Marcelo Silva Silva itibaren Pontesbury, Shrewsbury, Shropshire SY5, İngiltere
Sagan'ın 1985 yılında Glasgow Üniversitesi'nde Templeton fiyatını yapan aynı kişilerin sponsorluğunda verdiği dokuz konferans dizisi. Doğal Teoloji üzerinde - Tanrı'nın kavramını bilimsel olarak kanıtlayan - olması gerekiyor ve Sagan'ın birçok geçerli nedenden dolayı Tanrı'nın konusuna herhangi bir bilimsel şüpheyle yaklaştığınızı göstermeniz gerektiğini göstermeye çalışıyor. teorileri. Onun Tanrı hakkındaki düşüncesi gerçekten - bunu kanıtlayamıyorsunuz - öyleyse neden rahatsız oluyorsunuz? Harika dersler.
This is one of my favorite books ever. Perhaps only call it "one" of my favorites because to have it be my favorite book ever would be something that people would frown upon. So take what you will from that. While some may dislike the ending, I find that the rest of the book is good enough to carry a somewhat sad and maybe disappointing ending.
Didn't agree with the author on at least half of her arguments (nor how she argued), but it raises some really good questions for discussion with friends
In the opening prologue, Hadley says This isn't a detective story. I don't want to say, Keep away from the girl who will come along a ruin everything. So I shouldn't have been surprised. Is this a close account of Ernest Hemmingway, and his wife, Hadley? I'm not sure. But what you will read is a beautiful love story, and how it tumbles apart. Hemmingway easily fell hard--he was fiercly in love with every woman he fell for. It seemed especially so with his first wife, Hadley. However, they moved to Paris, and being around successful friends, rich patrons, parties, and the life, enticed Hemmingway to believe he could and should live that life too. The first part of this novel was a beautiful love story between him and his wife. It was so hard to read the end part. Hadley always loved him. Even when he did his worst to her. She was so conflicted and even hopeful to the end. But I think they were swept up in living the life in Paris after World War I. Party, laze about, travel, enjoy whatever you want in life. Had they stayed in a more settled life, away from the parties, would they have survived? Parts of the book were slower to read. It was more a descriptive book about what life was like, the people, the parties. A lot of contemporary writers were mentioned. I imagine a lot of good writing was done at that time in history.
Read this book in about three days, I didn't like Palahniuk's writing style but to each his own. The book was alright but I think it's way over-hyped.