the Coen brothers version of this in 2010, and found out later it was based on the 60's Charles Portis book. The Coens adapted the book as opposed to remaking the John Wayne version, and you can tell by their faithful adaptation. I thought Hailee Steinfeld did a great job as Maddie, but thought her dialogue delivery was a little stilted. So imagine my surprise when I read the book and she really did the book justice with her diction--she sounded JUST like the book version, and Jeff Bridges was a great Rooster. Since I knew how the book ended, I was a little weary of it by the end and was ready for it to be finished--Portis's writing style got a little repetitive. It was fine, but I wasn't as enamored with it as others. 2.5 stars, but I'm rounding up based on my affection for the movie (which I'm thinking back on more positively after reading its source material).
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_aimehcruz
Jaime Cruz _aimehcruz — This is another review of a book I read before I knew about Goodreads (maybe it didn't exist in 2008?) It seemed like a good chance to post it. Away: A Novel By Amy Bloom Publisher: Random House, 2007 ISBN: 1400063566 256 pages “Away” by Amy Bloom is a modern classic. It is the Odyssey, with the part of Odysseus played by Lillian Leyb, a young Russian Jew in the 1920’s. In her little village of Turov her mother, father, husband, and, presumably, her toddler daughter, Sophie, are slaughtered in a Pogrom. Unwilling to admit Sophie’s death she searches frantically only to be told by a neighbor that she had seen the little girl in the river. With nothing left to remain in Russia for, Lillian begins a heart-rending journey that takes her from Russia to New York City to Alaska. She does what she has to do to survive in this strange new world, where she doesn’t understand the language or the customs. Survival isn’t always pretty. A joyful day comes that she is told Sophie is alive, rescued by villagers who fled with her to Siberia. Lillian leaves New York instantly, to find her daughter even though it means crossing the United States with just the clothes on her back and maps given her by an old Jew who secretly loves her. The maps point the way to Alaska, the Bering Strait, and Siberia. She walks. She walks through mud, snow, mosquitoes, filth, and violence into love with a lonely man. When she becomes lost in a snowstorm he goes into the blizzard to search for her and Lillian loses once again. This is a story of a mother’s love, of the indomitable courage of a young woman who didn’t set out to be a hero, of determination in the face of the impossible. There is love in this book but no romance. Lillian deals with reality, from having her small store of money stolen early on, to being filthy and crawling with head lice, her feet blistered and blackened. “Yes,” you will think, “this is exactly what it would be like to walk, owning nothing, helped by no one, from New York to Alaska.” And you will wonder every step of the way, will she achieve the unachievable and find her little daughter? Will she ever know peace and love? The style of writing is different, and breaks rules in a way I wouldn't attempt. The looks into the future of the different characters was disconcerting the first time, but after that I liked it. I was astonished that some people saw the character of Lillian as flat, and her quest unbelievable. I couldn't disagree more. I recommend this book highly for anyone who likes books with some difficulty to them. A beach read, it isn't. This was my first Amy Bloom book; it won’t be the last.
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isaksjobacka
Isak Sjöbacka isaksjobacka — These stories are best read one at a time in a quite moment when you have some time to think (as the author says in the introduction). If used in the right way and with the right attitude they can force the reader to think differently about faith and belief; to focus more on living out their faith in the here and now rather than dreaming of heavenly rewards or obsessed with correct doctrine. But the drawback is that the message is almost always the same: love of God and our fellow man is the foundation of Christian fatih and too often other things and attitudes dominate. I also think there is a bit too much commentary at times - rather than letting the reader work harder at the message of the parables. I think these stories would be a great tool for a Sunday School class or small group. Reading a story each week would generate discussion and allw readers to further explore the ideas. Some, the stories provocative for the sake of it and others might find Rollins ideas a little too heavy on the post-modern philosophy and language (he doesn't use academic terms and language per se but his perspective is infused with the mindset and perspective). I enjoyed the book but definitely not for everyone.
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hello6ddd
Title Agency hello6ddd — One of my favorite books by an awesome author. It was made into the movie "Somewhere in Time" but the book is a good bit different and has way more heart. Always makes me cry, even though I always know what's coming at the end.
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