Super Girls and Halos: My Companions on the Quest for Truth, Justice, and Heroic Virtue
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Award-winning author Maria Morera Johnson follows up her bestselling book, My Badass Book of Saints,...
Ancient Israel: What Do We Know and How Do We Know it?
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In Ancient Israel Lester L. Grabbe sets out to summarize what we know through a survey of sources...
Gaz Coombes recommended The Man Who Sold The World by David Bowie in Music (curated)
COMMODITY TRADER PRO: Trading Signals, Commodities
Finance and Business
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Commodity Trader is a tool for investors, traders, and industrialists who take positions in the...
Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race
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"I couldn't have a conversation with white folks about the details of a problem if they didn't want...
Politics race gender social issues
About Canada - Culture, Immigration, Lifestyle - A Practice English Magazine
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Your easy to read source for Canadian news, information, and adventure. "About Canada" will help...
Love Wins: A Book About Heaven, Hell, and the Fate of Every Person Who Ever Lived
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Rob Bell’s Sunday Times Bestselling Love Wins is the world’s most talked-about modern Christian...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated Young Women in Books
Apr 12, 2023
Emily meets Tamsin at a protest march and they become friends very quickly. Tamsin is an actress who seems to be living a very expensive life. She owns a flat in Soho, eats in expensive restaurants and drinks in even more expensive bars. In contrast, Emily shares a small flat, and works for a charity that deals with women’s advocacy. Her life is very different, and she’s excited by what Tamsin has to offer.
When an actress comes forward to accuse a film director of sexual assault, Emily realises that Tamsin is involved in some way.
This novel looks at how women can be coerced into keeping quiet about assault and in this case, with large sums of money. We see how men have all the power, how acts of sexual assault by males are all too frequent and commonplace, and how women can make themselves complicit whilst experiencing trauma.
There’s a lot to talk about in this novel, and I think it would make an outstanding book club book. It would certainly create a great deal of discussion around both sides of the equation. All of the men are written as complication inappropriate behaviours around women, and the women initially take the money in exchange for their silence, only to disclose what happened to them later.
This is a brilliant book, I hope people will read it and discuss the questions it raises about our society as a whole.
Uptown Oracle (24 KP) rated No Ordinary Star in Books
Jun 30, 2017
Although the book was short, it was packed full of information about this new future world. The new world was so strange yet extensive. There were so many advancements in medicine and lifestyle. You don't need to drink, eat or sleep because you can live off small tablets. Scientists create and genetically modify children. The government has removed music, art and love from humanity. There was the issue that no action was taken within the book - it will probably be within the next book that the pace is picked up.
This future brings up so many discussion points and thoughts when reading. Are all these advancements moral? Is this the right thing to do? There's separation of men and women, as men treat women as an inferior species. This book just makes you think so much about what you actually want for the future.
This book also brings up so many questions plot wise. Some questions were answered by the end, such as who is the 'fairy girl' in the first chapters? Other questions, such as why is the Clock so important will hopefully be answered in future installments? I'm excited to read the next book to see how it evolves!
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2200 KP) rated Murder on Lenox Hill in Books
Feb 13, 2019
Yes, my discussion about a current murder is missing on purpose since the body isn’t found until late in the book. There is still plenty of plot to keep us engaged until that happens, but unfortunately it felt very predictable. I had most of this book figured out long before Sarah and Frank did. I’m often a step or two ahead of them, but not this far ahead. I do still recommend this book to series fans since there are some significant developments on series arcs in this book, and you’ll want to see what happens there. The subject matter is fairly sensitive, but it is handled delicately without going into too much detail. Don’t make this the first in the series you pick up, but if you are already a fan, you’ll want to know what happens to Sarah and Frank here.