Federica Zoccari từ Chiang Dao, Chiang Dao District, Chiang Mai, Thailand

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11/21/2024

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

Federica Zoccari Sách lại (10)

2019-10-24 17:30

100 Từ Trung - Việt Đầu Tiên Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi:

My sixth grade teacher revealed to me one day that my beloved math teacher, Mrs. Farca, had Written a Book. It was called Earth and could be found at the library, he said, and I found it pretty soon—I can’t remember whether I first read it during that year or the next. So there is my conflict of interest and, one presumes, my principal reason for having such a lingering fondness for this obscure book. That said, though, science fiction of just this sort was about the only thing I read in those days anyway. Chiefly I suppose Earth is a story about a highly technological culture meeting a primitivist one. Ames, a space explorer from a world where most everybody is a clone and people are so dependent on their omnipresent gadgetry that they’ve given up walking, is freshly arrived at the domed village of hunter-gatherer survivors of a long-ago holocaust that's left the planet lifeless outside their little five-mile terrarium. A lot of time goes to the exploration of the curiously structured, isolationist society of the villagers, and to Ames’ awakening as a biological creature, exposed to the great outdoors for the first time, learning the forgotten arts of walking and eating. As he slowly confronts the sterility of the life he was born to, the villagers are drawn into their own crisis as their rigid code of autonomy, the paranoid aftermath of their wartorn past, begins to fail them. And all of this of course comes to a head just about in time for the space cavalry to arrive. It’s a sweet book, really. I reread it many times and I have a real affection for it. There is a goofy amateurishness about it at times, ideas sketched in with slapdash gestures, but it’s a sturdy multithreaded bit of sci-fi ambition for all that.

2019-10-24 21:30

Tình Mẫu Tử Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Maria Bailey

When i first got this book in my hands i thought it would be awesome....and it was indeed...At the beginning, "stolen" gives you the impression that is just a very good psychological thriller, but as you continue reading it you realise that it's much more than that. This book, makes you think about the complexity of human relationships and how much things can change and depend apon different circumstances. SPOILERS AHEAD! So this book is about this girl, Gemma, that is being kidnapped by a man, Ty. He takes her to the Australian Outback (or something like that, a desert anyway), and he won't let her leave. He actually believes that if she stays there for a long time, even without her will, she will get used to it and will love him. Well clearly the guy's a psycopath. But as the days pass, Gemma's behavior starts changing. Many people who've read this book believe it's just Stockholmes syndrom, but i disagree with that. Gemma, never says that she loves Ty, or that she finds him attractive, she never has the urge to kiss him, or hug him or whatever...In adittion to that, Ty is always nice to her, he didn't rape her, or hit her on anything...I mean, is it that impossible? I can't figure it out myself. The tragic irony in the whole book, is that Ty is actually a good guy...if he hadn't kidnapped Gemma, if he had just tried and talk to her, they could have been a great couple. But he see's her like the camel he cought. He thinks she's just an animal that will obey to his rules...

Người đọc Federica Zoccari từ Chiang Dao, Chiang Dao District, Chiang Mai, Thailand

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.