Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
Fantastic! The series just gets better with each book. The ending is shocking, but I always found that character a little creepy and odd anyway, so it was shocking in a good way for me.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Ueno Yoshi
My regular readers will certainly not be surprised that the theme that most interested me in Stephenie Meyer's novel "The Host" was its treatment of human love. The story begins when the alien life form "Wanderer" is placed into the body of human female Melanie Stryder. Melanie continues to maintain her human awareness while Wanderer controls the body (and narrates the tale). Wanderer can feel the physical attraction that Melanie's body maintains for Jared, Mel's partner. At the same time, another human male, Ian, falls in love with Wanderer, the alien being inside Melanie's body. When I gave a presentation at the Mormon Women's Forum's Counterpoint Conference in 2006, I discussed my feelings about the bonding that takes place between couples who are sealed in the Temple. I opined that a sealing ordinance is merely a spiritual symbol of a phenomenon that takes place when two souls develop bonds that are so strong that they cannot be broken even after death. I was reminded of this when I read Meyer's description of the bonds which still existed between humans even after their bodies had been taken over by the alien intelligences. For example, read this passage, where one of the aliens explains why she chose to remain with the husband of her host, Kathy, even after Kathy's sentience had been replaced: "And Curt...You chose to stay with your host's spouse? After it was over?" This question was more pointed, and Kathy grasped that at once. She shifted in her seat, pulling her legs up and folding them under her. She gazed thoughtfully at a spot just over my head as she answered. "Yes, I chose Curt -- and he chose me. At first, of course, it was random chance, an assignment. We bonded, naturally, from spending so much time together, sharing the danger of our mission...We lived every day with the knowledge that we could meet a final end at any moment. There was constant excitement and frequent fear. All very good reasons why Curt and I might have formed an attachment and decided to stay together when secrecy was no longer necessary. And I could like to you, assuage your fears, by telling you that these were the reasons. But..." She shook her head and then seemed to settle deeper into her chair, her eyes boring into me. "In so many millennia, the humans never did figure love out. How much is physical, how much in the mind? How much accident and how much fate? Why did perfect matches crumble and impossible couples thrive? I don't know the answers any better than they did. Love is simply where it is. My host loved Curt's host, and that love did not die when the ownership of the minds changed." I was quite taken with Stephenie Meyer's description of Wanderer's similar attraction to Jared. As in the above example, there were several facets to this attraction. The first was simply the physical attraction which the body continued to manifest -- a purely corporeal response of Melanie's body to Jared's physical presence. Then there were emotional responses that the alien Wanderer began to feel. The following excerpt is a conversation Wanderer has with Melanie's consciousness in her head, after seeing Jared for the first time after the possession. She [Melanie:] hesitated for a long moment, and then the rest of the words came out in a rush. I thought it was all me -- the way we feel about him. I thought I was . . . in control of that. The thoughts behind her words were clearer than the words themselves. You thought you were able to bring me here because you wanted it so much. That you were controlling me instead of the other way around. I tried not to be annoyed. You thought you were manipulating me. Yes. The chagrin in her tone was not because I was upset, but because she did not like being wrong. But... I waited. It came in a rush once more. You're in love with him, too, separately from me. It feels different from the way I feel. Other. I didn't see that until he was there with us, until you saw him for the first time. How did that happen? How does a three-inch-long worm fall in love with a human being? Worm? Sorry. I guess you sort of have . . . limbs. Not really. They're more like antennae. And I'm quite a bit longer than three inches when they're extended. My point is, he's not your species. My body is human, I told her. While I'm attached to it, I'm human, too. And the way you see Jared in your memories . . . Well, it's all your fault. She considered that for a moment. She didn't like it much. So if you had gone to Tucson and gotten a new body, you wouldn't love him anymore now? I really, really hope that's true. Since, as Latter-day Saints, we believe that the human soul consists of both a spirit and a body, I am not sure what fascinates me so much about the notion of a purely spiritual connection, divorced from physical ties. We've all heard about or experienced physical attraction which lacks the spiritual/emotional component, but there isn't much discussion about a love which lacks the physical element. This is the relationship which Wanderer begins to develop with Ian. Although her body's physical responses are