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Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Sony Music
Very nice book
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Doğan Kitap
I have a persian translation by Najaf Daryabandi. It's a great book, which influences your heart and soul by simple poetical words. It's a collection of advices from "the messanger" about different aspects of life.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Antrenman Yayıncılık
These short poems about what happened to the author as a child are heart breaking. You can feel the pain and sadness she felt in her words. Such a short book but so worth the wait I had for it! Easily read by a youth, but earth shaking sadness as and adult reader. I also think it would encourage children who have been hurt to speak up about their own story. A must read!
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Timaş Yayınları
This is one of the most difficult texts to read—poorly written, racist and historically inaccurate. I recommend theBook of Mormon only as Mark Twain put it as: "chloroform in print."
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Barcelona
LOved this book. Lots of history about the Russiam Amber room and the search for it.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Doğan Egmont Yayıncılık
After a slow introduction by a whiny narrator with few redeemable qualities, the magic and mystery of this book won me over. The keep of the title refers to the center of a reconstructed castle in...Austria? Transylvania? The narrator, without his smart phone and gps is not sure, but he manages to become likable and more human. Oh, there's also an alternate story set in the good ol' US about a creative writing teacher and one of her inmate students (Note: Not quite intimate) in the prison where she works. These two worlds become one in a satisfying tale about redemption. No, not King Arthur on meth, but not bad.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Altın Kitaplar
sick
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından:
This beautifully written novel tells the story of one woman's journey of self-discovery. The novel doesn't only contend with Ana Howland's increasing sense of being smothered by a domineering and controlling husband, but also shows her growing realization that she has always lived under the overbearing weight of an oppressive relationship. Neither her authoritarian mother nor her dictatorial husband can accept her as a separate and imperfect person. The Road from La Cueva is full of metaphor and in the hands of Sheila Ortego, the use of this device brings a richness and poetry to a topic that might seem trite in other hands. We are given a deeper glimpse into Ana's struggles through the images of the hostile road from La Cueva, the stubborn clay shaped by the potter, and the Changing Woman Ceremony (sometimes called the Sunrise Ceremony). The road to and from Ana's home is a very tangible representation of those oppressive relationships in her life. When this dirt road is dry, it is as hard and unyielding as rock ... ready to tear up and break what dares to pass over it. Wet, the road is even worse. It oozes over and sucks everything into it with "a satisfied, brown belch." The beauty of the imperfect is gorgeously represented through the craft of pottery. As Ana learns this craft from Michael, a co-worker, she notices that one of his creations has an uneven rim. He ran his fingers around the rim of the cup. "See how this isn't even? The Japanese call this shibui, the flaw that makes something beautiful. The shape has to have some room, some freedom." ... "Like with people," he said, and she nodded. It is this very room and freedom that is lacking in Ana's life. She has allowed the oppressive behaviors of others to weigh down her very being and she knows that it is something only she can change. One of the most beautiful chapters in the book is the one describing the Changing Woman Ceremony, a Native American ceremony celebrating the change from girlhood to womanhood. Ana already knows that the means to change her life is within reach. It becomes more apparent as she watches the ceremony and recognizes her own internal strength and power as a woman. No longer will she be passively shaped by others. Ana already has the ability to gain command over her weaknesses, to be physically and emotionally strong, and to endure and suffer with dignity. Before the readers' eyes, "[she is shaped:] ... into the woman she [is:] to become." Her deep compassion and resilience form a strong core around which to emerge. The Road from La Cueva is an encouraging look at the power we all have to shape our own lives. The passion and beauty of the writing is something that will draw me back to this story repeatedly.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Emre Plak
this book is so deep... lol jk i still love it!
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: 5 RENK YAYINEVİ
The book is mostly interesting anecdotes, such as how Roe v. Wade caused a crime drop in the nation's large cities 20 years later, and how test scores reveal which teachers are cheating for their students. Many reviewers have complained the book has no central theme; this is only partly correct. The big theme I took from the book is that conventional wisdom is often wrong, and that with the right data, we can find out how things really work (a similar theme was explored in "Moneyball") as opposed to statistically irrelevant personal experiences, which is how most people operate.
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