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Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Araf Yayınları
I could read Artemis Fowl All Day Long!
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kontrol Yayıncılık
The best one of the series!!!!!!! Loved it!!
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Gpo
good up till the point in time they were supposed to leave VietNam and became a prisoner in Laos
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kapı Yayınları
The second book in the A Song of Ice and Fire series is not one hundred per cent as good as the previous one, but still so very, very good. The characters, the plot, the scenery. Everything is so very alive in this series, and I love it so much. Not a long review, but yes. It's good.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Marsık Kitap
I have read all the books in this series and really enjoyed them. If you like psychological mystery, you'll like these.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: İthaki Yayınları
I'm really, really confused. Hopefully it will all be explained in October
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından:
See my review here: http://everydayreading.blogspot.com/2...
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Sigmund Freud
This is VERY similar to Robin McKinley. She's created an "original fairy tale" - and her strong suit here is the characters.
abandoned
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Sebat Yayınları
I liked this book, but I wasn't expecting to have to work as hard as I did. When I pick up James Joyce or Thomas Pynchon (which I don't...I'm just giving examples of non-linear, postmodern, absurd, abstract prose) I expect to have a little trouble understanding the themes, the characters or even the plot. I did not think that picking up a collection of short stories by someone I've never heard of would have me so flummoxed. Maybe I didn't read carefully enough? That's very possible. Or maybe they're obtuse and esoteric. Also possible. But if that's the case, I think Link (which I can't write or read without thinking of Zelda) was obtuse with a purpose. Which at least I considered, so maybe I understand them better than I thought. Or maybe I'm wrong. That's the thing about these stories. They're very entertaining with crazy characters and completely weird, fantastic plots replete with ghosts, Greek gods, the underworld (lots of reference to the underworld), the Donner Party (parts of them...no pun intended) and a prosthetic nose collection. They were engaging and kept me guessing-- with regard to the plot as well as what exactly Link was *getting at*. What's with all the fairy tale references? Why the very, very permeable membrane between life and afterlife, landscape and dreamscape, in all the stories? And why is everyone so weird, in general? I've seen Link classified as a horror writer and a fantasy writer. I don't think these stories fit either of those genres. They're not scary, bloody, gruesome or violent. And they're not fantasy if dwarves and halflings are prerequisites for the fantasy genre. With that said, "The Specialist's Hat" is one of the most frightening stories I've ever read, and "Travels with the Snow Queen" is definitely fantastical. But overall, Link seems to float between genres, occasionally settling in magic realism, which makes the stories all the more compelling. I will definitely read more of Link's collections. They're interesting and I'm determined to figure out what's going on in her world.
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