Don't be a Nordic: Why Embracing the Scandi Lifestyle Won't Change Your Life
Book
Set aside those think-pieces on how 24-hour access to Lego creates the happiest nation on earth and...
Romantic Prairie Style: Homes Inspired by Traditional Country Life
Book
Romantic Prairie Style embraces simple pleasures, comfort, and the long-cherished ideals of natural...
Refuge: Transforming a Broken Refugee System
Paul Collier and Alexander Betts
Book
'Betts and Collier offer innovative insights into how to more effectively meet this challenge, with...
Politics
My Town : Daycare
Entertainment and Education
App
My Town: Daycare brings six cute babies and 12 happy characters, from teachers to family members....
Love Knitting for Baby
Book and Magazines & Newspapers
App
Love Knitting for Baby - packed with baby knitting patterns, baby yarns and wool, how tos, advice,...
Eleanor (1463 KP) rated The Mercies in Books
Jan 23, 2020 (Updated Jan 23, 2020)
The book begins with a freak storm killing most (all the able-bodied) men who were fishing from the small village of Vardo. (This is based on a true story - the storm thing really did happen to a village of that time.) Itโs a horrific tragedy and the women left behind have to work out how to survive without their husbands and sons. From the village, the tale is told from the perspective of Maren who loses her father, brother and betrothed.
With news of the circumstances of the village spreading a commissioner is appointed and travels from Scotland to oversee the village (because God only knows what could happen if you left women to sort stuff out themselves!!) It being the 17th Century, travel takes a long time and he stops off to get himself a wife on the way (must-have travel accessory) so the village gets by for many a year without oversight. With the arrival of the commissioner and his wife (Ursa) life again gets turned on its head as it turns out the new Commissioner has a knack for witch-hunting.
Although I found the pace a bit too slow for my liking it had a great feel and really evoked the frustration for the world women lived in at the time. With at times graphic descriptions of the way witch hunts were operated itโs at times a hard read. With the slow build, I did find the ending a bit rushed and unsatisfying but was left with plenty to reflect upon.
Many thanks to the author, publisher, and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
500 Crochet Blocks: The Only Compendium of Crochet Blocks You'll Ever Need
Book
With a wide variety of styles ranging from the traditional to completely new designs, 500 Crochet...
Claude Monet's Gardens at Giverny
Dominique Lobstein and Jean-Pierre Gilson
Book
Water lilies, ponds, a Japanese footbridge and blankets of glorious flowers: nothing evokes Claude...
Simply Crochet
Lifestyle and Magazines & Newspapers
App
Simply Crochet is full of creative ideas for anyone who loves - or would love to learn - crochet....
Scott Tostik (389 KP) rated The Burning (1981) in Movies
Jun 21, 2017
Not for the squeamish at all. The Burning has some of the best post CGI kill effects... And personally I love practical effects, nothing destroys a good beheading like digitized blood flying around out of sync with the body dropping.
Effects Master Tom Savini was fresh off the original Friday the 13th when he landed this flick.
A few years into the past the kids of a summer camp decide to pull a prank on the asshole caretaker involving a skull all dolled up with maggots, worms and burning eyes for effect. They sneak it into his dilapidated cabin, where he is sleeping off a drunk, and proceed to bang on his windows shaking him awake and scaring the hell out of hum. In his flailing fear he knocks the skull onto a pile of blankets and his hanging curtains and the whole place goes up in flames... As does he... His name is Cropsey... And he is engulfed in fire. The kids run like hell to get away as Cropsey flies out the door, rolls down a hill and ends up in the lake. Now I'm no doctor, never claim to be and certainly have never played one on tv, but in my imagination dirty lake water and freshly burnt skin do not a good combination make.
We skip ahead a few years and Cropsey is released from the hospital and goes into the downtown core of wherever the hell he is, searching for something. Wearing a trenchcoat and an old fedora over his scars. He picks up a hooker and goes to her place. She gets him to take off his clothes and recoils in horror. He grabs a pair of scissors and exacts revenge.
Without giving more away. You can see where this is going. A slash and gash festival unlike anything is about to follow. Starring a few familiar faces such as Seinfeld's Jason Alexander, Short Circut's Fisher Stevens and a young Holly Hunter in what I imagine was their first big breaks in film. This movie offers the viewer a glimpse of things to come in the slasher sub-genre of horror.
It's worth it alone of the scene in the canoe... What is that you may ask... Watch The damned movie and find out...lol


ClareR (6037 KP) Jan 23, 2020
Eleanor (1463 KP) Jan 25, 2020