Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
I really enjoyed this book. I will probably go back and read her first book about the beauty shop at a later date.
Anthony Trollope is sympathetic to changing social mores, but is moralizing nonetheless. I think his prose can be sharper than Dickens's at times, and certainly the outrage in this book drops from the pages, but his other novels are very much in a similar vein and not as successful.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Minh Nguyệt Thính Phong
I loved this book when I read it for the first time (3 years ago), and I think I loved it even more this second time. Even knowing what would happen, I still couldn't put it down. It's fascinating to read it again after you know what happens in the book 7-- I had a completely different experience this time around because of the new way I viewed Snape, Dumbledore, Draco, Harry, and even Voldemort. Rowling really develops the plot and characters well-- she must have a genius IQ to create such a complex, enthralling story! Wow! If you read this book a while ago, I'd recommend reading it again. Just as a side question, is Dumbledore supposed to be the Christ figure, or is Harry? Or both? Dumbledore's personality seems much more Christlike, as well as his agreement with Snape, but Harry's mission in life is also like Jesus' mission. There are some Christian undertones to the theme of these books, and it's fun to analyze.
This is my fourth or fifth time reading this and I still love it. I also don't understand why people think it's dated -- okay, some / a lot of the references are, but the questions it raises are still so relevant today. In fact, it's weird to think how little has changed in the last 20 years. We're STILL trying to understand the implications of technology in our lives, and what it does to our understanding of our bodies, our cultures, our history, our humanity. Also the end still makes me do the ugly cry. In fact, I think it's even worse now because I know what's coming. (view spoiler)
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Phan Thị Thu Hiền
beautifully written. She says things so you can picture them just so.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Chu Loan Loan
I agree with Steinbeck when he says that cheap made books are the best. For under 15 Euros i had the privilege to be entertained and stimulated by the Sprawl Trilogy. Mona Lisa Overdrive (still bother`s me this title) is the final (?) of a three book series known as the Sprawl Trilogy. In this final volume the reader has much to win by having read the previous books. Everything and everyone get`s brought back whether they are alive or dead, physical or immaterial. It`s a Sci Fi book by nature but if we take into account the time line of when it was written and today`s advancements in science and corporate behaviour we get a chill in the back of our heads. No spoilers here, although the future portrayed by Gibson is cold, cynical and profit centred, the emptiness that get`s generated by such state of affairs gets soothed by the notion that humanity is present in every single person and entity. Love shall set you free.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nguyễn Phước Bảo Khôi
Good book.
Not what I expected, but I liked it. Ultimately, a great story about the importance of family and figuring out that family means more than anything
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Louis S. Csoka
In this far-future novel, based on five related stories, humanity has been fighting a century-long war against the shape-changing Rull, and things are not going well. Carson's World is a vital part of Earth's defense. It is inabited by large, blue creatures, with teeht and claws, called ezwals. Trevor Jamieson is the only human who knows that the ezwal are highly intelligent and telepathic. It's best for everyone, human and ezwal, if no one else knows this. The ezwal want all humans off their planet, so there is plenty of hatred, mistrust and dead bodies on both sides. For humanity, the only criterion to determine a civilization's intelligence is whether or not they will assist in defense against the Rull. A lifeboat crashes on a very hostile jungle planet, carrying Jamieson and an adult ezwal. It's the sort of place where all sorts of disgusting and carnivorous creatures come out at night, and Jamieson's blaster is almost depleted. The ezwal would like nothing more than to tear Jamieson into lots of little pieces, but they end up having to work together to get off the planet. A ship crash-lands in Alaska, carrying an adult and baby ezwal. The mother is murdered by a human in revenge for the carnage on Carson's World. The baby survives, and is hunted by humans all over the Alaskan landscape. It is rescued by Jamieson, and is willing to tone down its conditioned hatred of humans. A Rull survey ship, and Jamieson, who seems to have nine lives, crash land near each other on a desolate mountain. Neither ship is going anywhere, so Jamieson uses this once-in-a-lifetime chance to conduct some psychological experiments on a captive Rull, to see what makes them tick. This is a fine piece of space opera from science fiction's early days. It's got intelligence, weird alien planets, and lots of good writing. Nearly anything by van Vogt is recommended, and this is no exception.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Collins
Just read the free blog.
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.