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Bu sayfada sizin için tüm bilgileri topladık Yarım Kalan "Devrim" kitap, ücretsiz indir, hoş okuma sevgili okuyucular için benzer kitaplar, yorumlar, yorumlar ve bağlantılar aldı. Yarım Kalan "Devrim" Türkiye’nin bağımsızlığı, devlet ve milet hayatını bütün boyutlarıyla kuşatan ve anlamlı kılan, ona doğasına uygun “ethos”u sağlayan ülkü. Ülkemizin toplumsal, kültürel, siyasal, teknolojik ve ekonomik bir geleceği olacaksa tüm bu alanlarla ilgili olarak sarsılmaz bir özgüven yanı sıra “istiklâl-i tâme”mizin de kazanılmış olması zorunlu. Ilgaz bu anafikirden hareketle Türkiye’nin bağımsız geleceğine yakın geçmişten bu yana takoz koyan güçleri veya engel olan tertipleri zevkli deneme üslubuyla ele alıyor. Portal - TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi, editörlerimiz tarafından toplanan içeriği beğendiğinizi umuyor Yarım Kalan "Devrim" ve tekrar bize bak, arkadaşlarına da tavsiyede bulun. Ve geleneklere göre - sadece sizin için iyi kitaplar, sevgili okurlarımız.
Yarım Kalan "Devrim" ayrıntılar
- Yayımcı: İZ YAYINCILIK
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- Boyutlar: Normal Boy
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Yarım Kalan "Devrim" Kitabın yeniden yazılması
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clickshoaib
Muhammed Shoaib clickshoaib — If you are a fan of the band Neutral Milk Hotel and/or Rock Plaza Central, you’re familiar with the way some of the songs descend into a glorious cacophonous mess at the end (similar to The Beatles song “A Day in the Life”). What seems to be a chaotic aural blend of instrumentation somehow works; it’s pleasing to the ear. When I started Salman Rushdie’s Fury, I had the same hope for it, that somehow the jumbled chaos of characters, settings, and events would evolve into a story not simply understandable but beautiful, and not beautiful in spite of its flaws but because of them. Unfortunately, I couldn’t have been more wrong. Rushdie’s exegesis on the supposed furies that we all feel hinges on his protagonist, Malik Solanka, an Indian philosophy professor who previously lived in England but moved to The Big Apple when he suddenly found himself standing over his wife and children with a carving knife. He became famous in England for making dolls, specifically one called “Little Brain,” a little girl puppet who interviews famous philosophers. The show became a huge success, Solanka sells out to commercial producers, and this ultimately leads to his "fury." Oh, and did I mention that he drinks? A lot? He’s not the most likable fellow on whom to pin a story; not that protagonists need to be likable (look at Tolstoy or Dostoyevsky, hell, almost anything by an Eastern European author), but they do need to be engrossing and, sadly, Solanka just isn’t. Indeed, every character in this book is simply a cardboard cutout: Lifeless and un-interesting. And then there are the numerous sub-plots (the murders of NYC women for example) that are never completely realized or related to Solanka, so I question what they are even doing in the story. I understand that this is supposed to be satirical, that Rushdie is poking fun at contemporary American life among the intellectual and the wealthy. I also understand that he is playing with our conception of the furies (female spirits of justice and vengeance) of ancient Greek and Roman mythology. “Life is fury. Fury—sexual, oedipal, political, magical, brutal—drives us to our finest heights and coarsest depths. This is what we are, what we civilize ourselves to disguise—the terrifying human animal in us, the exalted, transcendent, self-destructive, untrammeled lord of creation. We raise each other to the heights of joy. We tear each other limb from bloody limb,” Solanka says. However, good satire is supposed to expose certain profound truths about its subjects, and I don’t think Rushdie does this with any success. He doesn’t make us feel for his characters (in fact, the entire story strikes me as a bit misogynistic), and he doesn’t make us want to investigate what he is mocking. Don’t peg me as a Rushdie hater; I loved Midnight’s Children! But this definitely does not do for New York what Midnight’s Children did for Bombay. This is a different Rushdie; this Rushdie has embraced certain critics’ views of his work, the critics who praise him for doing things with style and language that no one else can accomplish and say that this makes up for his somewhat loose grip on plot and character development. It’s almost as if he took these reviews as a personal challenge to see how far he could go before readers noticed that he’s just fucking with us. And the result sucks.
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_ang_inxiong
Jinxiong Yang _ang_inxiong — Set in 18th century Japan, that remains relatively isolated, the Dutch have a trading outpost on Dejima Island off Nagasaki. Here they remain isolated except for minimal official contact. The central character is a young, idealistic Dutchman who has signed on to help his superior root out corruption, however, he becomes embroiled in the intrigue and involved in a romance of sorts. There are interesting insights into character in the face of such contrasting cultural visions.
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ercetinmurat
Murat Erçetin ercetinmurat — This book is a high-school Engligh teacher's nightmare. Proulx uses sentence fragments like nobody's business. Subordinate clauses abound, tied to subordinate clauses that have no independent clause to carry them along. I see it. I know it. And I love it. The style fits the landscape, however. Not that Biddo is the saltiest of Maine towns, but the clipped speech of New England -- and obviously Newfoundland -- was still a part of my childhood. The fragments mirror those patterns. The book is dark, deep, and closed-off. The characters slowly reveal themselves and are disinclined to share emotions but love a good, gossipy story. They drink a little too much tea for my American palate, but other than that, I could live with these people. Well, if I ever went home again. As Proulx says, "...but what was the cure for homesickness? Everybody that went away suffered a broken heart. 'I'm coming back someday,' they all wrote. But never did. The old life was too small to fit anymore."
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nikkers
Nicole Dominic nikkers — Honestly, I was expecting this story to be awful based on other reviews I read. But I thought it was well written and well formatted. It did exactly what it was supposed to do… whet my appetite for the upcoming series. I’ve gotta say, this was the best short story I’ve ever had the pleasure to read. And even though it was short (8 chapters), I felt like I knew the main characters well enough. So much so, I felt what they felt... my emotions were everywhere just like theirs were. Make sure to have the Kleenex handy! Especially for chapter 7. Overall, it was a truly sweet and moving story. The shortness of it worked well for me, meaning I can get the ‘feel good’ mojo from it quickly in the future. Always a plus since I read so slow.
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