Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Bạch Băng
This was my favorite, outside of school, book to read when I was in HS and college.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Higashino Keigo
So there might be a little Alex Supertramp in me ... this book conjured up memories of when I thought about flying across Cook Inlet and living off the land with my friend Mat, or following in the footsteps of our good friend Steven aka Madman. I wonder if my fate would have been different than that of Chris McCandless?
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Hữu Tuấn
I read this book post-Oprah, pre-Smoking Gun. I think I was still reading it when the "truth" came out. I was so sad. Even if it is fiction, it is still so so good. Frey writes like I think- like stream of consciousness at times. I guess he has come out and said that he made parts of it up. I don't care. I wanted to believe it was real. I wanted to believe in him. I cannot tell you how many times I cried while reading this- even though my life has never been touched by addiction in this way.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
I thought the beginning was terrible and boring, but it was an excellent survival story once I got farther into the book.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Songkha
I did love all the references to Paris but this book was just too long. The first half was good but the parts that dealt with all the work camps and the war was redundant of so many other books I've read. I give the book a 6 on my scal of 10.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Dịch Chi
Bought it during my trip to Seattle in June, was okay, just kept thinking who is this singer he based this on? Rich R. do you know?
I was warned before I read it that there the book was not proofread, so I was ready for that. It started off fairly well, but went downhill rapidly and never recovered. A sociological profile without supporting evidence--bad. One that protrays Millenials as the saviors of the world and the church--impossible. I do not recommend this book. (Apart from it being unsupported and implausible, I wondered about some glaring omissions: Millenials' attitude towards authority and how that plays into leadership and organizations, narcissism, which has not diminished, authority of the Scripture, gender roles.)
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Edmondo De Amicis
Gwen, Tony, and Nico burned this particular boardwalk up like sensual fire!!! A story about wolves that isn't typical...a mated threesome involving twins...IDENTICAL FREAKING TWINS and a psychic who's been ostracized by pack after pack after pack because of a natural gift. She has and they fear it. Without giving much away, I loved this book! The male characters are the ones that really pull me in. Doubled my pleasure and fun: D! Reviewed by M.N. Mori DIVA RATING: 4 Divas HEAT RATING: Blaze Link:http://www.deviantdivaseroticbookrevi...
Not quite as good as Nightwatch but I did enjoy it. It has the same characters from the first book but we see them from a different perspective. I can't wait to read the next two!
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Trần Luân Tín
I enjoyed the Second Chronicles even more than I did the first, as the conceit of Foul's millennia-in-the-making plan to bleach the Land of its inherent Earthpower through the Sunbane—and administered through the banefire auspices of the Gibbon-Raver-led Clave—as a corruption stemming from Foul's original defeat by TC proved to be, for me, an effective, even enhancing twist to the series. Furthermore, in addition to the self-loathing and lacerating personality of the eternally-tormented and leprotic Covenant we get Dr. Linden Avery, a physician with her own baggage—stuffed to bursting with shards of jagged, broken glass and the acrid smell of burning lye—who carries a guilt for not having loved her parents sufficiently to redeem them and a burgeoning talent for taking possession of other's minds, that makes her—in the end—perhaps even more of a fascinating anti-hero than the star of the show. I had always loved the three Ravers, and they are put to excellent use throughout, especially in engendering within Covenant's veins the venom that perpetually threatens to unleash the Arch-shattering Wild Magic. We also get an entire ship's crew of Giants by the end of the first novel who will carry Avery and Covenant across the uncharted oceans in search of an answer to the brutally entrapping snare that Lord Foul has lain for his pair of gaoler's keys. While the entire concept of the Elohim was a bit too all-purpose-magic-pixie deus ex machina for me, Vain, the enigmatic gift of the inscrutable ur-Viles, rocks, as does the superb sidebar to Braithairealm, the desert city perilously near to the wasteland home of the Sand Gorgons, where the Giant's ship must put in for repairs, and which will bring the sinister intrigues of the city-state's ruler, the Gaddhi, and his sorcerous steward, the Kemper, down upon the traveller's heads. The merewives are nifty, the battle between Haruchai and Keeper on the Island of the One Tree tres cool; whilst the return to the Land in the third and closing book is top notch, especially the final showdown between Gibbon-Raver and Covenant, in which the juggernaut of natural force, Nom, will earn a measure of revenge for the heart-rending death of the noble Honninscrave. Everything after this clash is, in a way, almost anticlimactic; however, the journey into the bowels of Mount Thunder and the face-to-face with a supremely confident Lord Foul—who appears to have correctly anticipated his opponent's every move and calculated the perfectly coordinated response—and his two remaining Ravers, brings things to a close well enough. It certainly wasn't as lame a resolution as the Hey, ghosts, let's laugh at Foul and reduce him to a lil' baby! grasp at the straws that comprised the painfully unsatisfying conclusion to the First Chronicles. Avery makes the choice that that weird old man, the Creator, knew she had it in her to make; and, with Covenant dead and the good doctor on her way back to the real earth, she even takes the time to straighten the spine of the husband of the First and fashion a new Staff of Law, one that avoids the old ideological rigidities that doomed the Land to the leechcraft of the Sunbane from the imperfect original. Well written—in Donaldson's rich vocabulary that ofttimes threatens to tumble over into pretension or parody but never actually fails to recover its balance—and melding the author's fertile imagination and eastern-tinged fantasy memes into the inevitable questing journey that still contains enough originality to put it in that relatively unoccupied second tier of fantasy works below the topmost occupied by the two Big Fellas themselves.
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.