WiFi Map Pro - Free Internet
Travel and Social Networking
App
Get WiFi passwords for FREE internet access all over the world! Useful for TRAVEL! Works offline. ...
Dune Worlds: How Windblown Sand Shapes Planetary Landscapes: 2012
Ralph D. Lorenz and James R. Zimbelman
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This book describes how sand dunes work, why they are the way they are in different settings, and...
Hiddensee: A Tale of the Once and Future Nutcracker
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From the author of the beloved #1 New York Times bestseller Wicked, the magical story of a toymaker,...
Fantasy
Last Wolf and Herman
George Szirtes, László Krasznahorkai and John Batki
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Two short masterworks by the most recent winner of the Man Booker International Prize: here, in...
Fiction travel thriller
Clothes Forever - Styling Game
Games
App
Clothes Forever- the hottest new fashion game. Ever dreamed of traveling around the world in style,...
Two Fatherlands (Reschen Valley #4)
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It's a dangerous time to be a dissident... 1938. Northern Italy. Since saving Angelo Grimani's...
Historical Fiction WW2
OffMaps 2 · Offline Maps for Travelers
Navigation and Travel
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"A Cheaper Way to Navigate Abroad, No Costly Data-Roaming Required", NYT GadgetWise Blog "OffMaps 2...
Paris Metro Map and Routes
Navigation and Travel
App
The official RATP metro map within an interactive transport app. Paris Metro is the best navigation...
Lessons is the story of Roland Baines’ life. His successes, loves, losses - all set against an historical background of the 20th and 21st centuries: World War 2, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Chernobyl and Covid 19 (and others besides, but there are too many to mention them all!).
I was completely engrossed, and it’s a book that you don’t want to race through. I love McEwans writing - so much is said in each sentence.
I’ll admit it now, a lot of what really kept my attention were the details about Germany: WW2 and it’s aftermath, Roland’s trips beyond the Berlin Wall and it’s fall.
The future is set for Alissa (Roland’s wife) when her English mother presents her with her journals, written when she travelled to Germany after the war. She had wanted to write articles about German Resistance during the war, and specifically the Scholls White Rose movement. These journals remained unpublished and unread 40 years later. And so when Alissa walks away from Roland and their baby to ensure her own dreams of literary success, it’s unsurprising even if it’ll ears callous.
The book is told from Roland’s point of view, first person, so we hear his inner voice throughout. What stood out most for me, was that his voice doesn’t change through the years. Yes, I know this is obvious - it’s the same book. What I mean is that what younger people often forget, is that the 72 year old man at the end of the book is the same as the 11 year old boy - just with 61 years experience. His experiences as an 11-14 year old with his piano teacher have a lasting and life-changing impact.
I loved this book and would highly recommend it. It’s a book to be savoured.

