Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nguyễn Thụy Kha
its a break down on why & the way we worship.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều tác giả
my teacher
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
Very intense and exciting to follow the story.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Trần Phương Hạnh
Good taut, action-packed thriller. #2 in the series; not necessary to read them in order.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Keith Cameron Smith
I have no idea how old I was when I first read this book. I was very, very young because I had it before I could actually read. It is one of the few books I remember needing someone to read to me. It is also the only book I had with black characters in it. Perhaps that is why I remember it so well. The illustrations were so rich- like ice cream. The edition I had was the 1976 edition with illustrations by Moneta Barnett. I hope I still have it packed away somewhere. (Yes, It turns out I do.)
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Ritsuko Nakata
An account of the passage into being a doctor, and being a doctor who has to deal with death. Very readable, moving, all the more so because the author seems very real and approachable.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Sung-Kyung Park
My daughter gave me this book as I continue my grief over the loss of my husband. This book brings me peace and comfort ... and hope. I love the way it focuses on what I can do. It honors the past, but is future oriented: what I can today. And I just love some of the quotes: "Ignorance gives one a large range of probabilities". -George Elliott Since I read one reading per day, I will be reading this for well over a year.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: James Patterson
I really enjoyed this book for more reason than I can totally explain. I haven't read many foodie books, but enjoyed the rapturous walk through her early childhood in rural Pennsylvania, where she and her four siblings were raised in a burnt-out ruins of a 19th century silk mill with a French ballerina mother and a creative father that loved to have theme parties for the hundreds. There were smoke pits, butchered baby lamb and Chinese lanterns that illuminate this perfect, idyllic childhood, ....that is, until her parents divorced, and left her and her youngest brother to fend for themselves while they both wandered off in depression. Then turn the tables: Gabrielle turns to drugs and lies about her age to get various jobs in restaurants, wanders in and out of three colleges and eventually lands smack in the middle of the catering industry in New York City, where she finally lands her own restaurant, meets her husband and has two children. Yes, the book wanders a bit, and at times, Gabrielle seems to whine. She swears like a sailor and is rather unapologetic about her mistakes and the hard places it takes her. I can see where some readers are turned off with the book and think it isn't deserving of Anthony Bourdain's praise. But along the way, as I listen to Gabrielle's voice and her philosophical thoughts about life and this strange marriage she has made with an Italian man who doesn't even live with her, I fell in love with this book. There's her thoughts on coffee, p. 205. "I hate hating women but double-skim half-decaf vanilla latte embarrasses me. I ordered a plain filtered coffee, as if I were apologizing on behalf of my gender...." and then her thoughts on the Farmer's Market, p. 242, "A time when we just grew it and cooked it and ate it and didn't talk so much about it. When we didn't crow all over town about our artisanal, local, organic fwa fwa. We just went to the farm and bought the milk." Yes, thank you. I see all these things and think the same things, but keep my mouth shut because I'm afraid to say those things and offend somebody. When she goes to a woman's panel on female chefs in the industry and fellow panelists are raving about "how much better than women are then men," but stating nothing else to help these women just starting out, especially averting the topic of how difficult it is to "make it" and how twelve to fourteen hours are demanded. She says nothing because her entire work ethic her entire life is been about "putting her head and down and just working hard," not concentrating on the politics of gender or equality. Her introspections on motherhood are great. "But at thirty-eight years old, hugely pregnant with my future, pure, precious son, I don't want to do anything badass. I want to be J. Crew catalogue-clean. I don't want to be that woman who can-and did-get on all fours and scrape the pancake batter off the oven door after having just cooked three hundred eggs with near constant monologue of fucking fuck of a fuck issuing from her lips.......when you are the one throwing the party every night, emptying the ashtrays, making sure the tonic is cold, the limes fresh, the shifts covered, the meat perfectly cooked and rested.....it will leave some marks. Someone has to stay in the kitchen and do the bones of the thing, to make sure it stands up, and if it's you, so be it." As someone who has worked hard her entire life, now works ten hours shifts, has to have dinner ready thirty minutes after I walk in the door and homework to assist, house to be cleaned and ponytails to be tied, I think Gabrielle is funny, truthful and a goddess to put it all on paper. Some of her lines resonated so closely I thought I had wrote them myself.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Colleen Hoover
I had such a hard time getting into this book. But I'm really glad that I stuck it out. Rarely is a person able to tell a story just for what it is and nothing else. This tale certaintly has the ability to carry a political or religious message. (Neither of which would I be inclined or equipped to negate.) But Ms. Kingsolver, does tell JUST the story and yet the reader can glean what she chooses from the rest. The rest being the surroundings of the Congo itself, or the intricate wiring of the Price Family machine, or the civilization that is established when there is anarchy, whether it by anarchy by nature or anarchy by design. Though I've read other books that bring the written imagery to life, Ms. Kingsolver manages to be descript enough to paint the picture but somehow without judgement as to its beauty or its worth and this allows the reader to draw her own conclusions and see the world in the exact way her characters do....just as it is and not much more or less. Even after the slow start I'm willing to give this 4 stars.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Bùi Ngọc Tấn
beautiful language, heartbreaking connection to characters
Người dùng coi những cuốn sách này là thú vị nhất trong năm 2017-2018, ban biên tập của cổng thông tin "Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn" khuyến cáo rằng tất cả các độc giả sẽ làm quen với văn học này.