Lightbot Jr : Coding Puzzles for Ages 4+
Games and Education
App
Apple Features, in over 100 countries: *Best New Apps and Games* *Best for Learning to Code* ...
SCRABBLE Premium for iPad
Games and Entertainment
App
CONNECT WITH FRIENDS. PLAY WITH WORDS. Get a game of SCRABBLE going with just about anyone – or...
Washington DC Offline Map Navigator and Guide
Navigation and Travel
App
100% OFFLINE - Your detailed Map for reach everywhere. Save much money in Roaming cost. Reach every...
Sky Without Stars (System Divine, #1)
Jessica Brody and Joanne Rendell
Book
A thief. An officer. A guardian. Three strangers, one shared destiny . . . When the Last Days...
retelling
Matching Bloodlines (The Princeton Allegiant #3)
Book
Vampires don’t date. They possess. Nothing could have prepared Francisco St. Claire for...
Paranormal Romance
The Perfect King: The Life of Edward III, Father of the English Nation
Book
He ordered his uncle to be beheaded; he usurped his father's throne; he taxed his people more than...
Wined and Died in New Orleans
Book
The second in a fantastic new cozy mystery series with a vintage flair from USA Today bestselling...
Brushstrokes from the Past (Soli Hansen Mysteries #4)
Book
WWII and the mid-seventeenth century are entwined in this fourth dual timeline novel about Nazi art...
Historical Fiction Mystery Sweet
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2165 KP) rated A Sense for Murder in Books
Aug 3, 2023
The book takes a bit of time setting up the suspects, but it isn’t too long before the body is found and things really pick up. There were several puzzling twists on the way to the satisfying climax. I was anxious to see how Sally’s relationship with her new boyfriend was going to go. I appreciated that their storyline didn’t drag their conflict out too much. The rest of the cast was great; we mostly focus on the suspects, and they kept me guessing. The book touches on the issue of the homeless, and I felt it did a good job of presenting the concerns fairly, which I appreciated. We also dabble a little with the sixth sense in this book, but it didn’t go so far that it bothered me or took this book out of the real world. There are five gourmet recipes at the end to enjoy later. This series was always intended to be a six book series, and if the author does stick with that, fans will be happy with where Sally winds up here.
ClareR (5681 KP) rated The Glutton in Books
Dec 20, 2023
The Glutton by A. K. Blakemore is based on the real life story of Tarare, a man born into poverty but happy with that life. That is until his mother meets the man who changes her life, presumably for the better - and changes Tarare’s life for the worst.
He’s known as the man who ate a golden fork (that eventually kills him), live animals, offal, a baby - but still people want to watch him put away vast amounts of food (and non-food!). And if it means he’s fed, Tarare sees it as a way of satiating the ever-present hunger. The draw of the circus freak is overwhelming for the French public.
Tarare is a simple man who is taken advantage of at every turn. I felt so sorry for him. He has the disadvantage of not only being very unusual, but also uneducated and poor. He has to fight to survive, both as a soldier and as a civilian, and he’s seen as a joke by the more well-off.
For such a grotesque subject matter, the writing really is rather beautiful. Descriptions of Tarare’s childhood and the place that he grew up were sensitively done - you could see the love of his local area and the love he felt for his mother. Even in the most disgusting sections of the book, there was a kind of beauty.
A deliciously bizarre, beautifully written book. I loved it.