Naglaa Hassan Hassan itibaren Elmstead, Colchester, Essex CO7 7BD, İngiltere
Çok acerbic ve dokunaklı. Bölüm I, en banal Amerikan şeylerinin (romanı Avrupa-Amerika ekseni aracılığıyla keşfetmek ilginç olacak), siyah komedi ve noiresk bir who-dunnit (başka bir tane) Romanı keşfetmenin yolu, metinsel oyunu - kağıt hamuru kurgularının tahsis edilmesi yoluyla olacaktır). II.
Çok komik! Yetişkin roman, ama çok temiz.
bu kitabı beğenmedim çünkü mia bazen çok aptal ama gerçekten onu 4 hissediyorum
Don't remember much about it, which I guess says a lot.
from my professors of the Mission Shaped Ministry course: In Cave Refectory Road, Ian Adams has produced a book that can be guaranteed to open up new vistas for anyone searching for an authentic spirituality that will make sense in the context of today’s 24/7 world. By combining threads of wisdom long forgotten or overlooked and showing how they can be interwoven so as to offer fresh insights into our everyday challenges, Ian has crafted a rich tapestry of scriptural and historic patterns for living that will be both empowering and sustaining. - John & Olive Drane, authors, Visiting Fellows of St John's College, University of Durham Ian skilfully opens up the Christian contemplative tradition as received from the monastics and friars in a grounded and accessible way for today's spiritual seeker. In an age when many are spiritually hungry, Ian opens up the Christian tradition in a way that is dynamically spiritual and authentically religious. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is seeking to establish a deep Christian faith and practice that can thrive in the complexity of the modern world. - Ian Mobsby, New Monastic, author and Priest Missioner to the Moot Community, London
This was the first time I've read a Grisham novel and the first time I've read non-fiction in quite awhile. The sad part is that if this were a work of fiction I would have probably stopped reading it because it just seems ridiculous. By this, I mean the way two murder cases were "solved" in the United States in the eighties. Twenty years ago and the justice system pretty much worked in a similar manner to the inquisition in Europe. Should I be surprised? Probably not. I do remember the O.J. Simpson trial pretty well. Should I be appalled? Certainly. This is a real eye-opener to one blind side of the justice system. Far removed from technicalities that allow murderers, rapists, and child molesters to walk the streets as free citizens lies the other dark side where people are convicted on circumstantial evidence if any. This book and the story behind it are eye opening and fantastic. I highly recommend this.