Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: GS.TS. Dương Thiệu Tống
I wrote my junior thesis on _Absalom, Absalom_ because I was interested in tellings and retellings IN fiction. Throughout the book the same story is told and retold with variations. It's an amazing book--but Faulkner at his densest, and in some ways more of an intellectual experiment than a free-standing novel. Read _The Sound and the Fury_ first, then come to _Absalom, Absalom_ when you're ready for more Quentin.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Huy Tiến
I never liked Thor was when I was a youth, but I saw Straczynski's name on this, liked what he had done with Spider-Man, and read some good things on this. So, what the heck, I'll give it a try. What I got here were 6 issues that all read like prologues for things to come but were never resolved. Each issue would have a plot that was a bit of "this is going to have to tide you over until next month's issue..." However, nothing ever got re-visited. And Thor's personality is so devoid of anything remotely interesting that there's no point in picking up the second volume to find out what happens. On the plus side, the artwork was solid.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
Hilarious! It's definitely a guilty pleasure, though. Bought it as a beach read and it started off a little rocky, but after a few chapters I've really gotten into it and have laughed out loud on many many occasions. I'm finishing it tonight!
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Tạ Ngọc Tấn
I think I enjoyed this book more than The Body Finder, and I hope Derting keeps Jay and Violet together (it is looking a bit dicey, especially with a new man appearing.) Once again, the character of Jay proves that boys in books are better.
I'd only read Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale so I was curious to read more. This book's opening pages just blew me away! What a great writer.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Cung Kim Tiến
** spoiler alert ** Not a good idea to read late into the night. It said horror book and it was a nightmare. Very well told nightmare. Frank and Eudora moved into a house in Whitbrow that his aunt had left him. She also wrote a letter to sell the house dont ever go their. Frank was a collage professor and had an affair with a student Eudora who was married to another professor. Frank lost his job and Eudora just got her license to teach and had a hard time in 30's to get a job. So Eudora got offered a teaching job in Whitbrow and Frank decided to write a book about an ancestor that owned a plantation across their that he was a slave owner and killed and torched slaves. His slaves ended up killing him. He also was a general in the civil war. The town had a weird habit twice a month they met after church they called it the chase. They would get two pigs put garlands of flowers on them and ferry them across the river and chase them into the woods. Then take a collection plate for the farmer whose turn to donate the pigs. The town had been doing it for decades. Times were tough all around and they voted and debated if they should quit it now or not and voted to end it. Then something had attacked and killed a boy then ate him. Then they tracked his killer with dogs to the woods to a black man and they hanged him. Then all the dogs that had tracked where killed. Then one of the Aldermans that voted to end the chase died. Somebody had dug up all the dead and put them in the school house in the chairs. Some where the freshly dead but others where just bones. Written on the chalkboard was SEND THE PIGS. Things started getting worse and worser. I can't say I enjoyed the book, but I had to keep reading to find out what was really going on. I prefer lighter books. So if you like to be scared this book should do the trick. I was given this ebook in exchange for honest review.
Well the lesson? That is easy! Don't judge people after what they are wearing but after who their character is!
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Phan Thị Thu Hiền
Cute, easy read
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Trần Mai Hạnh
I had never heard of this book, but reading the insert made me want to give it a try. I'm glad I did. This was a beautiful story, and the type of book that I thought about even when I was not reading it because of the sound wisdom it contained. The message was so truthful, that one really has to scratch the surface of things and people to see the true beauty in them, and that it's better to face everything life has to offer, good or bad, than to miss out. There were a few parts of the book that made me cry, as it was at times tragic, and other times extremely moving. A major point of the story that I have to commend E.M. Crane on is that she provided one of the more accurate portrayals of high school that I've read in YA. Perhaps this is because she did not focus on the popular kids, the nerds, or the other "labeled" cliques. Instead, the main character was a "nothing", neither popular or picked on, but one of the ignored kids who falls through the cracks in the confining world of high school. This was an interesting and realistic point-of-view, and I found that I could relate to it better than most of the books I have read. It's too bad this book has not received more recognition than it has. It's a simple plot that still manages to get to the heart of some of the more complex problems within the human experience, and at the same time tell an interesting story.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Victor Hugo
Abigail Jane Stewart, called Abby by her family and friends, is eleven years old and living in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania when the American army arrives there in December 1777. Abby is mostly worried about her mother and her new baby brother, because five of her brothers died in infancy and she is afraid for this new baby. She thinks war is an adventure and doesn’t understand how serious it is. However, when Abby, her mother, and her two sisters get a job doing laundry for General Washington, Abby and her sisters learn firsthand about the horrors of war. Determined to do their part to help, they sew for the soldiers, and visit the sick and injured soldiers in the encampment. In the process, Abby matures and understands the sacrifices of the soldiers, and that freedom is worth fighting for. I first read The Winter of Red Snow in 1996, when it was first published as one of the first books in the Dear America series. Each book in the series is the fictional diary of a preteen or young teenage girl living during an important time in American history. Out of the many books in the series, this one remains one of my favorites. The Dear America series truly brings history to life and helped me develop a love for historical fiction, and I am glad to see the series is being brought back into print for a new generation of readers. Highly recommended.
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.