rarekidz

Rare Kidz Kidz itibaren Chudy Dwór, Polonya itibaren Chudy Dwór, Polonya

Okuyucu Rare Kidz Kidz itibaren Chudy Dwór, Polonya

Rare Kidz Kidz itibaren Chudy Dwór, Polonya

rarekidz

Çok güzel kitap.

rarekidz

This was a really interesting book, although I occasionally found the author's monologues annoying. The author traveled the world asking poor people why they were poor. Their responses, along with glimpses into their lives, are the core of the book. When the book focused on the individuals, I found it fascinating. If you are concerned about poverty, than who better to hear from than those who understand it firsthand? The book worked less for me when the author would go off on the occasional existential spiel. But I appreciate his work, and his efforts to try and address a topic that most simply ignore. His personal grappling with his own attitudes and actions was illuminating, and something I admire him for sharing. I don’t know if I would.

rarekidz

very good book. oprah should recommend it.

rarekidz

What a pleasure to know that the current president of Harvard is also an expert on the Civil War. Her latest book (and perhaps her last for the time being) focuses on how death touched everyone living in America at the time of the Civil War. It was not nearly as morbid as I expected, but actually quite interesting.

rarekidz

This is the most unique book I have ever read. You can't explain it, you just have to read it.

rarekidz

Lee Child sticks to a winning formula here-impossibly heroic hero, really bad baddies, beautiful woman who lasts as long as the book and then gets left behind, and resolution of whatever situation Reacher gets into. Why change something that works? At least you know what you are getting with this series, and they are always entertaining.

rarekidz

Well Dumas, congratulations. You made me do something no other author has ever managed: you made me enjoy Literature. Yes, the capital "L" kind, the important kind that stuffy old men and pretentious Liberal Arts students love to make lists of and get into ridiculous arguments about. I've been forced to read a lot of !LITERATURE! in my schoolin' years, but I can't say I ever pretend I enjoyed it. Which is kind of the problem - by and large, do most people ever generally enjoy a book they're forced to read? Doesn't it stop being fun and start being work then? So after years of being burnt, it was with hesitation that I picked up this Dumas novel, a tome that gives some phonebooks a run for their money. But how can you not love this book? Watching the Count go about his business, watching all his intricate little machinations play out, is amazing. And even more impressive is the world that Dumas weaves for us, a world where the Count and his victims slip between Parisian high society and mansions, hashish smoke and harem girls. Sure, compared to other LITERATURE, this is kind of light escapist fare - don't expect any terribly deep philosophizing or eye-opening character development. But if you're the kind of reader who only enjoys a book if it "really helps them grow as a person", then you're probably not reading this list anyway.