In The Empty Quarter
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A woman’s journey to self-discovery collides with the ancient legends of the Rubʿ al-Khali desert...
The Black Painting
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An enthralling well-written mystery for readers who enjoyed The Keeper of Lost Things and The...
mystery
The Italian Matchmaker
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Lose yourself in the sun-drenched hills of the Amalfi coast with bestselling author of Songs of Love...
The New Hunger
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The end of the world didn’t happen overnight. After years of societal breakdowns, wars and...
The Running Hare: The Secret Life of Farmland
Book
The Sunday Times Bestseller. Winner of the Thwaites Wainwright Prize 2015. BBC Radio 4's 'Book of...
30-something and Over it: What Happens When You Wake Up and Don't Want to Go to Work ... Ever Again
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Kasey Edwards has everything she's always wanted: a successful career and the lifestyle and assets...
National Geographic Illustrated Guide to Nature: From Your Back Door to the Great Outdoors
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Bursting with beautiful images and completely authoritative text, this comprehensive nature field...
Acanthea Grimscythe (300 KP) rated The Jekyll Revelation in Books
May 15, 2018
The Jekyll Revelation goes back and forth in time, alternating between present day California where Rafe and Heidi (who vanishes halfway through the story, along with the repercussions for Rafe’s actions) patrol the desert and the past, where Robert Louis Stevenson, only just now writing his famed The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, is slowly dying from consumption. The latter portions are told in first person, as it is the recounting of Stevenson’s fictional life by journal. Many of these chapters could be removed and the book would be the same.
I guess it could be said that my biggest quarrel with this book is its slow progression. It isn’t until the final quarter of the novel that anything picks up, and by then the present is damn near irrelevant. Sure, there’s some loose ends that get tied up in the present, but it just feels hollow and empty.
Overall, I didn’t like this book. Fellow members of the #spookyfriendsbookclub seem to also have given it up, with only one member still reading it. I likely won’t be including Masello in future votes.
MaryAnn (14 KP) rated The Wonder Years: 40 Women Over 40 on Aging, Faith, Beauty, and Strength in Books
Mar 5, 2019
Well, it's time to start looking at life after 40 in a different light! In this book, well-known Christian women from ages 40 to 85 give their wisdom on how to face these worries. With Spiritual wisdom, a sense of humor, these women give some incredible insight into life after 40.
You will read the writings of Lauren F. Winner, Joni Eareckson Tada, Elisa Morgan, Madeleine Engle and kay Warren.
These women will provide ideas and thoughts about aging and to look at aging with your eyes open to new possibilities and most of all to grow closer to God. Each essay provides a look into God's perspective on the later years of life, reminding us that it's always possible to serve Him with the life experiences we have.
The book is comprised of short essays, that makes it quick to read, you can put it down and pick it back up at without interruption of the book.
It was interesting and it made me chuckle a couple of times. This is a good book for those who are in the 40 and over age, or those who are approaching it. It might even be a good book to do in a group setting with women of this age group.