Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
Yes it is pretty good, and i love the mistery area in this book and the romance department.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Adam Khoo
A great primer for understanding.
Bendis has written a unique story. Powers: Who Killed Retro Girl is the story of a pair of homicide detectives who cover the "Powers" beat - ie, homicides involving men and women with super powers. Someone has killed the nearly invulnerable Retro Girl, and detective Walker and his new partner have been assigned to the case. Walker has some history with both Retro Girl, and the rest of the heroes and villains in this story, and his new female partner is intent on figuring it out. It's a classic detective and murder mystery placed within an unlikely narrative landscape, but in the end manages to work very well. This is a story about policemen and the work they do, and less of a story about superheroes. You can sense the frustration of the coroner's job when he attempts an autoposy on Retro Girl - whose skin is impenetrable to everything, including a blow torch. You feel the long hours involved in a case going cold, with no leads materializing. The fact that it is set within the world of superheroes works mainly to jar the reader and "defamiliarize" an extremely familiar cops and robber story. Bendis deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as writers like Alan Moore and Frank Miller - giants in this medium who have shown the potential of consecutive image storytelling. I really liked this story, and look forward to reading more from the Powers title.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Pamela S.Wiegartz & Kevin L.Gyoerkoe
A really powerful memoir about the effects of war on a man and his family, from the perspective of his daughter. I was able to read this book in just a few days, testament to how well it is written, and how powerful and relevant the content is.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nguyễn Đình Thống
Overall, Goldman's crafting of the story is original, creating a false source copy of the story of which he is abridging. The explanations of differences between the two during his "good parts" edition just further shows the strength of his creativity. Don't sell yourself short by just seeing the movie adaptation of this story. While great in-and-of itself, the novel does much more to flesh out the characters and introduce us to their personal histories. A well written fairy tale for the ages.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: KS. Nguyễn Thanh Trung
Really fell apart at the end, but Reynolds does a great job of unfolding the story. It's how he develops his stories that makes him such a good read. Also, the hard science is impressive. I never thought anything I referenced in my thesis would ever end up in a novel.
Riyadh us-Saliheen is an awesome collection of ahadeeth. I was fairly new to Islam when I first got my hands on it, and I remember opening it up and being unable to put it down. The categorization is also great. However, for the non-Arabic speakers, I'd be cautious of some of the mistranslations in the dar us-salam version.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Andrea Mills
Man I love Black Hole, though it always makes me feel really really terrible. After the first time I read it, I was convinced I was the worst person in the world, for no real reason. I even started writing a zine about. The second time I read it, I thought to myself "I wonder if this will affect me weirdly again." and it did, though it wasn't quite as extreme. I just felt really uneasy and wanted to yell stuff out loud in the library. This has nothing to with the book tho, which is set in the mid-seventies in Seattle, where a strange STD that turns teens into mutants is spreading around. The infected kids live in huts in the woods, and it's really creepy and affecting, PLUS you can see where Daniel Clowes got a lot of his supernatural shit from. First time I read this, I was actually kinda disillusioned with Clowes, cos he kinda draws EXACTLY like Charles Burns, but I've since gotten over that. While Charles Burns does the supernatural B-movie type stuff better, Daniel Clowe's is definitely much better with characters and real life stuff. Tangent over. Review over.
On The White Lioness, the third book in Wallander series, Mankell created the most depressing first paragraphs in a book. With his last book in the series he creates the most depressing paragraph, or should I say two lines, for a book ending. And these two pieces of writing share the same qualities. They are so sad because they are realistic, they are probable to happen to you, your friend, your relatives. And both are characteristic to what Mankell does in the crime fiction genre. He brings real people into it. Most crime fiction genre oozes with fictionality, improbable actions, characters, solutions. Nice for the plot, but fake. Mankell differs, he doesn't care if the plot is slow, if it gets back and forth all the time. People make mistakes, people are afraid, confused, misguided, affected by life events. I won't hide that this book got me sniffling a couple of times while listening to it. The end had me weeping for several minutes. Probable reality is always sadder than fictional reality. Great ending for the series.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Họa sĩ Werner Wejp - Olsen
A really good an interesting book...u just start loving AS, the character here!!
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.