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Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Papersense
Really good. Set in the Village.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kırmızı Kedi Yayınevi
Outstanding writing, pacing, and characters.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından:
I have never hated a book more. One of the few books I've started and never finished because it was so terrible. And I know several people who called this book life-changing. Again, I have to question the company I keep.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Okur Kitaplığı
Images from this book have stayed with me: Pearly and his obsession with fresh paint, the stars in the ceiling at Grand Central, Peter Lake and Beverly Penn, the mysterious wall of fog, the sleigh rides to the Cooheries. It was a perfect piece of magic; I haven't read it in a while, but I used to re-read it every few years. It reminds me of what's beautiful and harsh about New York: "Of all the places in the world, New York was the one where it was easiest to get your blood up. All you had to do was step out on the street, and immediately you were ready to pit two short human legs against the Belmont ponies." So true.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Günışığı Kitaplığı
After meeting the author at a conference, I decided to read the book. It was a fascinating insight on Aspergers.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kidz Redhouse Çocuk Kitapları
This was a great read. I really like how the author included the cultural aspects of how food is incorporated into daily life in China.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Çocuk Gezegeni
** spoiler alert ** I'm just going to leave my reactions in hopes someone out there will comment on what they thought as well. 1. The ending was NOT an ending. I wish the author hadn't died! I'm SURE there would have been more books. 2. I'm so upset the Lisbeth's sister never made it into the books! My suspicion is that even though she was the beautiful, social one in high school that she's going to be someone doing something against the law and still charming people at the same time (I'm thinking a high class hooker). I think it would go well with the underlining theme in the book that sometimes things aren't what they seem and sometimes people who seem all put together are actually psychopaths. :) Great theme.... Plus, Lisbeth has issues with relationships and men, and I bet her sister will too. 3. I was really surprised that Lisbeth and Mikael didn't end up together (not that I expected it to be marriage or something really concrete - but still...). Mikael finally gets serious, but with some new girl? Huh? 4. I loved how Lisbeth (is it her?) points out that everyone is basically done with this case, but she still has to go on. In other words, this awful horrendous story that happened to her is still going to affect her for the rest of her life. It's not a happy ending, even if she does finally get justice. I think in a lot of books that isn't emphasized enough. 5. Hmmmmm... did the rape and the sex have to be so explicit? I think a tamed down version could have been just as powerful and a whole lot less disturbing. I realize the author wants us to be disturbed, but it's a bit extreme. 6. I never found it completely believable that the government (anyone - Swedish or whatever) would have really just ignored Lisbeth's father's crimes. I believe they might have swept it under the rug and then done everything in their power to keep him from committing further crimes. I mean if particular people are assigned solely to this case, couldn't they have him followed constantly? Couldn't they imprison him in their fancy flat? It doesn't make sense. I can see people doing extreme things to cover up their own stupidity, but why did they not take better care of Lisbeth's father in the first place? And once he was no longer an asset, why wasn't he imprisoned then? I didn't quite find that whole situation completely believable. Not all the men involved were crazy, it seems like someone would have dealt with him earlier. 7. Lisbeth's crazy brother - is it possible for someone like that (who can not feel pain) to really be as highly functioning as him at his age in such a dangerous position? I don't know... just wondering... I would think that it wasn't. But, I found the explanation about him being exceptional strong and large believable enough.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Remzi Kitabevi
I first read The Glass Menagerie as a high school freshman, and I loved it from the beginning. I was a rather shy girl, and I related to Laura’s shyness. The family is rather dysfunctional, though, and so I’d say that’s where our similarities end. Nevertheless, Tom’s frustration in his dead-end job and life, Amanda’s unrealistic dreaming, and Jim O’Connor’s positive encouragement of shy Laura all resonated with teenaged me. Ultimately, the dysfunctional family’s collapse and the obvious symbolism of the breaking glass menagerie just made the play magical to my 14-year-old self. It was so clear and yet so beautifully rendered in setting, character, and dialogue. I loved the dialogue (I still have passages memorized), the darkening set, and the concept of the entire play being a “memory” play.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: TÜBİTAK Yayınları
I read this book primarily because if I were to watch the movie, I wanted to have read the book first. The book was decent enough and not really hard to get through except for the fact that I can't believe people truly lived like this...perhaps I grew up a little too sheltered, but parts of this had to be made up! By the way, after reading the book, I'd watch the movie if it came on cable or borrow it from the library, but certainly wouldn't pay to see it or go out of my way to watch it.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Doğumgünü Yayıncılık
Robotham’s latest thriller brings back his original protagonist from ‘Suspect’, psychologist Joe O’Laughlin. In this book Joe is battling a psychopath, a grief-stricken teenage girl, Parkinson’s disease, and doubts about his wife’s fidelity. He’s now a part-time professor at the University, spending the rest of his time as a stay-at-home dad to his two young daughters. Joe is asked by the police to talk with a woman threatening to jump from the Clifton Suspension Bridge. When he arrives he finds Christine Wheeler naked, with SLUT written on her stomach and a cell phone to her ear. When he tries talking to her, she whispers, “You don’t understand…” and jumps to her death. It seems to be a clear case of suicide, until Christine’s teenage daughter Darcy shows up on Joe’s doorstep and insists that her mother was afraid of heights and would never have committed suicide in that manner. At the request of the grieving girl, Joe starts investigating and gets help from his friend Vincent Ruiz, now retired from the police force. When a friend of Christine’s is also found dead of an apparent suicide, the police are forced to open an investigation and consider Joe’s conviction that the women were being manipulated. Joe is a compassionate character who is easy to like, because he always tries to do the right thing. He genuinely cares about others and wants to help them. But he also has to answer to his wife’s fears that his involvement with the case will bring danger to their own family. This book was absolutely riveting, the type that grabs hold of your attention and doesn’t let it go until the last page is turned.
Tarafından yazılmış kitap Tarafından: Kapı Yayınları
Çok tatlı ergen aşk hikayesi, çağrışımsal çizimler, köktendinci bir yetiştirmeden biri hakkında okumak ilginç. Şu an nerede olduğu hakkında daha fazla bilgi edinmek isterdi, ama belki bir devam filmi var. Battaniye 2: Elektrikli Boogaloo.
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