Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Roger Fisher; William Ury
Love this book- Woodson is one of my favorite authors- she delves into the complicated lives of adolescents- interracial love, family issues, etc.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Quang Huy
older, out of print biography about Henry VIII's two sisters. Most of the book is devoted to Margaret (which I thought was a good thing since I didn't know much about her). Full review: http://shelfandstuff.blogspot.com/201...
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Ngọc Giao
One of the fine ones. Heyer's nobleman-of-fashion characters seem to vary primarily on a cold-warm axis and a moral-immoral one; here, Alverstoke is far to the cold side of Gareth from "Sprig Muslin," but compared to Leonie's nobleman from "These Old Shades," less immoral and rakish than simply not very caring. The Merriville children are as charming as the author thinks they are, and Frederica is charming, and of course I always love Heyer's obvious affection for women who are frank and intelligent.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Thôi Hoa Phương
This is on the top of the list! I love how she tells the story from many different characters perspectives.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
A couple of the chapters are way off in left field, but otherwise it's a very good read.
much better than i expected. enjoyed greatly
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Shino
I have accidentally took the second volume of the Build up series, but it was lucky pick. The plot was narrow and actually very interesting the sex scenes were hot and kinky and somehow when book ended I craved for the next volume. The sci-fi and porn sometimes made an interesting combinations. The politic can be vary dirty but from time to time the honest type of politician appears only to be crushed by system or fate. Nick Farr was that kind of politician and the false accusation of corruption was the exact starter of the circumstances, which eventually lead him to skilled hacker with strange conduct of honor, Justin Hobbs. Nick wanted to clear his name, but the things run so deep and they ended by invasion of his planetary system. Nick changed overnight from the politician who wanted clear his name to freedom fighter. Nick Hobbs wanted to have his job done and moved as soon ass the corruption case would be closed, but sudden invasion and muscular figure of his employer made a little complication in his plan. The last drop to his professional and emotional turmoil was accusation by Protectorate that he was criminal, which lead him straight to Nick services and bed as bonus. Unlikely pair was forced by the invasion and both men found out that there was something more that connected them like two dildos in Hobbs ass.
This was a strange and wonderful book that I enjoyed immensely. It is dense and confusing in many parts, so it also frustrated me. I would highly recommend it to people who have a high tolerance for dense reading, confusing storylines, and Persian history. It was really difficult to follow at times, but taking it slow and re-reading the most confusing parts helped me keep up with the story. It may be worth a second read now that my mind has a map of where the story is going, and also the language is so beautiful I would love to spend more time enjoying it. This isn't a speed read or a book you can skim, but it is worth the effort and time.
I bought Little Brother back in 2010 some time, planning 'giving this Doctorow fella a go'. For some reason I got distracted, or bored, or just picked up another book and kinda forgot about it (this was before Goodreads). Fast forward three years, and I also seem to have bought an ebook copy of the book as part of the second Humble eBook Bundle. Two paid-for, but unread, copies of a book that I could download for free from the author's website – not bad going at all. Instead I read Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom as my first Doctorow and popped this one on the shelf to try again later... Little Brother is the story of a group of school friends in San Francisco, caught up in a terrorist attack against the city. In the wrong place at the wrong time they are scooped up by the Department of Homeland Security for questioning. The department's approach turns out to be a little extra-legal, and before they know it they are being held in a secure – Guantanamo-like – facility in the bay. Having already been held, without even telling their parents, for several days they can't just be released, and they are threatened further to keep them quiet. Once out, the San Francisco they are released into is one they barely recognise. With the DHS running and influencing almost everything there is no freedom to question anything anymore. Luckily, our hero Marcus, is determined to fight the DHS and get things back to the way they were. Doctorow is an obvious Libertarian, and this novel is a good, young-adult, primer. The Department for Homeland Security is the over-powered evil authoritarian regime. The rest of the city are easily duped into accepting the occupation of their city – because, you know, Terrorism! Marcus and his friends are the hackers, free-thinkers and underdogs; determined to overthrow something for what was done to them: to right the wrongs. The perfect teenage rebellion fantasy. Not only does Marcus have the ideal organisation to rebel against, but he has the skills and tools to do so. While the politics gets a little obvious in places, Doctorow is obviously trying not to make this just a libertarian tract. Luckily, he has a pretty exciting story to tell and I still have no idea why I gave up on this the first time...
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Mai Lan Hương
Lord Peter Wimsey goes undercover at an advertising agency, where he proves that what appeared to be an accidental death was really murder, and that the agency is tangled in a drug-running operation. But he's British, so he's unflappable about the situation, and he never misses his tea.
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.