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Andy K (10821 KP) created a video about The Color Purple (1985) in Movies

Oct 30, 2017 (Updated Oct 31, 2017)  
Video

Celie Stands up to Albert

  
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MusicCritics (472 KP) created a video about track Encore Un Soir by Celine Dion in Encore un Soir by Celine Dion in Music

Jun 29, 2017  
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Encore Un Soir - Céline Dion

  
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Entertainment Editor (1988 KP) created a video about Rosehaven in TV

Nov 7, 2017  
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Rosehaven: Season 1 Extended Trailer

Rural Tasmania provides the spectacular backdrop for Rosehaven, the new comedy series created by and starring two of Australia's most loved comic talents: Luke McGregor and Celia Pacquola.

  
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Joe Wright recommended Brief Encounter (1945) in Movies (curated)

 
Brief Encounter (1945)
Brief Encounter (1945)
1945 | Drama, Romance

"Okay, so, Brief Encounter. I love it because of its consummate craftsmanship. It’s deeply British. It [has] perfect structure. Celia Johnson’s performance. And the way in which it’s a film about something not happening rather than something happening."

Source
  
The Dangers of Loving a Rogue
The Dangers of Loving a Rogue
Jeri Black | 2022 | Romance
8
8.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
very much a HIT for me!
Independent reviewer for Archaeolibrarian, I was gifted my copy of this book.

I really enjoyed this! I found it a lot of fun, spattered with some drama, some bloodshed and some smexy times, and I want to read more of this author.

I loved that Celia was not going to be a proper lady of her time and was going to do what she wanted. Even if she really wanted her bethrothed AND Jackson!

I loved that jackson was, for a pirate, a proper gentleman with Celia, at least til he had a taste.

I loved Jackson's support network and I absolutely did NOT see the twist of who Celia's bethrothed was to Jackson!

Historical romances and pirate romances have been a bit hit and miss for me, but this is most definately a HIT!

*same worded review will appear elsewhere
  
The Color Purple
The Color Purple
Alice Walker | 2014 | Fiction & Poetry
10
8.5 (24 Ratings)
Book Rating
Everything (0 more)
A story of hope against all odds. The main character, Celia is a poor black woman living a life of domination by her father, and then her husband, it’s only when she meets her husbands lover, that she finds out about life, and how to find her strength and courage. This book should be on your to read list, not just for black history month, but for anytime.
  
The Boy at the Door
The Boy at the Door
Alex Dahl | 2018 | Mystery, Thriller
2
2.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
The plot (0 more)
The main character, the pacing (0 more)
Just Say No
I wanted to love this book. I really did. I heard about it in a book magazine, and I fell in love with the blurb.

However, I got to reading this book, and I found myself not caring about what happens. The pacing was just to slow for me, yet I continued to read in case it got better. It did not.

As for the characters, I found myself not caring about them. I just couldn’t connect to any of them. I did like Johan from the Little I read of him. I wondered why he’d stay with a horrible piece of work like Celia. And Celia was definitely a nasty piece of work! The way she treats her husband is vile! She talks about showering him with plenty of sex and affection and then basically being a bitch to them in order to get him to stay. She recommends other women do this too. No, thank you. The way she acts when she hears that Tobias is going to be staying with her for a few months is just horrible too. I realize it’s a big deal to have a kid you’ve never known come to stay with you for a few months, but I just felt she was way over the top. And don’t get me started on how she treats other people like she’s better than them. Yet she wants to come across to others as having the perfect family, so why treat others like crap if you are concerned with how they perceive you? Celia is nothing but a spoiled, selfish, vile brat. She’s one of the main reasons I couldn’t finish this book.

Maybe others will like this book, but I just couldn’t get into it due to slow pacing and mainly because I couldn’t torture myself to keep reading about Celia. This is being added to my DNR shelf.

(I received a free ebook of this title from the First to Read program).
  
Sealed With A Curse (Weird Girls, #1)
Sealed With A Curse (Weird Girls, #1)
Cecy Robson | 2012 | Paranormal, Romance
9
9.5 (2 Ratings)
Book Rating
This throws us straight into the story with Celia and her sisters on trial for murdering a vampire. Only it turns out the vampire was in a bloodlust filled rage at the time and they're let off the charge. Only then they get asked to help solve the problem of the curse on the Master's family that is causing his vampires to fall into the strange rage that can only be cured by death.

During this time she meets an Alpha werewolf, Aric, who tempts her inner tiger. They are drawn to each other time and time again, causing a tension between his pack and herself. They believe as a born werewolf he should be with someone of the same ilk and as Celia's shapeshifting is as the result of a curse that she isn't worthy of him.

I loved Celia and her sisters. The could kick arse with their abilities and luckily they could heal themselves when they got hurt too. Well, Emme could heal them after they threw themselves into whatever trouble they found themselves in.

I liked Gemini and Koda--love interests of Celia's sisters. Liam always seemed to butt in at inopportune times to remind Aric of other things he should be doing instead of spending time with Celia which annoyed me no end.

I found this quite funny. It was my kind of humour and I was chuckling and grinning like a loon for most of my time reading this.

I cannot wait to read more of this series to see what happens between all our couples.
  
Celia Davies spends her days helping the women of 1867 San Francisco via her free medical clinic. One of her patients, a former Chinese prostitute is found murdered, and Celia must know what happened to her. Meanwhile, Nicholas Greaves is the police officer assigned to the case, and he is determined to get justice for the young woman. But where will the investigation lead?

This is a good debut that will please any fan of historical mysteries. The characters are intriguing, and their history makes them seem even more real. The plot did bog down a few times, but never for very long, and we reach a logical conclusion before the end. The world of 1867 is brought to wonderful life as well, and it’s easy to get lost in another time.

NOTE: I was sent a copy of this book in hopes I would review it.

Read my full review at <a href="http://carstairsconsiders.blogspot.com/2016/04/book-review-no-comfort-for-lost-by.html">Carstairs Considers</a>.
  
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Jenni Olson recommended Brief Encounter (1945) in Movies (curated)

 
Brief Encounter (1945)
Brief Encounter (1945)
1945 | Drama, Romance

"“It all started on an ordinary day, in the most ordinary place in the world.”—Brief Encounter David Lean’s depictions of two ordinary women (Celia Johnson’s Laura and Katharine Hepburn’s Jane) restraining their desires for Trevor Howard and Rosanno Brazzi, respectively, are two of my all-time favorite cinematic portrayals of forbidden heterosexual love. Incidentally, both use the writing of gay playwrights as source material: Brief Encounter is based on Noël Coward’s Still Life, and Summertime adapts Arthur Laurents’s The Time of the Cuckoo."

Source