Your First Leadership Job: How Catalyst Leaders Bring Out the Best in Others
Tacy M. Byham, Richard S. Wellins and Brad Thomas
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Becoming the Very Best First-Time Leader Congratulations! You re now in charge. Perhaps it s your...
Pro Android Python with SL4A: Writing Android Native Apps Using Python, Lua, and Beanshell
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Pro Android Python with SL4A is for programmers and hobbyists who want to write apps for Android...
Sams Teach Yourself C++ in 24 Hours
Rogers Cadenhead and Jesse Liberty
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Starter Kit Includes C++ compiler and IDE for Windows, Mac & Linux In just 24 lessons of one hour or...
The Clinical Practice of Educational Therapy: Learning and Functioning with Diversity
Maxine Ficksman and Jane Utley Adelizzi
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Despite the wide array of services offered to students with learning disabilities, attention-deficit...
The Artful Baker: Extraordinary Desserts from an Obsessive Home Baker
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A collection of more than 100 extraordinary desserts--all with photos and meticulous...
Joe Goodhart (27 KP) rated X-Men: Second Coming in Books
Nov 30, 2020
The story is about Hope Summers, but it is also about Cable, and it is about sacrifice. It is also about taking responsibility for our actions, and the consequences of those actions. And, it is about the end of Christoper Yost's and Craig Kyle's X-Force run.
There was some top writers assigned to this x-over, but it just felt inconsistent. I love Matt Fraction's HAWKEYE run (still one of my favorite Marvel series runs EVER), but here, it just was missing something, like when someone gives you a recipe, you try re-creating it, and the end result is as far from the recipe as the tool in the White House posing as the President! Even Yost and Kyle, who I have a great deal of regard, felt like they were glad to be done and having nothing more to offering.
Then there is the art. There was really great pages in the beginning. The art by David Finch (he was the only reason I gave this book three Stars) in the first chapter is brilliant and totally suits the theme(s) of the story. However, after his issue, everything goes from derpy (re: Greg Land, "Mr. Lighbox" himself) to just not-as-good-as-I-remember (re: Terry Dodson). And don't even get me started on the inconsistency of which costume Wolverine would be wearing in the issues he would be appearing!
I thought that NECROSHA was as bad as it could get, but this one definitely took care of that bad taste!
Instead of reading SECOND COMING, there are slew of older X-books out there, with better art, better stories, and better direction. Save your money!
The Dilemma
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Knowing the truth will destroy her. Keeping it secret will destroy him. It’s Livia’s 40th...
The Photo Cookbook – Cocktails
Food & Drink and Book
App
This app is like taking one-on-one lessons with an experienced mixologist in your own home....
Marine Rules & Signals
Navigation and Sports
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The reference guide to rules and signals at sea. Part of a series of Marine Navigation apps, Rules &...
Hazel (2934 KP) rated The Collaborator's Daughter in Books
Apr 16, 2023
Set in two timeliness - 2010 and 1944 - the story is written from the point of view of Fran (Safranka) in Sussex in 2010 and her father, Branko in Dubrovnik in 1944. Fran was born in Dubrovnik but left with her mother when she was just a baby and never knew her father but was always told he was a hero.
Fran is now in her 60's; her stepfather has recently passed away having lost her mother a number of years earlier. With her son having grown up with his own family and having found out that her father's remains have been found in a mass grave containing fascists and collaborators from World War II; Fran decides to return to her country of birth to learn more about her father and to find out what she wants to do with the rest of her life now she has no one left to care for.
I loved the characters and particularly the fact that they were of an older generation which was a refreshing change proving that it's never too late to change your life although it remains a scary concept. I loved the setting and the descriptions of Dubrovnik which really made me want to visit. I found the sections set in 1944 were my favourite parts, I wish they had been longer and more in depth however, the author has explained why this was very difficult due to the lack of information available.
Overall, an enjoyable read and whilst I don't usually like a book that has quite such a focus on romance, it did work well with this particular story and it made for a gentle and easy read.
My thanks go to HarperCollins UK, One More Chapter and NetGalley for enabling me to read and share my thoughts of The Collaborator's Daughter.

