Ivan Vilovski itibaren Bhorande, Maharashtra, India

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11/21/2024

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Ivan Vilovski Kitabın yeniden yazılması (10)

2019-04-09 12:41

Mizanül Kübra, Dört Büyük Mezhebin Fıkıh Kitabı - Abdül Vehhab-ı Şa'rani TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi

Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Furkan Yayınları

I grew up with Stephen King's books, and, having lived in Maine most of my life and harboring a coming-and-going desire to write fiction throughout most of that time, he will always be an inspiration, no matter how crappy some of his books are (and, really, even the worst of the lot are readable). The idea of making it big within any realm of popular entertainment while remaining in the state of Maine seems unfathomable, but King, God love him, is living proof that it can happen, it can be done. He is a source of more hope than he may realize. "It" is a fat, great, gooey clump of everything that is everything about Stephen King. Not much is scarier than growing up, and childhood horrors are vividly evoked throughout. All those horrible creatures that used to live under your bed and in your closet when you were seven? The entire cast of characters makes an appearance here. I'm admittedly not as well read as some, maybe even most, but I've yet to encounter a more frightening personification of evil than Pennywise the clown. It's a shame they had to make a dumb TV-movie version of the book, because now it's probably impossible for anyone not to think of Tim Curry while reading the clown scenes, but at least he did a good job. I happened to read "It" when I was about twelve or thirteen, the same age as most of the characters in the book. My parents were pretty strict about what I could and couldn't read and watch and listen to, but for some reason they were lenient when it came to Stephen King, which is funny since of all the books I could have checked out of the library, his were probably pound for pound the dirtiest things I could possibly be looking at, barring porn. It wasn't like they hadn't read him before. They knew what his stuff was like. I don't see them caring too much about my support of "local talent". What made him okay, in their eyes? It's interesting. Anyway, the scenes of kids just hanging out, making fun of each other, wasting time playing weird made-up games, fighting, crying...I felt nostalgia reading this. Nostalgia! At thirteen! Looking back fondly on times I was currently experiencing! That's amazing to me. I know I felt it. This is a great, great book, his masterpiece I think.

2019-04-09 18:41

Muhteşem Matematik - Jonathan Litton TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi

Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları

I read just about everything Caroline Gordon wrote starting 1992 when we moved into the Clarksville house she and Allen Tate lived in from 1932. For some reason I've been moved to read much of her work again recently. I remember loving NONE SHALL LOOK BACK, but I realize now I'm confusing it with PENHALLY and perhaps other works as well. I give high marks to almost everything Caroline Gordon writes, and this book is no exception; however, I feel the need to make a distinction regarding it's comparison to GONE WITH THE WIND. This is Gordon's major Civil War novel that came out in 1937 shortly after Margaret Mitchell's GONE WITH THE WIND. Apparently it has been thought that timing would have made all the difference... in other words, that if NONE SHALL LOOK BACK had beat Mitchell's book to the press it would have enjoyed the that success. I don't agree with that conclusion. NONE SHALL LOOK BACK has been touted by some as a major Civil War novel, perhaps surpassing Mitchell's. I recognize it is phenomenal in coverage of battles, details of the soldiers' lives and struggles. Gordon did her research and has written an exemplary book in that sense, a description of battles that is historically correct but fictionalized by adding her own characters and a bit of plot about how they were affected by the war. GONE WITH THE WIND, on the other hand, is a love story that takes place within and around the setting of the Civil War and its aftermath. There really is no comparison. Mitchell's book is always going to have the upper hand in terms of romantic poignancy and character development, while Gordon's book is a masterpiece from the historian's point of view.

Okuyucu Ivan Vilovski itibaren Bhorande, Maharashtra, India

Kullanıcı, bu kitapları portalın yayın kurulu olan 2017-2018'de en ilginç olarak değerlendirdi "TrendKitaplar Kütüphanesi" Tüm okuyucuların bu literatürü tanımalarını tavsiye eder.