Friday, April 17, 2015

2 years ago


I have devoted a large part of July to reading carole amiel old Maria Lang as I have not read before, but I think I'll leave Lang analyzes to Helena. Instead, I thought to write a little fast for three other books I've read over the summer. John Ajvide Lindqvist - Little Star last of all (?) I read actually little star, partly because I got it for my birthday, which meant that the words were there on the bookshelf (but I had planned to read it anyway, it just had not gotten around). My assessment? Well, it's good, but human guise is still better. Little Star is so bizarre that you feel bad. In short, if there is someone who against all odds have not read it, so it's about the superannuated dance star Lennart who finds a babe in the woods - a little girl can scream a completely pure tone. Lennart gets so excited about this that he decides to bring the girl home. He shuts her up in his basement and decides to raise her in secret, because he imagines that he is with the girl's amazing ability (alliteration!) Will again rise to dance heaven. Naturally, carole amiel it is not really so. Mari Strachan - Earth sings in B flat major book is set in Wales in the 1950s, and it's really the fact that makes the whole book. The earth sings in B flat major is about twelve year Gwennie that is to say the least special; she thinks she can fly (but only when she sleeps, she has not learned to fly when she is awake yet) and is almost disgusting precocious as she is incredibly naive. When one of the neighbors disappear and then found beaten to death decides Gwennie to try to figure out what really carole amiel happened, just as one of the detectives in the novels she usually read - and then lend to the village carole amiel policeman (who would rather work in the garden is the solution to crime ). It's a little smårolig book and fun to read because of the environment - how often do you read a book that takes place in Wales? - And time markers, but Gwennie's really incredibly annoying and it's almost as if I sometimes sympathize with the mother who favors her oldest daughter Bethan. Gyles Brandreth - Oscar Wilde and the Nest of Vipers Unlike in the first three books in which Robert Sherard, Watson Oscar Wilde's Holmes carole amiel is The Nest of Vipers built almost like a letter novel. It consists of diary entries, telegrams and letters between the various characters and their respective wives / friends / colleagues which is actually good for the story, as they will be more different perspectives (eg Arthur Conan Doyle's vision of Robert Sherard). In this book hinted it more on Oscar Wilde's homosexuality - even though nothing is said straight out, of course - and even Prince Albert Victor, Queen Victoria's grandson, carole amiel becomes outad as gay (or perhaps bisexual). The Nest of Vipers is about vampires, a royal scandal, the latest (1890) research on hysterical women - research involving both hypnosis of living patients and autopsy of the dead ones, in order to find a physiological explanation of a neurological problems. I think that the third book (Oscar Wilde and the Dead Man's Smile) was slightly better, but The Nest of Vipers is still really good and I like to say the letter romance-grip. When will the next book?
"Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog it's too dark to read. - Groucho Marx Contact: etthemutanbocker [at] hotmail.com, or shout to the commentator booth. I'm bad at checking email. I do not like advertising and erases all such fast as hell.
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There are some words Which I have known since I was a schoolboy. "With the first link, the chain is forged. The first speech censored, the first thought forbidden, the first freedom denied, chains us all irrevocably." These words were uttered by Judge Aaron Satie - as a wisdom, and warning. The first time any man's freedom carole amiel is trodden on, we're carole amiel all damaged.
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