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Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Destek Yayınları
It takes a little bit for the book to develop, but it really gives you a great picture of Henry VIII England.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Remzi Kitabevi
um... meh.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Alfa Yayınları
I was amused. I can see the series wrapping up in a few books. Its been good. Nothing surprising really in this book. It was good, solid. I'll probably reread it later on to catch anything I missed in my speed read though it. Rachel was kick ass as always. Nice to see Trent. Ivy made me sad (tear up like for real too)
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: İş Bankası Kültür Yayınları
Ethan Frome packs a hefty emotional jab in the eye. It's that good. My edition came packed with a couple of short stories as well; a couple of them were really boring, but "Xingu" was a lot of fun: "Xingu: I have known cases where it has changed a whole life."
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: A Yayınları
So effing weird. Awesome.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından:
freaky. wierd. paranoiac.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Everest Yayınları
This is one of those books where blurbs and reviews ruin the experience. Prior to hitting page 1, the reader is advised that things may not be what they appear to be, and thus, I found myself constantly looking to deconstruct the language and prose for an advance sense of where the story was heading. I wish the publisher of the book would have been more discreet and simply let the reader experience the book without projecting too much of anything.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Altın Kitaplar - Boyama ve Çocuk Kitapları
Loved the movie with Colin Firth so had to read the play. Such a cute one! Only wish it was longer...
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Parıltı Yayınları
Trixie Beldon was my favorite detective when I was a kid, and I read the whole series more than once ... this first book and the second that followed were the two best, and I still enjoyed them very much as I read them yesterday. Not completely believable, but lots of fun. August 2013 ... just re-read this first installment, and again fell in love with these believable characters. Going to enjoy the series again, reading with a friend! May 2016 ... just needed a quick read, and thoroughly enjoyed Trixie again. Just good, clean, fun, kids working to solve a mystery and help others. Just love the concept here.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Engin Yayınevi
"Thuvia, Maid of Mars" is the 4th of 11 John Carter novels from the pen of Edgar Rice Burroughs. It first appeared in April 1916, as a three-part serial in the magazine "All Story Weekly." This is the first Carter novel that does not feature John Carter himself as the central character; he only makes a brief cameo appearance early on. Instead, the action mantle is taken up by Carthoris, Carter's son, but fortunately, Carter Junior turns out to be just as good a swashbuckler as the old man. In this installment, Princess Thuvia of Ptarth has been kidnapped by the spineless Prince Astok of Dusar, which abduction almost causes a world war on Barsoom (Mars). Young Carthoris, in his quest to free his beloved princess, runs across deserted cities, a forgotten kingdom, banths (10-legged Barsoomian lions), ethereal warriors, mucho swordplay, giant white apes, and on and on. As is usual for these books, the amount of action that Burroughs packs into a small compass is quite surprising. Whereas previous Carter books seem to read more like fantasy/fairy tales than science fiction, this installment veers even more to the fantastic, mainly in the use of those phantom warriors just mentioned. These bowmen are called up from the minds of the remaining members of the lost city of Lothar, and have no "real" concrete existence. However, their arrows can still kill. In this book we also get, for the first time, a nice, detailed look at life in Helium; what the people do, how they live and the like. We also receive a biological explanation of how Carthoris, who was 10 years old but a seeming adult in the previous books, got to be that way. The worldwide peace that apparently prevails at the end of book 3, "The Warlord of Mars," is shown in this volume to be not as widespread as was inferred, which makes for some nice tense situations. So this is a good, fast-moving, detailed entry in the series. There are some minor problems of inconsistency and fuzzy writing, however, although not as prevalent as in previous entries. For example, in one scene, Carthoris is said to be fighting a force of a dozen Dusarians; three of these are killed, and so three are left. Huh? Carthoris seems to know exactly where to find water in the dead city of Aaanthor, despite the fact that he has never been there before. Wha? Vas Kor, one of Carthoris' chief enemies, fails to recognize him merely because Carthoris is dirty, tired and covered with blood; this is just a bit hard to swallow. Perhaps worst of all, the book ends extremely abruptly, just as all of Barsoom is about to be plunged into that world war. We never learn the fate of several of the main villains, nor do we see the end of hostilities as the realization of the true facts becomes known. This is a short book, and would not have suffered by the addition of such scenes to make it more satisfying. Still, this is a fun entry in the John Carter series, one that all lovers of fast-moving fantasy should enjoy.
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