Keitty Mcphee Mcphee itibaren gorodskoy okrug Gorod Ob', Ob', Novosibirskaya oblast', Rusya
İyileşmesini bekledim. Ne harika bir başlık ama kitap renksizdi. Ana karakteri ya da bu konudaki herhangi birini umursamadım. Aylak.
Enright'ın yazıları, sineklerin çürümenin etrafında uğultusunu fark etmeden önce bir süre tatlı bir Flaman resmine bakmak gibi, langöz ve karanlıktır. Bir babanın korkusuyla doğumda ayrılan ikizler yetişkinlikte birbirlerini bulurlar.
Aşırı puan.
An 850-paged biography on James Joyce is not a pleasure read. But as far as 850-page biographies go, it's well written and informative and engaging at times.
This is a luminous book about women poets. I liken it to "The Artist as a Young Man" and also love her poetry. The only drawback is that you need to be very familiar with Irish history. Nation, heritage, womanhood, and poetry is seamlessly interweaved and there are often no handy gloss of a certain historical event. Even so, an intelligent reader can gather what they need from context and enjoy the book.
This research further convinced my UCLA Shakespeare prof that Edward de Vere was the man who wrote the Shakespeare plays. From everything she's said and what I've read of this book so far, I gotta say I'm pretty convinced. The argument for the man from Stratford is pretty weak with many unexplainable conflicts and contradictions whereas the "Oxford" theory (de Vere was Earl of Oxford and is referred to by his named title) has countless intriguing anecdotes and evidence that account for much more of the broad and specific knowledge found in the Shakespeare plays. I think it's only a matter of time before the Oxfordists overcome the undereducated, uncultured man from Stratford.
Reeve's book is a quick, fun fantasy read. Do dragons exist? Ansel, a mute servant, and his master set out to find out.