Seungyeon Lee từ Kodinhi, Kerala, India

cookandegg

11/05/2024

Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách

Seungyeon Lee Sách lại (10)

2019-08-14 11:30

Tuyển Tập 692 Đoạn Văn Luyện Dịch Anh-Việt & Việt-Anh Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Lê Văn Sự

I have to admit that I approached this book with considerable trepidation. I fell in love with Jim Henson when I was a small child, back in the Ed Sullivan days, when I saw a bit with a skin diver being harassed by an obnoxious and punny fish. Finally the man screams "Why are you doing this to me?" And the fish shrugs and replies "Oh, just for the halibut." I've sought out many different forms of Henson's work, and found them of very uneven quality. And this book, published the year after Henson's death, probably had little direct input from Henson himself (he's not even listed in the credits, though the series is under the umbrella of his name). As it turned out, the trepidation was well justified. Strip out the Muppet (and Fraggle) characters and names, and there's nothing to mark this book out from a hundred other patronizing and offensive 'educational' children's books. One of the things I always loved about Sesame Street and the Muppets in general was that they WEREN'T smarmy, and didn't talk down to children. They treated children as intelligent (if often unsophisticated) partners in their own learning, and respected them enough to include jokes they knew the children wouldn't understand (leaving aside the Monsterpiece Theatre segment Monster in A Box ("No ego problem there..."), how many children do you suppose could really identify Carmen Miranda, who frequently appeared on Sesame Street, in one guise or another?). Children are perfectly capable of doing research, and it enriches their lives to be exposed to things they know they don't understand--but could, with a little more information. How many of us learned most of what we know of opera from Bugs Bunny, for example? Oh, well. If nothing else, this book is a souvenir of a wealthier time in my life, when I could count on rich, bizarre gifts materializing unexpectedly on my tv. As nostalgia for a lost Golden Age, it's somewhat heartbreaking. I've read it, but likely won't do so again. Instead, I'll go back to recordings of the 'good old days', for as long as they last.

2019-08-14 19:30

Những Điều Kiêng Kỵ Theo Phong Tục Dân Gian Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi:

It took me a few days to write this review after I finished "Five Years In The Warsaw Ghetto" by Bernard Goldstein. In a day where there's much wrong with our world, you can't help but be depressed when reading of people in the past that's ideals were utterly crushed by the might of state power. Goldstein was a Jewish socialist organizer in the trade unions of Warsaw, and lost his entire community to the Nazi plan of aus rotten of the Polish Jews. Its story, a re-release of a memoir put out in the 1950s when the Holocaust was fresh in the world's mind, leaves you with three things. First, it is a tragedy, one of where Bernard Goldstein spent his entire life fighting for justice, as a socialist activist and organizer amongst Polish workers and Jews; he actively fought fascism from rising in Poland, but was nearly powerless to stop as the tanks rolled into Warsaw. Throughout the five years, he watched as half a million Jews were reduced to a little more than 70,000, and as his beloved Warsaw was utterly destroyed by the Nazis, and than the Socialist resister survivors were rounded up and either imprisoned or executed by the Soviets. Second, it is a story of hope. Throughout the entire occupation, Goldstein never rested nor never gave up; reminding the reader of the old phrase "Better to die on your feet than to live on your knees." When the Nazis set up the Ghetto, he urged, from the underground press, to resist it and not to trust the Jewish collaborators whom the Gestapo put into power to rule over the ghetto. When deportations started, his organization tried to manufacture fake documents to as many people as possible marked for liquidation as good workers. When it became clear the Nazis were planning to kill everyone, Goldstein helped organize the uprising which nearly succeeded in defeating the Nazis except for a dearth of supplies. Escaping the Ghetto, Goldstein joins the Polish resistance which stages a second city-wide uprising two years later, which only failed because the approaching Soviet army refused to help it, since Stalin wanted no rivals in his puppet government. Third, it is a story of courage to fight for what is right. Throughout the story, Goldstein remains resolute that the Nazis would be defeated eventually, and used all of his cunning, strength, and organizing skill to achieve it. People who compromised themselves in order to survive in this story usually did not, such as Jewish Gestapo agents, who became such to protect themselves from death camps, but instead were assassinated by vengeful Jews when the uprisings erupted. Goldstein, the biggest rebel of them all, survives the holocaust of his people and his city, though he has to flee when the Soviets begin arresting the radicals of the nation. Goldstein's message should be for us today, in these difficult times, to never give up, and never stand down, no matter how mighty your foes are nor how much the odds are stacked against you and what you hold dear. Nothing, not the state, nor the worst of tyrants and human hatred, can crush the thoughts and hope for a better world. If Goldstein can survive it, so can we.

Người đọc Seungyeon Lee từ Kodinhi, Kerala, India

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.