still linked to Jared, her emotions are engaged by Ian. I realized, when he smiled then, that I wanted him to like me. The rest -- the hand on my face, the fingers on my arm -- I still wasn't sure at all about those. But I wanted him to like me, and to think kind thoughts about me. Which is why it was hard to tell him the truth. "You don't really feel that way about me, you know," I whispered. "It's this body . . . She's pretty, isn't she?" He nodded. "She is. Melanie is a very pretty girl. Even beautiful." His hand moved to touch my bad cheek, to stroke the rough, scarring skin with gentle fingers. "In spite of what I've done to her face...But, pretty as she is, she's a stranger to me. She's not the one I care about." That made me feel better. Which was even more confusing. "Ian, you don't . . . Nobody here separates us the way they should. Not you, not Jamie, not Jeb." The truth came out in a rush, more heated than I'd meant it to be. "You couldn't care about me. If you could hold me in your hand, me, you would be disgusted. You would throw me to the ground and grind me under your foot." His pale forehead creased as his black brows pulled together. "I . . . not if I knew it was you." I laughed without humor. "How would you know? You couldn't tell us apart." His mouth turned down. "It's just the body," I repeated. "That's not true at all," he disagreed. "It's not the face, but the expressions on it. It's not the voice, but what you say. It's not how you look in that body, but the things you do with it. You are beautiful." He moved forward as he spoke, kneeling beside the bed where I lay and taking my hand again in both of his. "I've never known anyone like you." I sighed. "Ian, what if I'd come here in Magnolia's body?" He grimaced and then laughed. "Okay. That's a good question. I don't know." "Or Wes's?" "But you're female -- you yourself are." "And I always request whatever a planet's equivalent is. It seems more . . . right. But I could be put into a man and I would function just fine." "But you're not in a man's body." "See? That's my point. Body and soul. Two different things, in my case." "I wouldn't want it without you." "You wouldn't want me without it." Tell me, readers, do you long to have someone love you like that? Where it wouldn't matter to them if you were a 3-inch long alien? Does it interest you to dissect the different bonds which attract us as humans? Is it important for you to know if your partner loves you spiritually as well as physically? Do you think you would love your partner as well if they were in a different body? You'll have to read this book to take a look at some the other themes that Meyer covers. Another motif in The Host is conflict and pacifism. I may explore that one later, too, if I get around to it.
Great stories it took me a long time to get in the right mindset for. And now I realize he didn't really write that much short fiction. Oh well.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Dương Hà Ngân
One of my favorite books of all time; recommended by my mentor. I'd write more about it, but surmise it to say, you're either a friend of Ishmael or not.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Ngọc Hà
I give this book 2 1/2 stars.. Nice message.. but I didn't always like his method of expressing it.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nathalie Choux
The most amazing thing about autobiographies are the similarities. I just finished Russell Brands's My Booky Wook and even found connections between that and this book (although Russell should have held out another 20 yrs before writing his autobiography probably). I love to read about someone who is so very different than yourself and at the end you feel an odd connection. The book is filled with things that are memorable to me and who cares what I find interesting anyway? But this one line stands out for me and says a lot about the book - The only answer to "Who are you?" is "When?"
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Twentine
This was, quite possilby, the weirdest book I've ever read. I think it was actually a religious sermon hidden in a fiction novel. Would I recommend it? Sure, why not, but I have no idea who I'd recommend it to. It was just that weird.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nguyễn Phúc Thuần
Weirdly wonderful! The novel is full of fabulously strange characters and happenings and essentially follows two main characters whose lives are somehow destined to converge. Loved the metaphors...left me with much to ponder. I do wish there had beed one or two more answers at the end though.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Guillaume Musso
There's a slew of stories from the Holocaust, but how many times are you going to see one about a Jewish woman who survived it because she MARRIED an SS OFFICER? I mean, come on!
I can't believe I finally finished this book! Two years, off and on, but it was worth it! Bryson writes about geology, physics, microbiology, etc. in a clear and concise way. All with Bryson's humorous way of looking at the world. Truly, since this book is all about planet Earth. Still, it wasn't an easy read for me. I'd read a chapter or two, then go for months without picking it up again. There's just so much information. I feel enlightened yet terrified as well.
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.