Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Sơn Tùng
I prefer the Art of Woo. Strategic persuasion has a longer end game.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Mai Sơn
i have two favorite lines from this book that make me giggle when i think about them; the first is on the top of page 26 and the other is near the bottom of page 202. :) this was a cute book. it makes you realize you can find "wonders" wherever you are. i would recommend it to anyone, my 11 year old recommended it to me.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Cloud Pillow Studio
Si ha habido un grupo poético en la historia de España que haya tenido impacto, ha sido este. Sobre todo, Lorca y Alonso
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Hoàng Việt Hằng
This book was basically a denser, more detailed, and less fun version of Ray Kurzweil's The Age of Spiritual Machines: When Computers Exceed Human Intelligence. It's still good though and has more interesting discuessions about the ultimate limits of computing and the universe but didn't conjure up the same excitement as his previous book.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều Tác Giả
This book not only addresses the African American struggle in the United States but other minorities and the prejudices they faced and are still facing in these United States. Being it it Black History Month, I enjoyed re-awakening the things that we have struggled for and this book serves as a reminder that the struggle is not over yet.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
So far pretty good. I'm not sure what is going to happen...
Homicidal mechanical ladybugs, maniacal dogs named Poche, cocky/hero werewolfs, evil holy Templars, and Alexia's trusty parasol...where does one begin? After Lord Jackass (opps I mean Lord Maccon) casts Alexia out on her own she is forced to move back in with her family. As if that wasn't punishment enough, for a crime she didn't commit no less, after the press got wind of said offense her own family turned her out as well. It doesn't take long for Alexia to determine she is mostly wanted dead by the entire vampire community, a fact they made perfectly clear with the most unpleasant surprise of attack ladybugs. I know it sounds kinda cheesy, and in most cases it would be, but this was fantastically funny! The vampires are apparently afraid of what Alexia has come to refer to as, the infant-inconvenience, and are willing to go to great lengths to see her killed. Even though Alexia is no longer under the protcetion of the pack she is no stranger to people wanting her dead. She decides the best course of action is to find out why the vampires are so upset about her delicate situation. Armed with her trusty parasol, and accompanied by Floote and Madame LeFoux, she sets out to Italy. "It is a strange world, she ruminated, wherein one finds oneself surrounded by Italians in nightgowns carrying French guns mollified by the English to kill supernaturals." As far as action is concerned this book stands up to the challenge. It is full of action, humor, suspense, and even a few tears. I was a little disappointed at the lack of romance. I was glad to see Connell come around to his senses, but I just wished it had happened a little sooner. He spent most of this book sloshed because her was depressed. When I finished Changeless I was so SO hurt and mad at him for how he treated Alexia. I mean seriously who wouldn't be? So in the beginning I took pleasure in seeing him beat himself up. I even started to feel pity for him. Yea I know it surprised me too! I just wished, say around page 200, he would have sobered up, and fled to Alexia. I just would have like a little more graveling. Now that might be me just being bitter that I didn't get to see him naked quit as often as I would have liked, but hey who could blame me;) I did love how I got a closer look into most of the secondary characters. I always knew their was something up with Mr. Floote, and while the author doesn't quite tell you what that is just yet, she does reinforce my suspicions. Madame LeFoux probably surprised me the most. When I first met her in Changeless I never trusted her. Not even in the end, but by the end of this one she has gained my trust. Don't get me wrong she is still mysterious, but I really expected to turn out on the bad side. It cracks me up how she makes little comments about her interest in Alexia. She doesn't try to hide the fact that she has romantic feelings for her. Something about it just makes their relationship perfect. Then there is Lyall. Oh Lyall what can I say. You are witty and entertaining. It seems like no matter what gets thrown at you, you always overcome the challenge. Simply put I heart you. I wish you would give in and find some romance soon! PLEASE...lolz Overall this book was everything to be expected and a great continuation of the story. I will be looking forward to the next installment. prays for a little more naked Connell> hint hint;)
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Đức Tín
Eff is a Thirteenth Child, and while she has more or less overcome the assumption she is an avatar of misfortune as a result, she is still working at smoothing out her magical talents. As she finishes up her schooling as a child her brother Lan, a fortuitous seventh son of a seventh son, urges her to consider higher schooling in the east. But Eff's attention turns ever westward, to the wild lands beyond the barrier. She takes on a position as assistant to the menagerie attached to the school she just graduated from, and from there, is brought along on a survey expedition through the lands unprotected by the barrier. As the survey stumbles upon magical animals in places they should not be as well as a puzzling collection of what look to be petrified animals, Lan's schooling comes to a stop in a horrifying tragedy. Across the Great Barrier is the second book in the Frontier Magic series, and is a fascinating mix of Little House on the Prairie and Harry Potter. I am particularly fond of magic being used for mundane things, so the way Wrede has written magic being utilized by folks trying to make their way on the frontier pulled in my attention, and the edge of danger that life style and the world Wrede has built with its steam dragons, mirror bugs, and Columbian Sphinxes kept me frantically turning pages long past when I should have been sleeping. Beyond that, everything I can ever remember enjoying about being a child is represented, in some way, in these books. The little experiences and triumphs, even the flat failures and disappointments- things I can, as an adult look back at with a crooked grin. These are books shelved in the children's section, but are by no means books just for kids. Enjoyable, fun, highly recommended.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Thịnh Văn Nam
Not quite "what we could expect from Jane Austen if she had been a fantasy writer". The author is evidently an Austen fan, but her writing lacks Miss Austen's wit and sharp observation of the human condition. It's a pretty nice read, though. I felt I was reading a mashup of Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibitly, Northanger Abbey and fantasy novels, with a little Frank Churchill on the side for good measure. A quick read, not extremely satisfying but entertaining enough for a leisurely afternoon in bed with a cold (well, that's how I read it).
Anything Isabel Allende is so beautiful!
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.