Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
I'm a First Reads winner! Should be interesting...
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: NGUYỄN VĂN HÒA
This book is amazing. a-ma-zing. Read it, love it, don't take it too seriously. Unless you are Andrew Buck. If you are Andrew Buck, you may base everything you will ever need to know around it. I totally owe you a new copy of this book, don't I?
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Bích Ngân
I was in the mood for something funny and saw this as I was browsing in the library. I may have smiled a few times but mostly it was an eye roller. I didn't have any laugh out loud moments with it. Still I don't regret reading it. I just wish it was funnier. I actually felt like crying during a few places in it.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều Tác Giả
Not my favorite Picoult, but still well written and intriguing. Two of the books I am reading have had storylines with Munchausen by proxy, how odd?
I read it aloud to my sister, and we had a good giggle over the scary parts at the time. However, we both could not sleep that night because the really creepy images sunk in. It's insidiously scary.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Xen Ma La Gớc Lốp
Not as good as Cop Hater but not too bad.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Bùi Vinh
This book is hilarious. The tone is familiar, like catching up with a friend, and it's interesting to hear about past projects. Hearing what happened on films and being told how he felt about certain movies, certain scenes, certain actors, is a lot of fun. It made me feel like I was there, taking part. This is the most entertaining biography I have ever read.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Hồ Biểu Chánh
I read this book as a young teenager, and it was a big help to me in understanding grace. I suppose it is written for a teenage audience, and if I read it today I would be disappointed that it was simplistic. But it filled an important purpose in my life, and I appreciate that.
I adore this series, these characters and this author. If there is a third, I have enough faith in the author to believe it will be fabulous. As it stands, the ending was profoundly satisfying. I plan on going on a steampunk binge for awhile, never having realized how much the genre has exploded before this. Also, Amazon has a ton for under $5, who knew?
When her baby brother is ripped from their safe, quaint neighborhood and flown away to the Impenetrable Wilderness, Prueaccidentally accompanied by her classmate Curtismust risk it all to enter the woods, and there discover places and dangers unknown. With an epic adventure and journey, as well as an antagonist, in the style of Narnia and locales that mirror Redwall and other classic fantasy settings, Wildwood falls somewhere between homage and derivation. Unfortunately, this means that Wildwood reads more like a book that wants to be a classic than one that is: the right pieces are often there, but they're a little too familiar and so too often predictable; the book offers nothing more, be it startling originality in a Harry Potter-like world or the numinous qualities of a Narnia-like metaphor, to make it stand out. This doesn't mean that it wants for a Jesus analogybut it does want something bigger, something more unique and memorable, to make it a classic or a must-read. Instead, Wildwood is just a good book. At a hefty 500 pages, it's an unapologetic epicand Meloy flows smoothly from city to woods, indulging in the joy of a rambling journey without losing pace, maintaining a sense of humor without becoming twee, and altogether building a compelling tale. Ellis's stylized illustrations do even more than the prose to make the story vivid and unique. This is a book to lose yourself in for hours, which is a pleasure in its own right. Although it occasionally grows too quirky and cute (which is a mixed blessing as a St. Johns localthe depiction of the area is idealized, but no less delightful for that), Wildwood is also surprisingly dark. Without forgetting the age of its intended audience, the book recognizes and refuses to romanticize its violenceand so, however sure the reader is that all will turn out well in the end, there's a distinct sense of danger and loss. (Now if only Meloy would stop preferring humanoid lives to anthropomorphic ones.) Not all supporting characters are so lucky, but Prue and Curtis are fantasticeach is distinct, each is remarkably normal, each achieves something beyond their own expectations and perceived limitations, and that's almost exactly what I hope to see in all children's and young adult fiction. Wildwood wants desperately to be something more than this, but it's notwhich may be its downfall, making it feel more disappointing and derivative than it really is. But even if the book is disappointed in itself, I'm satisfied with it: this is a solidly enjoyable, if ultimately unremarkable, tale, and I'm glad for the chance to read it. With those caveats, I recommend it to readers of all ages. (And yes, this first installment does stand alone.) (ARC received in a GoodReads First Reads giveaway.)
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.