tareksabbouh

Tarek Sabbouh Sabbouh itibaren Łochów Stary, Polonya itibaren Łochów Stary, Polonya

Okuyucu Tarek Sabbouh Sabbouh itibaren Łochów Stary, Polonya

Tarek Sabbouh Sabbouh itibaren Łochów Stary, Polonya

tareksabbouh

I loved almost every aspect of this book! It's funny and emotionally satisfying (there was a part at the end where I was laughing and crying at the same time). The characters are real and flawed and endearing. I connected with them extremely well and thought they were a perfect match for each other. They certainly deserved their HEA together. I loved the snappy one-liners everywhere. The pacing was excellent! The tension between Lacy and Chase was perfect. The writing could have benefited from an additional read-through to catch the errors in grammar. That was the only annoying part, because at times it did pull me out of the story. But, I chose not to factor that into my rating because I loved this story so much. It made me so happy and giddy. This book was a joy to read, and I look forward to reading it many more times in the future. Definitely a winner!

tareksabbouh

If you like Larry Niven, if you like Known Space, if you can ignore a couple of plot holes and how this story changes the history of Known Space - You will enjoy this book. Fleet of Worlds kept me entertained and interested all the way through. Oh and now I have to find my copy of "The Boarderland of Sol". ;-)

tareksabbouh

Can't quite get into the book -- I wanted to, I just can't. My father is an alcoholic and I wanted to read a book about someone who is an alcoholic and is in recovery. I was only reading the intro to this book, though, and Zailckas already annoyed me. For a page and a half, she's talking about how she drank all the time, sometimes blacked out because of her drinking, lost all of her friends, didn't do anything but drink for days on end. And then, in the very next sentence she wrote "But I'm not an alcoholic." Huh? I guess she was thinking of an alcoholic as only someone who suffered from the physical symptoms of alcohol. I guess I think of it as someone who has an emotional need for alcohol and when she said she wasn't an alcoholic, all I thought was "You're still in denial." I so wanted to read something by someone who had overcome the disease -- to somehow have hope that my dad could do it, too. But she denied it in the first few pages. Maybe she comes to terms with her disease later on, but right now, she's still in denial. And i don't know if I can read about it.