Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
im 14 this book was very confusing ...but it was okay ..i enjoyed it
I actually have not finished it off, but I will finish it sometimes. I am like half-way. It is about a boy who can understand and can talk to cats. It is a very interesting, but the story itself is a bit slow. The boy is on the journey to find his parents. The cats have been helping him to find them. That is all I have read so far. I have the sequels to LionBoy. I still have it on my bookshelf waiting to be read. Well I hope the second and third would get better.
I saw the movie first, so any chance I had at being surprised or shocked was gone about 5 years ago. Oops. As an examination of narrative structure, this book is really fascinating. If I'm not mistaken, the beginning features a play within a novella within a novel? That's great. McEwan asks a lot of great questions about truth and story-truth, but the book's middle section really sags (the movie does a much better with this job in particular) and the prose is at times so thick that I felt it was smothering me. Definitely worth a read. Sorry, but the movie is better? Oops. 3.5/5
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều Tác Giả
I'm not sure why this book is called The Cookbook Collector. There is nothing about cookbooks until page 178 and then the cookbook collection is a secondary story line. Lots about startup computer companies. Character story lines were tied up too quickly at the end.
This was my first intro into boy's love. It still is one of the most cherished and favorite manga I've read. Matching rings are the in thing at Wataru's high school-they signify whether your best friends, single, currently seeking or an actual couple. Wataru wears his ring, for none of these reasons but because he has a special attachment to the ring itself. Through a series of events he finds out that the prince of the school, Yuichi Kazuki, wears a ring that's a match to his! He doesn't understand why someone who is so kind and friendly to others would actually act the opposite towards him. Wataru realizes soon that his interest in Yuichi, and the emotions that he invokes in Wataru run deeper than he imagines. But he's even more suprised when he finds out Yuichi's real feelings. This story is beautiful, funny, and sweet. I fell in love with Yuichi and Wataru as they struggled and came to terms with their feelings.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Diệp Lạc Vô Tâm
This is one of my favorite all time books. I've read it several times and love it each time.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Hanyu Jiaocheng
didn't read it cover to cover, but read most of it - very interesting. Through looking at what people eat on a typical day, you get to see what everyday life is like. Get to see what their houses are like. a very good culture book
Had some excellent moments as when Prior speaks as his second self but not my favourite of the trilogy. Hard-hitting and memorable however.
Profane and wickedly funny satire...I laughed out loud. Thompson is deft with language, even as his narrator is in a constant state of intoxication. (I read this book as a sorbet between long periods of reading Shadow Country by Peter Matthiesen; Fear and Loathing's flights of gross anarchy came as a relief to Shadow Country's somber genealogies.) It is dated, but only in a way a time capsule is, its references to early '70's culture and counter-culture more descriptive and evocative than anything that could be written with the benefit of retrospect. Some of my laughter was in appreciation of Thompson's soaring hyperbole in his equating the madness of Las Vegas and its underground to the American Dream itself. I have not seen the movie, and I don't know that I will, as Thompson's descriptions of outrageous people and drug-induced foulness is much funnier left to the imagination. If there is any guiding literary weight to the book, it rests in snippets of (I assume) are actual newspaper articles depicting sordid crimes and other unusual incidents. Thompson reminds us that these shocking vignettes actually render his hilariously criminal behavior rather benign in comparison.
I liked this one. I sailed through it and enjoyed the characters. I wanted it to be a little more timeless though. Larsson made a few pop culture/media references that already date it. I read the #2 book, too. I heard the 3rd isn't so good, so I might not bother...but maybe I will. I also heard that the movie misses out on quite a bit of the story line and also mixes a bunch of stuff in from the second book. I suppose that's the challenge of moving from one medium to another. I may not see the movie for a while so I can think about the book some more.
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.