Just Tattoo Of Us
TV Show
The show follows Charlotte Crosby and Stephen Bear as they open the doors to the 'Just Tattoo of Us'...
Just tattoo of us Tattoo Reality tv
Tattoo You Premium - Use your camera to get a tattoo
Catalogs and Entertainment
App
The premium tattoo app to add tattoos to your photos with no in app purchases required. See what...
Tattoo You - Add tattoos to your photos
Photo & Video and Lifestyle
App
Trade in the tattoo machine for your iPhone and turn normal photos of yourself into tattoo riddled...
Cattail Moonshine & Milkweed Medicine
Book
History, literature, and botany meet in this delightful tour of how humans have relied on plants to...
Instattoo - Tattoo Designer
Entertainment and Lifestyle
App
INTRODUCING INSTATTOO, THE WORLD'S FIRST TATTOO GENERATOR • Join The Revolution In The Tattoo...
Dean (6926 KP) rated The Girl in the Spider's Web (2018) in Movies
Nov 26, 2018 (Updated Nov 26, 2018)
This feels very different. From the Bond like opening credits and plot about a programme that can hack any nuclear missile world wide. It's very broad in scope... Without actually having a big plot feel to it. It's not a bad film, it's an ok Thriller. After the high standards set by the other films though this is a step down. Check out the the Swedish ones if you haven't seen them.
Booksy: book your appointment
Lifestyle
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Book appointments with hair salons, barbershops, estheticians, nail or makeup artists, tattoo...
Parking Frenzy 2.0
Games and Education
App
Games2win’s No.1 App Parking Frenzy brings to you the ultimate drive ‘n’ park experience. Get...
Hara05 (11 KP) rated The Tattooist of Auschwitz in Books
Jun 30, 2019
Boy, what I disappointed.
The premise of this book offered so much potential but from the first page, I found myself cringing. I haven't read a book so poorly written since the Fifty Shades fiasco and although I'm loathe to compare the two (one a poorly informed erotica and this one, a book on such a important and harrowing topic) I find that I cannot help it.
As I've said, the premise offered so much potential. A true story of the Holocaust from a little explored prospective which shines a light on the suffering of all those forced through the gates of Auschwitz and Birkenau, this book could have been something truly special, resonating with so many readers on so many levels. Instead, the reader must grapple through pages of unrealistic dialogue, clunky exchanges and at times, very simplistic prose which simply makes the reader bored. We must never be bored when it comes to The Holocaust - of anything, the horrific event should have us all squirming, almost in a sea of distress as we turn each page for how else can we learn from this? How can we take on board the lessons that must be learned when we cannot connect with the characters?
The fact that this is a true story just adds to the disappointment. So many survivors spent their lives too afraid or too completely isolated to ever want to share their experiences with the world and yet, here we have a brave survivor , willing to do just that and their story is completely ruined by awful story telling. Whether all of the survivors story is true or not is not the issue here, it's how the story has been presented and bundled up beneath an eye catching cover.
So bad is the writing, so terribly constructed is the prose, that I found myself forcing myself to finish. By the time I did read the final sentence, I was relieved. Not my usual relief of 'Thank God, they survived!' but instead, relieved that I had managed to get through it. By the time the end came, I still did not feel any connection to the main characters other than the sympathy that they were forced to live through that ordeal. Of course, I was routing for them but not because of anything included in the book rather because they were real human beings who found themselves in such a place.
What is so disappointing is the fact that, with all the media attention and advertising this book received, it could have been at the forefront of the movement to raise awareness of The Holocaust. With so many survivors now gone, most without having shared their own stories, this book could have really been something special. It could have educated masses of people and made us take a long, hard look at ourselves and the world around us.
Instead, it is only memorable it's disjointed prose and simplicity, when it's premise is anything but simple.