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Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kapı Yayınları
This is such an amazing book! It may sound like a short young adult book about a little girl going through problems in foster homes, but it is far from that. This is deffinatly an adult book with problems that I couldn't even imagine having. The way this is written is so descriptive and just pulls you in to the way Astrid thinks and feels and how she discovers the world. I feel like each section of the book is a brand new book because an entirely new story is being told about a phase in her life. I highly reccomend it.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Aganta Kitap
I think this was one of those books that was praised so much by the time I read it it wasn't as good as I thought it was going to be. Don't get me wrong, it was good... but, not what I was hoping for. There were two problems I had with the book. One was that there were moments I found unneccessary that just caused the book to drag. I read this in October so I can't recall any specific instances. The best example I can give were the parts following Norah. I didn't find myself connected to them at all, and I think that also relates to the second problem I had with the book... So much of the book was about Norah's downward spiral after "losing" one of her children. I don't know why, but I had such a huge problem that she couldn't get over it. Before you attack me and say stuff like: "Well that's because you're not a mom, you don't know the bond that is created!" Let me say that, yes, that is why. I haven't birthed anything. I've lost people close to me and it hurts and is hard to get over... but you do keep on going and eventually life goes on and you can maintain the balance you had before hand. You would think that yes, losing a child you gave birth to is hard, but it wouldn't be as hard as one that you raised as well, you know? And you would also think that the consolation of still having that son would be something that would help you start to recover quicker. I could completely understand why Dr. Henry was upset after that day. Guilty conscience. But Norah's continuous moping for the years to come... I don't get it. It was why I enjoyed the parts following Caroline and Phoebe. Also because their story felt like it was continuing and growing while the story of the Henry family just sort of sat there... in the doldrums. You could easily look at that and say it was Edward's choice, and I accept that. I can even see it and understand it. The comparison of the two family's is full of such stark contradiction, that you can see the consequences one action can have and different people. How the same action can be a blessing and a curse. With that said, I'm going to say that you really need to form your own opinion about this book, which you should do with every book I review. You also need to understand that this is my opinion and I'm entitled to it. Obviously there have been a lot of other people who enjoyed this book, so take my review with a grain of salt. Good day!
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Can Çocuk Yayınları
A fictional account of Laura Bush that is creative and insightful!
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kolektif Kitap
Vladimir Mayakovsky (1893-1930) was a Russian poet and dramatist who had a powerful influence on the writers of his day. He initially supported the aims and programs of Bolshevism – in addition to writing serious poetry he created many propaganda posters – and traveled widely outside Russia, but he gradually became disillusioned with the nature and direction of the Soviet Union under Stalin, writing satirical drama that was quickly suppressed. He died playing Russian roulette. Mayakovsky’s poetry can be vigorous, rough, and powerful: “Your thought,/ musing on a sodden brain/ like a bloated lackey on a greasy couch,/ I’ll taunt with a bloody morsel of heart;/ and satiate my insolent, caustic contempt.” He can also be exquisitely sensitive and introspective, as in his last poem, “Past One O’Clock”: “Past one o’clock. You must have gone to bed. The Milky Way streams silver through the night. I’m in no hurry; with lightning telegrams I have no cause to wake or trouble you. And, as they say, the incident is closed. Love’s boat has smashed against the daily grind. Now you and I are quits. Why bother then to balance mutual sorrows, pains, and hurts. Behold what quiet settles on the world. Night wraps the sky in tribute from the stars. In hours like these, one rises to address The ages, history, and all creation.” In “The Bedbug,” a delightfully satirical and amusing play, Mayakovsky uses the figure of Prisypkin, a former Party member in about 1920, to contrast those dedicated to the purity of the Revolution with those intent on working for their own material and social advantage. At the end of the first half of the play, a fire consumes the place and personages present for Prisypkin’s wedding. In the second half, fifty years later, Prisypkin is discovered frozen in a block of ice in the basement of the burned-out building and is resuscitated, along with a bedbug crawling out of his collar; mutual misunderstandings between Prisypkin and “modern” Soviet citizens inevitably ensue, and Prisypkin and the bedbug are left living in a cage in the zoo. For us today, the play provides prescient insights into the nature and course of Russian history over the course of the 20th century, even as it sheds light on the intellectual ferment and variety of Russia in the late 1920’s.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Küsurat Yayınları
Ok. So I read it. What a S_L_O_W read, and a little confusing. All the hype I've heard about this book over the years did not match the reading experience for me, at least. I get the general point of the book, that without law any society can quickly move toward savagry. But the way Golding wrote was just so abstract and heavily detailed, yet without giving INFORMATIVE detail, I just felt a little clueless on just about every page. (I still don't know how the boys even got there!) Really pretty disappointing, but I can finally say I read it. Just answer me this - WHY is this book very often standard literature for middle/high school aged students?!?!?! Good grief... Now, onto a book I can look forward to reading.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Bir Ocak Eğitim Yayıncılık
I did enjoy the book but pair it with the bonus novella and it makes for a long read. I wish the recipes were in the back of the book so I could have skipped over those. I felt at times the plot did drag on a little too long and there were points where the book was lagging plot wise but overall it was a good book. I read cozies often and while I am not in love with the series I am planning on reading the next book, hopefully things will pick up.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Karakarga Yayınları
Ooooh.. This book.. What can I say about this book.. I wasn't too fond of it AT ALL. Probably due to the fact that I hate books about witches. I saw, "Beautiful Creatures" and assumed maybe it'd be a new type of race. Did anyone notice how Ethan is more feminine than I am? I mean, the only time I EVER saw a little masculinity (If that's a word) was when Ridley was around and he couldn't help but stare. I even had this problem where when i'd describe the book, i'd call Ethan a she.. I hated Ethan's nickname for Lena. L. Just L. Couldn't we think of something better than the first letter of her name? A lot of things were cliche in this book. Book Of Moons? What's up with everyone and cresent moons? UGH. Sarafine.. She was just classic evil chick. Corset, gothic looking, yada yada.. There are just so many things about this book that I hate so, tell me, why am I reading the sequel..?
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Doğan Kitap
This is a very good read. I actually could not put it down. This author can take a series of common events and weave them into something really out of the ordinary.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Destek Medya Yayınları
This book is worth mentioning since I feel like it made me about 50% of what I am - basically after discovering it at the age of 17, I wanted to be George Steiner (polyglot, massively erudite) but also still be a rock musician - whether I have succeeded is anyone's guess. It also, for a few years, made me think I wanted to go into linguistics, until I discovered that wouldn't really involve as much literature and philosophy as I'd imagined (there was one particular phonetics class that kind of broke my spirit) - in any event, I've returned to this hybrid of linguistics, literature and philosophy many times. Appending an analogy I just thought of - I suspect taking Steiner as your inspiration to be a linguist is similar to reading Witold Rybczynski and deciding to be an architect.
Definitely better than The Da Vinci Code but still overrated.
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