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Although there are numerous books on alternative accounting methods, such as Lean accounting, none...

The Power of the Other: The Startling Effect Other People Have on You, from the Boardroom to the Bedroom and Beyond-and What to Do About it
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Wall Street Journal bestseller An expert on the psychology of leadership and the bestselling author...
A Holistic Approach to Measuring the Security of SCADA Systems
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Describes how Supervisory Control and Data Acquisitions (SCADA) systems work and defines a new...

Disk-Based Algorithms for Big Data
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Disk-Based Algorithms for Big Data is a product of recent advances in the areas of big data, data...
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This title was first published in 2001. Biographical details for George Ripley (c.1415-c.1490), one...

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The spellbinding new Robert Langdon novel from the author of The Da Vinci Code. 'Dan Brown is the...
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Scotland and Tourism: The Long View, 1700-2015
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Tourism has long been important to Scotland. It has become all the more significant as the financial...

A Year of Living Happily: Week-by-Week Activities to Unlock the Secrets of a Happier Way of Being
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Experience a year of discovering how to swap worry and anxiety for joy and contentment using this...

Here Comes Everybody: How Change Happens When People Come Together
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Clay Shirky's international bestseller Here Comes Everybody: How Change Happens When People Come...

ClareR (5945 KP) rated The End of Men in Books
Jun 8, 2021
This is told from multiple perspectives. There are mostly recurring characters, such as Dr Maclean, some scientists, the anthropologist, intelligence and government types, interspersed with ‘ordinary’ people who were also affected and lost friends and family. We see perspectives from all over the world. The voices of these people all seem so real: their pain, confusion and determination coming through in their own voices, as their stories are all told in journal form.
The End of Men had pretty much the same effect on me as World War Z: I was checking the news and the windows (just in case), completely preoccupied with the book whilst I was reading it, and I predictably experienced a stonking book-hangover when it ended.
This is science fiction for people who wouldn’t normally pick up science fiction (a bit like a gateway drug!). It reads like contemporary fiction - the here and now.
This novel had me on the edge of my seat and in tears - and a bit angry at times, truth be told. This doesn’t feel like you’re reading science-fiction, it has a tinge of the non-fiction about it. Perhaps that’s because of the times we’re living in...
Would I recommend it? You’d better believe I would!