Hien Tang từ Küçükkızılkum/Bartın Province, Turkey

hientang

11/05/2024

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

Hien Tang Sách lại (11)

2019-11-05 10:31

Thực Đơn Cơm Gia Đình 3 Món Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Cẩm Tuyết

http://breesabookworm.blogspot.com/ This book was written by Kaye Dacus and released last year. It is a Christian Fiction Romance. I got this copy through a galley grab! This is the first book in The Matchmaker's Series. Basically, a group of grandmothers want their grandkids married so they can get them some great grandkids.Their role in the book is minimal, though, as this book focuses on Zarah and Bobby. I love stories like this. Like where a past love is rekindled. Zarah and Bobby were in love and soon to be engaged fourteen years ago, but a misunderstanding occured and they parted bitterly. However, neither ever got over one another, so when they end up going to the same church and running in the same circles all those years later...things get interesting! The love story is not the only thing going on this book. There is also a crime to be solved, and as Bobby is an investigator, we get to follow along as he tries to close his case, which somehow involves Zarah...the question is, is she guilty or not? The romance itself is very sweet, and I love the way it is written. The book is in third person with both Bobby and Zarah's points of view. There are also best friend's of Zarah: Flannery and Caylor, (um, yes, those are for real the names of the main girls in this book!). I imagine future books will focus on each of them...they made for great side characters, so I look forward to their stories of love. :)

2019-11-05 13:31

Tự Học Microsoft Powerpoint 2010 Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Nhiều Tác Giả

Whether to put more emphasis on one's politics or one's personal life has been a running debate between activists, organizers, and rebels of all sorts for a long time now. Where does your personal life stop and your efforts to change the world begin? Is there something in between? How do you go about living your life that goes along with your principles? These questions sometimes haunt me, because you can never really separate yourself from mainstream consumer society no matter how much you dislike capitalism. However, in this life, while you make compromises so you can exist, at what point do you go too far? I'll usually veer away from these sorts of thoughts since I've seen it cripple many politically-minded people and make their heads spin. The worst part is the questions continually come back. Relationships are a huge part of who we are simply as human beings. Whether it's sex, friendship, love, simple companionship, or something in-between all of these, humans exist as social creatures. In fact, any healthy social movement for change develops strong relationships on individual and mass levels. So what's so radical about that? Well, it may look more radical when you start to think about how many things in our society have been the result of domination, control, and exploitation. Ultimately, much of what we think of as romantic relationships in the West is based on about male control, patriarchy, and jealousy, (which again, we all grew up with in this society). Alternative relationships, or open relationships where no one person has control over another's feelings, is an alternative model. In "Redefining Our Relationships: Guidelines for Responsible Open Relationships," Wendy O Matik, explores how an open relationship, based on trust, honesty, and maturity, would actual work. When it comes down to it, I highly recommend this book. I've gone back and forth on the monogamy vs. polyamory issue. (I don't like the term non-monogamy because I don't like defining myself as what I'm against.) Sometimes I won't do it because my partner is against it, and other times we compromise to adopting it. Wendy writes here that the key towards a successful open relationship is to be honest with one another that humans will be attracted to other people, and they can't shut that part of them down just because they're with someone else. Jealousy, much like rage, can shut a part of you down and hate someone you're supposed to love, or when someone cheats on monagomy. Wendy also makes the good point that relationships aren't just a black/white thing where you have lovers and friends, and nothing else. Another excellent point she makes is that open relationships do not mean irresponsible relationships where you don't have to take your partner's feelings into account or can just go marathon bed-hopping without letting your partner know what's going on. If you're even just curious about open relationships or wish to explore exactly what love is, Wendy-O Matik is a great start, since it's a fast, short enjoyable read.

2019-11-05 15:31

Phòng Và Điều Trị U Xơ Tiền Liệt Tuyến Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn

Sách được viết bởi Bởi:

In the beginning of the book, the protagonist, Liesel Meminger is 9 years old, and on a train with her mother and younger brother, to be taken to a family in Molching, Germany to become their foster daughter. Her mother is in no position to take care of her children and makes this very difficult decision. Her younger brother dies on the train. They stop in the next town to bury him. This is where she steals her first book. The relationships that develop between her foster parents, members of the neighborhood, her friendship with Rudy, her best friend and neighbor; Max, the Jew, as well as the Mayor’s wife, are wonderfully fleshed out by the author, and has the reader experiencing a variety of emotions. The story begins in 1939 and takes us in the 1940s where Hitler reigns with his evil spreading like a cancer. Death himself narrates this World War II story, and tells us Liesel’s story. There are great lines in this book. Example: The narrator, Death himself, describes his job in this way: “I travel the globe as always, handing souls to the conveyor belt of eternity.” The final line in this book is spoken by our narrator Death, “I am haunted by humans.” As for me, I am haunted by the potential evil that is in all of us and what happens when we choose to unleash it. Case in point: The Fuehrer. I loved this book. I’m drawn to books that shows us the capacity of the human spirit, that despite evil and awful things that can happen in one’s life, especially at the hand of another, one can rise above it while still finding the good in life, in people, and still trust in humanity. This book tells a story well worth reading and experiencing. It's witty, charming, and poignant, and captures all the emotions.

Người đọc Hien Tang từ Küçükkızılkum/Bartın Province, Turkey

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.