Nabeel Butt từ Charolipada, Madhya Pradesh , India

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11/05/2024

Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách

Nabeel Butt Sách lại (10)

2018-09-25 09:30

Mùa Hè Đã Qua Mà Chúng Ta Chưa Thể Nói Lời Tạm Biệt (Tặng Kèm 3 Postcard) Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Higuchi Naoya

Long time ago, before many of you youngsters were born, or even until now, people still treat other people with different skins differently. Some people would care and some people don't, some perhaps don't "at all". There are many reasons from where this attitude derive. It may be coming from the parents who had the memory of their friends or workers who couldn't behave properly, and apparently it was a different skin person. Therefore they tell their children to stay away from the people with this different skin, it may be black or white. For you information, this advice could lead into a serious violent. Malorie Blackman wrote this book to teach us about the diversity of people. How we should behave to one and another even though their "different". As far as I've captured, the purpose of this is to realize what's right and what's wrong. What's right about killing white or black people or what's wrong about killing them. You may be asking why I said "killing". Well on this book, which took time during the Apartheid where racism was still sticking in the hearts of the people, a young boy who was black was attracted to this girl who had white skin. It started very romantically, and full of love, but apparently there was one thing that hampers. During the Apartheid, there had been build a wall, a symbol of discrimination, between the black and the whites. Which gave the results that her parents didn't allow them to stay close. Because the feeling was so strong, they chose to be in a "hidden relationship", where their parents couldn't find out. The situation that time was harder for the boy since the white people had the power to dominate the area. They both did what they could, but not long enough as time passes by, and the boy had become an adult, he was shot as a soldier who's job was to protect the black people there. After reading this book which I borrowed from my English teacher, I now know what's right and what's wrong about killing black or white people. And I surely know that killing an innocent one, just because of racism, is totally wrong.

2018-09-25 11:30

旅猫リポート (講談社青い鳥文庫) - Chuyến đi của Mèo Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: 有川 浩

Another uneven anthology. I still have it in my hands, so I'll try to hit each story briefly. "Lucky" by Charlaine Harris - Sookie is much easier to take in short form. I can't help it, the woman grates on me (in the TV show even worse than in the books). The other characters keep me reading. "Bogieman" by Carole Nelson Douglas - Delilah Street does more than grate on my nerves in long form. She's more palatable in short form, too, but there are reminders of why I don't intend to read more in that series. "Looks are Deceiving" by Michael A. Stackpole - If I've read any of Stackpole's work before, it's been in anthologies, and I don't remember it. I did wonder if this short story is set in a universe he uses in longer works, though. It wasn't bad at all. "The House of Seven Spirits" by Sharon Shinn - I loved this story! And how often do you say that about a haunted house tale? I must track down and read some of Shinn's novels. Any suggestions? "Glamour" by Mike Doogan - The Peasantry Anti-Defamation League might be after Doogan if he isn't careful (at least, representatives of the male peasantry). The story was cute, and it did make me laugh. "Spellbound" by Donna Andrews - This is another author whose books are going on my (groaning) to-read shelf. The story hit a few clichés, but was fun enough to get away with them. "The Duh Vice" by Michael Armstrong - Ugh. A little too preachy, and way too much anti-fat prejudice. "Weight of the World" by John Straley - Where does Santa Claus go in the off-season? That's the biggest question answered in this piece. The "mystery" was "solved" nearly as soon as it was discovered. "Illumination" by Laura Anne Gilman - Bonnie's back story! I think a bit of this story is used in the first chapter of Gilman's first PUPI novel, but I'll know more when I get my hands on it. It's a must-read for fans of the Cosa Nostradamus universe, though. "The House" by Laurie R. King - could we maybe call a hiatus on the abused-kid stories? Maybe I'm hypersensitive, but I'm tired of them. "Appetite for Murder" by Simon R. Green - another dark Nightside story. I don't think I'll ever need to read more in that universe. "A Woman's Work" by Dana Stabenow - I'm an unabashed Stabenow fangirl. Despite that, I wasn't sure how she'd do in a fantasy setting. She proved herself, certainly. I can only hope that we'll see longer fantasy works from her in print at some juncture.

Người đọc Nabeel Butt từ Charolipada, Madhya Pradesh , India

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.