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At the end of the nineteenth century, acoustics was a science of musical sounds; the musically...
Insane Clown President: Dispatches from the American Circus
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One of the most important voices in contemporary American journalism - Independent Matt Taibbi is...

No Way but This: In Search of Paul Robeson
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Film star. Icon. Agitator. Martyr. Paul Robeson was a brilliant student and champion athlete who...

The Detective and the Devil
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'What impresses me most is Lloyd's ability to bring big themes into the weave of the story and yet...

Beatrix Potter: The Complete Tales
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This is a perfect gift to introduce children to the world of Beatrix Potter, "The Complete Tales" is...

Kingdom Builder
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Kingdom Builder, winner of the German „Spiel des Jahres 2012“ award, now available on iPad! ...

The Death of a Prophet: The End of Muhammad's Life and the Beginnings of Islam
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The oldest Islamic biography of Muhammad, written in the mid-eighth century, relates that the...

Raffles: And the Golden Opportunity
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Thomas Stamford Raffles (1781-1826) was the charismatic and persuasive founder of Singapore and...

Book Divas (227 KP) rated Light Years in Books
Dec 12, 2017
"You have nothing to lose here, whatever happens. You just be yourself and let go of the results."
"The world is everyone's oyster if they step up to crack it open."
"Can you feel it? The wind? That's God's hand, washing you clean."
"If you begin with a belief that the world is flat, you'll never be able to conceive of it as a sphere. Your brain will just stop there, deciding that it knows. It will never allow you to consider an alternate perception."
{I received an E-ARC via The Fantastic Flying Book Club and the Publisher via NetGalley and made no guarantee of a favorable review. The opinions expressed here are unbiased and my own.}

Marylegs (44 KP) rated Station Eleven in Books
Aug 14, 2019
I won’t go overly into details about the characters it is best to discover them yourselves. I was pleasantly surprised by how good this book was. Receiving it as an advanced review, I didn’t really know much about the story other than it being based in a post-apocalyptic world. Upon receiving the book I was slightly put off by the blurb stating it was following a group of traveling actors and musicians and that it was trying to show how art still had a place in this post civilisation world. But don’t let this put you off, I’m glad I didn’t. Whilst the story uses the actors and musicians in this ‘Traveling Symphony’ as a point to allow cross country movement and show that some people as trying to survive but also to enrich other people’s lives, that wasn’t really what gripped me. It was the relationships this characters had made, the stories about how they used to live and what they had been forced to do in this changing world that kept me turning pages.
I would recommend this book, and I would probably re-read again and possibly try some of the authors other works. The author wrote beautifully and it never felt pretentious or like they were trying to over moralise things. If like me, you like a good end of the world, dystopian story but want something different from the general, zombies, vampires and hunger games type read, give this ago. It may surprise you, like it did me.