zhangan2013710

Zhang Andy Andy itibaren Ruyad, Maharashtra 442905, Hindistan itibaren Ruyad, Maharashtra 442905, Hindistan

Okuyucu Zhang Andy Andy itibaren Ruyad, Maharashtra 442905, Hindistan

Zhang Andy Andy itibaren Ruyad, Maharashtra 442905, Hindistan

zhangan2013710

Kitaplarda benim bir numaralı evcil hayvan peeve içermez ve bu karakter vuruluyor ve bir hastane sahnesi, bu bir evcil hayvan peeve dahil olsaydı beş yıldız olurdu çünkü herhangi bir nedenle vurulmuş ve dramatik bir hastane sahnesi olması gibi görünüyor m / m kitapların yaklaşık% 90'ı. Hala nedenini tam olarak anlayamadım ama bu çok sıkıcı ve klişe ve bin kez yapıldı, cidden bir kitap yazmayı düşünüyorsanız, karakterleri kapıda vuruluyor ve sıkıcı bırakmak istiyorum. kitap. Tüm bu oldukça iyi bir okuma ve geri kalanı için farklı olduğunu söyleyerek bu bir milyon yıl içinde asla olmayacak arsa akıllıca demek ama insanların kesinlikle okumak gerektiğini düşünüyorum (tipik çekim / hastane eksi)

zhangan2013710

Bu küçük kız öğretmenine biraz takıntılıydı.

zhangan2013710

A couple of years ago, I read The Red Tent by Anita Diamant, which is an awesome book about the lives of the wives of Jacob, told through the eyes of his daughter Jacob. The Preservationist is written in a similar vein, although not as emotional as The Red Tent. It fleshes out the story of Noah and his family and their trials and triumphs before, during, and after the Flood. I'm a little ashamed to admit it, but I never knew that Noah's wife's name is never mentioned in the Bible until I read this book and wondered why she is always referred to only as "wife" or "mother". I love books that, although they are fiction, give you an idea of what it might have been like to be there during such important times in history (especially Biblical history). The Preservationist is a novel that includes the viewpoints of Noah (spelled "Noe", per the 1609 Douay Bible), his wife, his sons and their wives. If you've ever wondered how they might have felt about the Flood, not to mention how they got all those animals rounded up, I highly recommend this novel!

zhangan2013710

read in 2004

zhangan2013710

The most under-rated of the Bronte sisters, it is an injustice that Anne's books are never given the veneration that her sisters' do. Agnes Grey lives in the shadow of Jane Eyre and is often unfavourably compared to it even though it was published first, and Charlotte Bronte herself was quick to dismiss Tenant because of the 'wild and coarse' themes. Yet Anne's works have a social relevance that must have been completely shocking at the time of publication. When a woman and offspring were the 'property' of the man, to have a heroine pack her child and leave her husband, as well as the detailed scenes of drunkenness and adultery, would have done more than raise eyebrows. Tenant is passionate and raw, and most likely because Anne drew upon her experiences with her brother Branwell. There is an honesty and melancholy in the decline of Huntingdon and his friends. And although I love Agnes Grey you can see how Bronte's writing had matured even in so short a time, and can only wonder what a third novel might have brought had she not died so young.