Wiley IFRS 2017 Interpretation and Application of IFRS Standards Set
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The one-stop resource for IFRS interpretation and application, updated for 2017 Wiley IFRS 2017...
Take off into English Teaching!: How to Prepare for Your Secondary Teacher Training Programme
Book
Planning to become a secondary English teacher? This must-have guide contains everything you need to...
Beginning iOS 7 Development: Exploring the iOS SDK
David Mark, Jack Nutting, Jeff LaMarche and Fredrik T. Olsson
Book
The team that brought you the bestselling Beginning iPhone Development is back again for Beginning...
Enhancing Adult Motivation to Learn: A Comprehensive Guide for Teaching All Adults
Raymond J. Wlodkowski and Margery B. Ginsberg
Book
The classic interdisciplinary reference on adult education, updated for today's learning environment...
Reading Fragments & Fragmentation in Modernist Literature
Book
This book begins with the question: How are literary fragments defined as such? As a critical term,...
Hazel (2934 KP) rated Secrets of a Serial Killer in Books
Jul 5, 2020
Told from multiple points of view, this is a pretty fast moving book, once the usual introductions to the various characters has been completed, and what a great cast of characters the author has created here. The author is also clearly adept at describing the eerie setting and at creating atmosphere ... I was transported to the old hospital, the derelict caravan and the woods surrounding them. The tension and fear in each of the characters is really well told and builds and builds throughout until the gripping and nail-biting conclusion.
Although I enjoyed this book, I do have a few issues that prevent this from being a 5 star read - there was next to nothing regarding the Police input or investigation and they came across as being inept and pretty useless, particularly at the end but I won't go into it here as it would be a spoiler but you will see what I mean when you read it. Also, the blog posts inserted at various points didn't really do anything for me or add to the story that much and I wonder if they were put there as a red-herring?
Despite the niggling issues, this is a creditable and decent debut and even though there are a few unanswered questions, in addition to the cliff-hanger, they are either left to the imagination of the reader or are going to be resolved in another instalment? If so, I would definitely read it.
My thanks go to HarperCollinsUK and One More Chapter via NetGalley for my advance copy in return for an unbiased and unedited review.
Love Bombing: Reset Your Child's Emotional Thermostat
Book
"Love Bombing" is a radical new method for resetting the emotional thermostats of troubled children...
Food Insecurity and Disease: Prevalence, Policy, and Politics
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This title includes a number of Open Access chapters. Food insecurity and disease are inextricably...
Kristina (502 KP) rated Crash (Crash, #1) in Books
Dec 7, 2020
This story is not full of rainbows and butterflies. There are no moments that make your heart swell with overwhelming happiness, or when tears of joy threaten to spill over, or even when you feel that satisfaction of a happy ending. Heck no, Crash is absolutely not that story - and I've never been so grateful. I'm a romance fan, through and through, but sometimes I come across too many that are so sweet, I almost feel sick when I'm finished reading (once I come down from the high of a happily ever after, of course). I'd been searching for a book that had the romance quality but offered a twist, a dark element that would keep me on my toes and pique my interest. I found it, thanks to an e-mail that offers free Ebooks. From the beginning, I knew Stranger (as I've dubbed him) was different: his eyes were too cold, his expression was too rough, his demeanor was too rugged; which is how I immediately knew I'd found what I was looking for. Drew Jordan gave me the element of a love story, but she wrapped it up in a beautiful black bow accompanied with thorns. Each chapter had me falling more and more in love with the tale, even if that concerns me slightly. I love how honest and raw it is, how Laney is completely truthful, even if her thoughts don't make sense. The secrets were probably my favorite part - I believed Laney was this sweet little girl who was slowly becoming tainted by this stranger, but I eventually realized there's more to her than meets the eye. I'm very excited to read Hide, the next book in the Crash series, and I look forward to revealing more deep, dark secrets from both Laney and Stranger.
Biodiversity and Earth History
Jens Boenigk, Sabina Wodniok and Edvard Glucksman
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This uniquely interdisciplinary textbook explores the exciting and complex relationship between...


