s-hei

Shohei Yoshioka Yoshioka itibaren Ayamkudy, Kerala 686613, India itibaren Ayamkudy, Kerala 686613, India

Okuyucu Shohei Yoshioka Yoshioka itibaren Ayamkudy, Kerala 686613, India

Shohei Yoshioka Yoshioka itibaren Ayamkudy, Kerala 686613, India

s-hei

I did like this book but at the same time I didn't, it's kind of hard to explain. It didn't feel like there was enough to it but at the same time I can't imagine how it could've been better. I liked the characters but I didn't. It got annoying when it kept randomly changing characters without even going to a different paragraph. The events also seemed to rushed. Peter comes back and Valerie straight away loves him. She keeps changing her mind on what she wants to do. One minute she wants to be with Peter, the next she'll be with Henry. I was kind of really disappointed with the ending. I don't know why. Just the person that turned out to be the wolf was disappointing and just the ending in general. It was a good book and was pretty enjoyable but I just expected more, hopefully the movie will be better :/

s-hei

The one where a prince of Faerie is exiled with a requirement every seven years to pay a tiend in "gold, silver, or souls," and he becomes a sort of Pied Piper. Again with the whiny people problem, and evidently YA books are so short they read like long stories, but still interesting. I would have liked this a whole lot except for the whininess of the narrator, which really got on my nerves.

s-hei

Another amazing installment in Moore's lifelong quest towards avodacting the mysterious and unfathomable depths of the human soul and how it can possible amalgamate to another equally enigmatic human soul. Moore confronts moralism in sexuality as well as pondering the needs of soul - in that it often wants detachment just as much as attachment, coldness as well as passion. Though I consider myself a lover of soul and proponent of the soul's journey, Moore never ceases to press further into the process and combats the arid analysis of relationships and the "lets fix it" mentality through practical means, and encourages relationships to delve into every aspect of the relationship - even the vices - in an effort to hear what the soul of your being has to say. Always challenging, never simple, forever entrenched in the mythology of Jungian and Grecian archetypes, I find Moore more and more (hah) offering me a truth older and safer than I know... If I had to sum up a few Moorian tenants: 1. Be a friend to yourself. 2. Do not repress even the slightest inkling/desire inside of you (he does not encourage acting upon every inkling but facing all the parts of yourself, the shadows as well as the sunlight, in an effort to let the soul be heard).