An Economist in the Real World: The Art of Policymaking in India
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In December 2009, the economist Kaushik Basu left the rarefied world of academic research for the...
Deadly Medicines and Organised Crime: How Big Pharma Has Corrupted Healthcare
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PRESCRIPTION DRUGS ARE THE THIRD LEADING CAUSE OF DEATH AFTER HEART DISEASE AND CANCER. In his...
From Russia with Drugs
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It was the story that shocked the world: Russian athletics was revealed to be corrupt from top to...
Russian Winters: The Story of Andrei Kanchelskis
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Russian Winters by Andrei Kanchelskis tells the story of the last great footballer to come out of...
The New Era of Regulatory Enforcement: A Comprehensive Guide for Raising the Bar to Manage Risk
Richard H. Girgenti and Timothy P. Hedley
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Mitigate risk and achieve high-level business performance in today's regulatory and enforcement...
Darkness the Color of Snow: A Novel
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Like No Country for Old Men and Snow Falling on Cedars, a haunting, suspenseful, and dazzlingly...
Dubliners
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James Joyce's Dubliners is an enthralling collection of modernist short stories which create a vivid...
Charlie Cobra Reviews (1840 KP) rated Pure in TV
Jul 7, 2020
Noah Funk (Ryan Robbins) is a newly-elected Mennonite pastor, who is tired of drug traffickers in his community and is determined to get rid of them. He finds that things are not that simple when after planting drugs in the home of the ring leader, he is forced to become the head of the Mennonite drug trafficking operations, endangering his community, his family and himself.
This show has constantly surprised me with its ups and downs and twists. I'm usually not into these kind of shows but it just really has me hooked especially with this new season. I feel so much for the main character Noah because he is a good person and almost all the people in their community are good people too. And how his actions come to plague him and weigh on him are dreadful. He does everything to protect his family and still they get dragged into things. His wife Ana Funk is also quite a great character and his brother Abel, a recovering drug addict comes into play greatly too. The dialogue isn't always the greatest and sometimes the acting isn't so good from supporting characters but there isn't a show quite like this. I like seeing the character fall from grace and struggle with his conscience and doing the right thing when he's the only one trying to fight the corruption in his community. It really is a great show, I give it an 8 out of 10.
ClareR (5603 KP) rated Lightseekers in Books
Feb 23, 2021
This isn’t a straightforward, easy investigation. There’s corruption at every turn, and the mob mentality and fear of being caught on the wrong side of that, radiates off the page. It was pretty difficult at times to work out who was on the side of ‘good’ and who wasn’t - the lines were so blurred. It was pretty obvious that social media in this case contributed negatively to what had happened, and how easily its users were manipulated - I’ve been seeing this a lot in books recently, and as a user of Social Media, I can see where these authors are coming from!
I really enjoyed reading this on The Pigeonhole, and I think Femi Kayode is going to be an author to look out for if this book is anything to go by. Thanks Pigeonhole for serialising this, and Femi for joining in the chat in the margins!
Ross (3282 KP) rated Blindspot - Season 4 in TV
Jun 28, 2019
Here we have that same issue, while the season 3 villain has been ousted, lo and behold a new one has cropped up to take his place. This relegates the show to be something of a low quality reboot of 24 as the team struggle with conspiracy, terrorism, underworld shenanigans and corruption to try and stop the eventual attack.
However, the producers seem to have set the number of episodes in advance and then struggled to fill the 22 episode series with quality output. So instead we get a number of rejected 24 scripts hashed out with implausible solving of tattoo puzzles that generally add nothing to the overall series. So many times, the team seem to have been staring at a puzzle for months, only to suddenly realise that if they convert the numbers to letters, turn those into chemical symbols, add up their periodic table entries and divide that by the square root of the number of bananas produced per annum in the Caribbean and lo and behold it gives the password to a Hotmail account of an international terrorist who literally just landed in the country. Almost every episode has one of these mind-farts where so much is just shat out the screen in lazy exposition. The writers should have abandoned the tattoo nonsense a long time ago as tired and exhausted.