ImagineFX: the sci-fi and digital art magazine
Education and Magazines & Newspapers
App
***FREE MONTH SUBSCRIPTION TRIAL – GET OUR LATEST ISSUE FREE TODAY!*** ImagineFX is the only...
Leela Kids: For 3-15 Year Olds
Education and Utilities
App
Techcrunch - "Leela Kids opens up the world of podcasts to children." Lifehacker (Australia) -...
Injustice 2
Games and Entertainment
App
Enter the Universe of Injustice 2 and unleash the powerful fighting style of your favorite DC Super...
Digital Master
Games and Entertainment
App
/*NOTICE*/ The game only supports later models than iphone 5(Including 5S) with 64 bit CPU,...
The White Darkness
Book
Henry Worsley was a devoted husband and father and a decorated British special forces officer who...
Blood Bowl: Team Manager – The Card Game
Tabletop Game
Blood Bowl: Team Manager - The Card Game is a bone-breaking, breathtaking standalone card game of...
Boardgames DeckBuilding BloodBowl
Sushi Go!
Tabletop Game
In the super-fast sushi card game Sushi Go!, you are eating at a sushi restaurant and trying to grab...
Boardgames Cardgames Travelgames PartyGames GatewayGames 2013Games
ClareR (6001 KP) rated A Spell of Good Things in Books
Mar 31, 2023
Eniola is a boy who looks like a man. His schoolteacher father loses his job due to a shakeup in the education system, and falls into a deep depression. This leaves Eniola working as an errand boy for the local tailor, collecting newspapers and begging (much against his will). He wants so much more for his life, though…
Wuraola is from a wealthy family. Her parents are proud of her succeeding in her aim to be a doctor - and now they expect her to marry. And Kunle is the son of friends that they favour. But he’s volatile in private (to say the least).
We follow the stories of Eniola and Wuraola and the differences in their lives are stark. Eniola goes to school hungry, he’s beaten by the teachers because his parents pay their school fees late (if at all). And finally, he thinks he has found a way out of his poverty - when in fact it’s something far worse.
Wuraola’s life is difficult in a different way: she has a well-paid, well-respected job, but the Nigerian health system is overstretched, underfunded and doesn’t have enough doctors. But she believes in doing her duty, so she works hard, and says yes when Kunle proposes.
Wuraola’s and Eniola’s lives are on a collision course though.
I inhaled this book. It’s gritty and doesn’t hold back in any way. It’s an insight into lives I’ve never experienced and so powerfully told. The themes of domestic abuse, poverty, access to education and political corruption make for a heartbreaking read.
Recommended.
Miguel Covarrubias (143 KP) rated Doctor Sleep in Books
Apr 30, 2019
There was one scene that will continue to disturb me. It was Danny's secret, that he shared at the end of the book, and lived through at the beginning. That scene with the toddler just... it really upset me. It will haunt me as it haunted Danny. I think it's because I am a father of a toddler myself, and any harm done to children kills my soul a bit.
The themes of becoming better than your past are beautiful. I love King's take on this as he is also a man that has overcome his past and become better than he was. The idea of purpose is one I would argue with, but that is something that I'm struggling with myself. I do love the imagery that is borrowed from Madeleine L'Engle about collecting ages that Danny references. We are always that age at some level, and will always be. There will always be that part of us that was our past, but we can overcome it and be better than we were. The trauma in Danny's past made him a better person, rather than letting it weigh him down for his entire life. It almost did.
I almost didn't read this one, but I'm very glad that I did.
I'm also a fan of the little dig that King takes at Kubrick in his Author's note about the movie version, the mini-series was a better interpretation.


