Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Felix Salten
The book is surprisingly slow given the success of the story on Broadway. I have seen the musical twice and own/have memorized the sountrack, but cannot seem to get through this book! I don't understand!
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nguyễn Như Ý
Its a pretty good book, You will enjoy reading it!
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Hs Gia Bảo
I was fascinated and repulsed by this novel(?). Could this really happen? Somehow I think it could which makes it even more beautiful and repulsive. But, I couldn't finish it. I wanted to give a one-star rating, not because the book wasn't great, but because I really, really didn't like reading something this grim.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Sugiura Shiho
Like a long damned poem, this is a favorite 'classic'.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhật Lệ Giang
(Originally published here: http://www.nbafictionblog.org/nba-win...) I picked up my copy of Alice Walker's The Color Purple to jog my memory of it for this review. I found myself swallowing it whole, reading it cover to cover in one day, and not merely remembering why I liked the book, but loving it once again. Walker accomplishes a rare thing: She makes an epistolary novel work without veering into preciousness. Rather, Celie's full-bodied voice emerges, a moody and honest voice, in an inherently intimate literary form. While she is the protagonist of the novel, she is not the protagonist of her world -- and so, she writes letters to God that no one is expected to read. Celie's letters are written in broken dialect, resulting in surprising juxtapositions and lyricism. As she evolves over the forty years that the novel takes place, so do her letters evolve in nuanced observation and authority. Reading the novel, you don't merely watch Celie change; you feel it in the beat and rhythm of her words. Celie's letters carry the tale of isolation and love, of violence and sexuality, of poverty and ambition, of domination and independence, of self-awareness and community, of the chafing relationships between black men and black women, and of an inward spirituality that's not easily contained. While centered on Celie's life in a small Georgia town, and later in Memphis, the scope of the book widens with the strange and hilarious characters who people the pages. From the proud singer Shug Avery to Sofia, whose bluntness in punished, to Harpo, who eats constantly so he can be sure to be bigger than his wife, The Color Purple is a strong contender for offering the best secondary cast of characters in twentieth-century literature. As well, the novel takes a global turn in the second half of the book through the letters and life of Nettie, Celie's sister, in Africa. Such vividness and variety of characters eases the burn of what might have been a claustrophobic earnestness in the novel. The Color Purple--winner of both a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize--remains a frequent target of censors still today, nearly thirty years after its publication. The intimate location of the reader in the scenes of violence and sexuality have troubled many. But it is through the uneasiness -- and the lure of Celie's voice and the surrounding cast -- that we are disarmed. The Color Purple is about the search for joy. Reading my copy of it again, I found joy myself.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều Tác Giả
I cannot wait to read the rest of her books. This was great. It was different enough from the TV series that it kept me guessing (except for that one big thing which I wont ruin for those who haven't seen the show). I was surprised that it was a lot sexier than the show. Since when has a book been hotter than something on cable? I'm a little bummed that it was missing the character Tara because I hoping to get some more info on the mysterious woman who came into her life right at the end of the TV season. Guess I have to wait for HBO.
This was a compelling book to read. Initially the mystery of the murder of a young man draws one into the plot, but that murder is rather quickly made secondary to the mysteries of the community during WWII, communism and the later labor movement. The descriptions of the forest and fields, of farming and the weather are all beautiful. I found it difficult to keep track of the many characters introduced early in the book, so many had similarly difficult (Polish) names. It also took a little while for me to get the rhythm of the writing, which at least initially felt choppy to me. Those hurdles were well worth jumping over, this is a book I will be recommending to friends and relations.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
I wasn't all that crazy about the first one but the series grows on you. I really like this one (the 3rd in the series)
this book plays in the dark belly of the tenth arondissement in paris. i know the place really well and I recpognized so many places and atmospheres. the story is disturbing, violent and beautiful.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Phạm Phương Thảo
Really 3.5 stars. This is the second in the Chaos Walking trilogy. The Knife of Never Letting Go and Monsters of Men are the first and third, respectively. All three books are very good, very hard to put down. I listened to the third one right after the second, so I can't remember where one ends and the other begins! What I found interesting is that Mr. Ness did not paint a black and white picture.
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.