Dữ liệu người dùng, đánh giá và đề xuất cho sách
Sách được viết bởi Bởi:
I read this book in the 9th grade. The House on Mango Street was an amazing book. It is best to read it with someone or with cliff notes because on the surface it seems to be filled with pointless stories. But if you think through each story and spend time on it, you will understand what is truly going on. It is best for mature audiences, less mature people would probably not even know what is going. It deals deeply with heritage, stereotypes, and relationships. One thing that may make this book harder to read is the lack of quotation marks in dialouge. But it is told from the perspective a pre-teen/teenager, so I think it adds character development. It gives a more realistic effect. All in all, an amazing work. Watch this author...
I honestly cannot say enough good things about this book. To say it elucidated many feelings of my own far more eloquently than I would ever be able to doesn't seem like enough. To say it was the best book I ever read - fiction, nonfiction, essay or textbook - doesn't seem like enough. To say I wish I were Anne Fadiman certainly doesn't say enough and to say that I love it only comes marginally close. All I can say is that I am unendingly grateful I stumbled across it on my mother's "to read" bookshelf one bored summer day and I recommend it most hardily to anyone and everyone who loves books.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Rahul Singhal & Xact Team
totally breathtaking. for the bicentennial of the world communist revolution, one of the world's last lesbians (they have been eliminated by designer viruses) enlists a fleet of angels (informationally translated people) and her ex-girlfriend's (a polar bear) rendition of dante's divine comedy to opera as a global atmospheric holographic performance. that's like page 350 to 375. wow.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Mèo Maverick
I really liked this book. It was fast-paced and interesting. The police chief of a small town just happens to be a woman...and oh yeah, formerly Amish. Although the main character's career path is a little farfetched (becoming a dispatcher with no experience or skills, then going from dispatcher to police officer to detective to police chief in just 8 years), it's not a major part of the plot so I'm willing to overlook it. A little gory at times, but not overdone. I look forward to reading more books by this author. Solid 3.5 stars.
Weird book. There were five or six different character/storylines that sometimes crossed. Ultimately, none of the questions about any of the characters are answered. Unless, like I said, I missed the big philosophical message. Which is entirely possible. Sad, scary, totally gross at some points. Really boring and wordy in others. Not recommended for people with kids!
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Dương Hồng Anh
Ugh, this took forever. Interestingly, the introduction to the Phenomenology is very clear and easy to read in comparison. I still don't understand a lot of what he wrote in this (who does? Hegel's famous last words about the only person who understood him not actually understanding him seem believable), so I'll probably come back to it shortly.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Quang Huệ
This book had a really really good villain and we learn a lot more about Kate's heritage. This book is definitely the best yet. It never drifts into boring or slow. The investigation parts are interesting - the villain's powers really make the book and the end fight pretty cool, bested by Kate's troubles afterwards where she picks it up yet another notch of badassdom. Kate and Curran's battles with each other are hilarious - I kinda prefer them playing pranks on each other than when they actually talk. Though I do wish they'd just listened to each other at the beginning - the 'you stood me up'/'you ran away' was just so childish and stupid. Though I guess it stays true to character - fight fight and more fight, that's what they love in each other. They won't stop fighting but running away would be weak as well. "A tiny sound popped in my ears, and I had the absurd idea that it was my heart forming hairline cracks." "As you wish." I couldn't figure out who was the bigger idiot, him for saying it to me, or me for wanting to drop everything and go straight to him because he said it.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Sherrilyn Kenyon
Okay, so the theme of these books start out a little childish. But, as the books go on, the story becomes darker. J.K. Rowling is an amazing author and these books are incredibly well writted. Again, I suggest reading the books before seeing the movies! They actually go together very well.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Edmondo De Amicis
Saw the play, helped stage it and then went on to read it. Gruesome and ugly, and yet reinforces my belief that even in the worst of situations humane nature bears a dignity that conquers all...
Flatland serves as a reminder that we all have our perspective. Sometimes our perspective may be jaded, corroded, or inadequate. We must always be reminded that we have the power to change our perspective, our thoughts, our lives. We can in control of how we perceive the world, even though the world may not perceive us the way we want.
Sách được viết bởi Bởi: Ngọc Tú
These stories (or pomo belles lettres or what have you) are sometimes what I expected them to be - precious, affected, self-congratulatory, and too eager to go for the easy joke - but mostly, they are absolutely superb. "Suicide as a kind of gift" may be the best two page story I've ever read; "The Depressed Person" is a savage and savagely accurate portrait of solipsism, and it bends the subject matter into the weave of the text in a way that bespeaks a technician paying attention to every level and every element of what he is doing. The brief interviews themselves are always captivating, and at times, particularly in the final pages of the book, transcendent in their insight.
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.