Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Anh Ba
I actually enjoyed this quite a bit, maybe more than Assassination Vacation, but then I'm fascinated by religious semantics. Like David Sedaris, Vowell is more entertaining to listen to than read, but I found some of the switching back and forth between Vowell's narration and the voice acting a little awkward, although it would have been worse I guess if she had just read the entire thing straight through.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nắng
This is a mildly funny book about a young guy living with a bunch of retired folks in Florida. This is pretty much quick-read, lightly ha-ha, airplane reading.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
This was ... French. I enjoyed it a lot, although I think i was expecting too much, and then was let down. Also, I think the Madame Bovary is a huge bitch, so it was tough trying to understand her.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Aleix Cabrera
Five BIG stars for this one. Cleon Skousen--Constitutional scholar, Salt Lake police chief, FBI agent (and special assistant to J. Edgar Hoover himself), BYU professor, prolific author, public speaker--has brilliantly outlined 28 principles of freedom our Founding Fathers said must be understood and perpetuated by anyone desiring peace, prosperity, and liberty. This is a must read by every American; really, it should be required reading in high schools across the nation. Skousen notes that the Founders were inspired men who had not only studied just about every form of government known to man but crafted a most remarkable, bold, and brilliant document......unlike any ever before created. The Founders were wise, as they warned about possible pitfalls that would ensnare the country they worked so hard to protect and build. Among some of the warnings: 1. They opposed big federal government, heavy taxation, and a welfare state, which they reckoned destroyed incentive, industry, and independence. 2. They guaranteed equal rights and the freedom to prosper; not equal things or equal wealth. Redistribution of wealth is UNCONSTITUTIONAL. 3. They were huge on property rights, and how this was essential to personal liberty. 4. They considered national debt an evil (unless under dire circumstances, i.e. war), and if incurred must be paid off immediately. They claimed that passing on debt to future generations was immoral. 5. In order for this country to live peaceably and function under this Constitution, we must be a moral and religious people. After reading this book, it is readily apparent how far we have strayed from this important document and the admonitions of our wise Founders. (My one teeny tiny issue with this book is the notion that entering WWII was a possible mistake. I disagree.....)
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Lê Xuân Công
Lo lei en la escuela superior y lo volvi a leer. Me encanta porque presenta lo que es ser puertorriqueno. Donde nos ensenan que todo lo "bueno" viene de afuera (Estados Unidos y Europa) y que lo de la isla es "malo". Es triste saber que los mismos puertorriquenos no sabemos nada de nosotros mismos.
Fascinating story of Bob Dylan travelling back to MN after recording Blood on the Tracks in New York and then re-recording most of the album with no-name MN musicians and releasing the album with 8 of the MN tracks but no credits to the MN musicians. Told by the MN musicians themselves. Fascinating story but rather poorly organized and quite uninterestingly written. A must-read for those that think this to be one of the best albums ever recorded (like I do) but a bore for anyone else. 4 stars: the story; 2 stars: the writing. Listen to the record.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều Tác Giả
http://www.lovlivlifereviews.com/2011... Eleri Stone has a talent for creating and telling stories. I fell in love with her jaguar shifter world last year after I read Mercy and now I am determined to read more shifter titles from her. Redemption gave me more of the world I love and for that alone I'm excited to write this review. Adriano is half man and half animal but all crazy for Sophie. Sophie is a quiet woman who tries to fly below everyone's radar. She is intelligent, goal-oriented and with her own secrets. The fireworks that sizzle between the two is explosive and absolutely crazy enjoyable to read. The setting, in the middle of an archaeological dig creates the perfect atmosphere for explorations of all kinds. *wink* All in all, Redemption (book 2) is a title I much enjoyed. I'm a "series" kind of gal so I thoroughly love references made to the previous books/story-lines. Redemption, does mention the King and Queen (My review of Mercy) but the story is all Adriano and Sophie.
70 years after genetic engineering cured cancer but cursed new generations with a much-limited lifespan–20 years for females, 25 for males–16 year old Rhine is kidnapped from her life with her twin brother Rowan in New York and sold into a polygamous marriage 1000 miles away. Now married to the weak House Governer Linden of her own generation and under the watchful eye of his pre-disease father, the sinister Housemaster Vaughn, Rhine must navigate the politics and agendas of her sister-wives and captors if she’s to have a chance of escape. But with only 4 years of life remaining, is Rhine sure she wants to abandon her comfortable prison, or will she find love in her new life after all? Dystopias–and dystopian trilogies–are in right now. Based on the ARC synopsis, I assumed Wither would be along the same lines as Awaken or Delirium, a romance about a girl’s choice to love or act in defiance of the rules of her progressive, emotionless society. But Wither is different. Unlike the faux utopias of those books, the world of Wither is broken. People are dying too young to maintain civilization as we know it. Members of the last generation to age naturally are still alive, but most children are orphaned early and left to fend for themselves. Powerful men have the luxury of kidnapping wives. If a cure is not found–and not everyone wants one to be–it’s easy to envision the future as successive generations of Lord of the Fruitflies. Despite its heroine wrestling with her feelings toward her new husband Linden and the house servant Gabriel, Wither is not a romance novel. Reading it brought to mind Wuthering Heights (the name association between Linton and Linden helped) and Jane Eyre, with its introspective young woman trapped in a mansion of secrets and desire. Wither is more about personalities, and how each of the sister-wives responds or adjusts to her captive marriage and new social situation. Although the story seemed to slow at times, I liked that Rhine’s feelings for both Linden and Gabriel are sometimes conflicted, and that she doesn’t lose her personality or agenda to their pheromones. The sense of menace of the house and villain are palpable, and other characters, even sympathetic ones, perpetuate iniquities through either willful or oblivious ignorance. The science fiction aspect of the series seems underdeveloped and even extraneous. The science of and social response to the crisis seem glossed over at best, although they may be further explored in the continuation of the trilogy. While the age-limiting disease helps to explain the reason for Rhine’s kidnapping, this feels more like a book about captivity that could take place at any time: future, past, or even in today’s present. Consider the same synopsis as above, with a few omissions: 16 year old Rhine is kidnapped from her life with her twin brother Rowan and sold into a polygamous marriage 1000 miles away. Now married to the weak Linden and under the watchful eye of his father, the sinister Vaughn, Rhine must navigate the politics and agendas of her sister-wives and captors if she’s to have a chance of escape. But is Rhine sure she wants to abandon her comfortable prison, or will she find love in her new life after all? The future setting does distance the horror of Rhine’s situation, as well as appeal to the current YA dystopian trend. But does it really need to? In The Hunger Games, Awaken, and Delirium, there is a real sense of rebellion. In Wither, other than her captors, there’s no government or establishment to rebel against (or if there is, we don’t know enough about it). The focus is instead on how a group of individual characters deal with their own lives under the oppression of a single household–and by extension, how we might approach our own–and that’s enough.
Tourette's explained and quite the literary achievement -- a detective novel of the highest order.
Fantastic book, really a great series of books! Looking forward to the american movie versions of these books to be finished. Lizabeth Salander is my hero, a fantastic character!
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.