David McK (3801 KP) rated Megamind (2010) in Movies
Mar 19, 2021
And then (he thinks) manages to defeat and kill the same, after he he sinks into a funk of depression.
Like Despicable Me, this also has a character called Minion (here, one character instead of a group of the same), with most of the banter coming from the interaction between Megamind and Minion in what is (essentially) a family friendly underdog story as Megamind discovers that being a villain is not everything there is to life.
First a Dream
Book
This is a captivating "rags to riches" story, as a young boy discovers during the Depression that...
A Few Right Thinking Men (Rowland Sinclair, #1)
Book
Rowland Sinclair is an artist and a gentleman. In Australia's 1930s the Sinclair name is respectable...
Mystery crime Historical fiction historical mystery Australia
Anywhere But Schuylkill (The Great Upheaval Trilogy)
Book
In 1877, twenty Irish coal miners hanged for a terrorist conspiracy that never occurred. Anywhere...
Historical Fiction
Becs (244 KP) rated Words That Kill in Books
Oct 2, 2019
Genre: Mental Health, Young Adult
Audience: Young Adult but also mature audiences as well
Reading level: Middle to High School
Interests: Depression, Mental Health, Anxiety, Suicide, Abuse, Hope, and Love.
Style: Light to hard – depending on the person.
Point of view: First person
Difficulty reading: Very easy to read but be warned, it does make you very emotional.
Promise: Words That Kill promises a poetry collection that talks about mental health and it delivers.
Quality: I believe everybody should read this even if they haven’t dealt with mental health.
Insights: Not taking the grammatical and spelling errors, the poems were a lot lighter to read compared to Rupi Kuar or even Shakespeare.
Ah-Ha Moment: There wasn’t really a moment where I went ‘Ah yea, that’s the turning point’. This is only because it wasn’t really a story, more of a poem that brings memories of the past back to life.
Favorite quote: “There is no need to hide in the shade, the light will come and your pain will fade.” – This is a great representation of how depression works. You have your good and your bad moments.
Aesthetics: The thing that drew me to the book in the first place, minus the topic of mental health of course, was the fact that the entire book is white words on an entirely black background. I’ve never seen a book have that aesthetically pleasing style and I love it!
“Like a flower, I will bloom again – depression.”
A Square Meal
Book
James Beard Foundation Book Award Winner From the author of the acclaimed 97 Orchard and her...
Great depression FDR food history
Callum John Hunter (0 KP) rated England Is Mine (2017) in Movies
Sep 20, 2017
Staring at Lakes: A Memoir of Love, Melancholy and Magical Thinking
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Throughout his life, Michael Harding has lived with a sense of emptiness - through faith, marriage,...
Herbs for Diabetes and Neurological Disease Management
Vikas Kumar and Addepalli Veeranjaneyulu
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This new volume provides a plethora of new information about potential medicinal herbs and their...
Natasha's Prison
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During the early years of Harry and Natasha’s relationship, the bond of the twin flames grew...
drama romance


