Not Knowing: The Art of Turning Uncertainty into Opportunity
Steven D'Souza and Diana Renner
Book
Knowledge and expertise are highly valued in today's business world. These values are introduced at...
Moving Finite Element Method: Fundamentals and Applications in Chemical Engineering
Maria do Carmo Coimbra, Alirio Egidio Rodrigues, Jaime Duarte Rodrigues and Rui Jorge Mendes Robalo
Book
This book focuses on process simulation in chemical engineering with a numerical algorithm based on...
Acanthea Grimscythe (300 KP) rated Glow in Books
May 16, 2018
The main character of Glow is a young woman of eighteen by the name of Jubilee - but don't you dare call her that! She prefers Julie. After making the ultimate sacrifice for her mother, she spends the summer unraveling the mysteries behind paintings she finds at thrift stores while her best friend prepares for college.
Between each chapter, readers find an epistolary account from the mind of Lydia Grayson. Like her sisters, Lydia is one of the many girls that worked for the American Radium Company (I think I got that right). The Grayson sisters, for those that haven't read The Radium Girls in order to make the comparison, appears to be based loosely on the Maggia sisters, while the company is, obviously, a fictionalized version of the United States Radium Corporation. (Amelia "Mollie" Maggia was the first of the Radium Girls to die.)
Unlike most books that attempt this method, I do not find the switch between perspectives and styles to be detrimental or clunky - if anything, it is inconvenient. Rather than wrap up preceding chapters, Bryant uses these switches to leave Julie's story on a cliffhanger more than once throughout the book. This style can easily be avoided, considering the letters written from Lydia to her boyfriend are interesting enough on their own to propel the reader forward.
While Julie's story offers an plot that appeals to younger readers, I feel Glow would have worked just fine without it. For that purpose, I'm caught between a three and a four on this book. Ultimately, I lean toward the latter and must applaud Bryant on the amount of research she obviously put into writing this book. Julie's story is unbelievable and full of things that I simply have no interest in, but the haunting tale that the Grayson sisters weave is horrifying.
I would like to thank NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with a copy of this book for the purpose of unbiased review.
A Treasury of Songs
Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler
Book
As well as being the UK's most successful picture book author, Julia Donaldson is a gifted...
An Economic History of Europe: Knowledge, Institutions and Growth, 600 to the Present
Karl Gunnar Persson and Paul Sharp
Book
This revised and extended edition of the leading textbook on European economic history has been...
Cognitive Strategies for Special Education: Process-Based Instruction
Book
Research on training programs for students with learning difficulties has usually focused on the...
Protecting Intellectual Property in the Arabian Peninsula: The GCC States, Jordan and Yemen
Book
As one of the few publications on intellectual property law and policy in the region in English the...
The Awakening (The Vampire Diaries, #1)
Book
This special paperback TV tie-in edition of the first book in L.J. Smith’s New York Times...
Play with Chain Mail: 4 Weaves = 20+ Jewelry Designs
Book
Play With Chain Mail focuses on using color, proportion, and scale to create multiple contemporary...
BookInspector (124 KP) rated Viper's Daughter (Chronicles of Ancient Darkness #7) in Books
Sep 24, 2020
I really enjoyed the narrative of this book, it is set in the antarctic kind of place, where ice covers everything. It has plenty of adventure, wild and dangerous animals, spirituality and inner thoughts. I really loved the human-nature balance and relationship portrayed in this novel, I think it is a very important thing for us to remember because we do take nature for granted. Even though this book is a part of the series, I was able to read it as a stand-alone.
The writing style of this book is exquisite! The author portrayed the nature in this book with such great detail, I felt like sitting on the boat with Torak and witnessing everything with my own eyes, the experience was incredible! For some reason I really like books set in north and cold climates, people’s survival skills really amaze me. The chapters have a very decent length, and constant change of the perspectives doesn’t leave the reader bored. I liked the ending of this book as well, I think it rounded the story nicely.

