And Furthermore
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The SUNDAY TIMES bestselling memoir of Britain's best-loved actress, Dame Judi Dench. From the...
Ariel: A Literary Life of Jan Morris
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Jan Morris is one of the great British writers of the post-war era. Soldier, journalist, writer...
Granta 119: Britain
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In 2012, Britain is a nation in flux, managing difficult socioeconomic realities, contending with...
The Perpetual Motion Machine - The Story of an Invention
Paul Scheerbart and Andrew Joron
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In the last days of 1907, the German novelist and exponent of glass architecture Paul Scheerbart...
Living with Strangers
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Living with Strangers is a family drama set in England, France and Germany between 1963 and 1978. It...
Funny How Things Turn Out: Love, Death and Unsuitable Husbands - a Mother and Daughter Story
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Muriel Newmarch was born in North London in 1903. She died in 2009, aged 106. Judith Bruce is her...
Gilgit Rebellion: The Major Who Mutinied Over Partition of India
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In 1942 William Brown was posted as a recently commissioned Indian Army Officer to the Gilgit Agency...
Good for the Money
Book
In 2009, at the peak of the financial crisis, AIG - the American insurance behemoth - was sinking...
Birds of Passage: The Indian Travels of Henrietta Clive
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Henrietta is a true original. Clever, vivacious and interested in everything, she managed to balance...
BookInspector (124 KP) rated Yakuza Moon: The True Story of a Gangster's Daughter in Books
Sep 24, 2020
The narrative of this novel is filled with violence, and it got sadder and more miserable as I was reading through this book. This book is a great example of how poor decisions can ruin one’s life. Even though it was a sad book, I absolutely loved the illustrations used to portray this story. I found this novel quite educational, I learned how people were getting by in Japan in 1990ies, especially women.
This book is quite nerve-racking and upsetting, and the chapters are quite long, but it is a one-sitting read and pages just fly by. The ending of this book rounded up the story very nicely, but I wanted a different ending for Shoko.
So, to conclude, it was an unusual and shocking journey for me, but at the same time an invaluable experience gained throughout the pages, and I would strongly recommend it to everybody.

