Space, Time, and the Limits of Human Understanding
Shyam Wuppuluri and Giancarlo Ghirardi
Book
In this compendium of essays, some of the world's leading thinkers discuss their conceptions of...
200 Easy Homemade Cheese Recipes: From Cheddar & Brie to Butter & Yogurt
Book
Discover the satisfying art of cheese making in this updated edition. This bestselling book has been...
Collie (Comprehensive Owner's Guide)
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One of the world's most recognizable purebred dogs, the Collie with his signature rough coat and...
Mushroom 11
Games
App
As life struggles to gain a foothold in a devastated world, a new lifeform emerges from the rubble....
A Hamiton Christmas (HIS #9)
Book
While some may try, no one ruins a Hamilton family Christmas. From Romantic Suspense BEST-SELLING...
Heather Cranmer (2721 KP) created a post
Sep 2, 2021
Whatchareadin (174 KP) rated The Mothers: A Novel in Books
May 10, 2018
We all have people in our lives who know everything think that is going on in our lives or think they do whether we want them to or not. In this book, a few ladies at Upper Room Church fill this spot. They narrate the scene for most of the chapters in this book and give their honest opinion on how the story will unfold. They have known these young people most of their lives and have been in their position many years before.
I have been looking forward to reading this book or a long time. I will say that even though I read this book rather quickly it wasn't quite what I was expecting. I would have liked to seen more of a voice from "The Mothers". Other than that, this was an enjoyable read for me.
Nadia, Aubrey and Luke are all around the same age and live in Oceanside. Luke and Nadia date briefly the summer before she leaves for college. Then Luke suddenly cuts her out of his life like a bad habit. She takes a job working as the First Lady's assistant at Upper Room. There she meets Aubrey. Aubrey is quiet and shy, but is instantly drawn to Nadia. Both of them having lost their mothers, although in very different ways, have a connection that no one would have seen. The story follows the trio as they move through life and deal with their pasts in order to move forward with their futures.
This was a very good debut novel and I look forward to more books by Brit Bennett.
Natari (73 KP) rated Midnight's Daughter (Dorina Basarab, #1) in Books
Jul 19, 2019
Dorina is a 500 year old dhampir with some serious memory problems from most of her life, so while she has experience and fun stories to tell she is still very modern and youthful. An outcast to both vampire and human world's, and repeatedly mocked and attacked by them too, Dory shows how 500 years helps build a thick skin. But deep down we still get a sassy, strong woman than Chance is known for writing.
The reason I love Dory starts in Midnight's Daughter but grows in the series. And that is because Dory is relateable. She is strong. She knows she is strong. She is confident in her strength. She knows her limitations. But she is also afraid. This internal dialogue you read is so very real and lifelike.
She is also hilarious and Karen chance style of writing will have you laughing as well as scream for the safety of for favourite characters.
Midnight Daughter as a book is well writte . With attention to detail throughout the history and action scenes that you will be holding for more at the stench or getting rather flustered at some romantic encounters. There is a good balance and it is infused with emotion and sensation so you aren't just stuck with a dry sex scene, it is romance not boring bedrooms with flat description or over the top swooning.
The romance plays key files in the plot and not just the sake of it being a romance. Much like in the Caddie Palmer series.
The storyline is very much a scene setter for the rest of the books. While a lot happens it is breaking the mold set by Carrie Palmer.
All in all a fun battle in both bar brawls and bedrooms with deep undercurrents of isolation, stigma and abandonment covered. Read it. Read it now.
The Many Faces of Sacha Baron Cohen: Politics, Parody, and the Battle Over Borat
Book
In his various guises, the British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen has threatened Uzbekistan with...
Whatever...Love is Love: Questioning the Labels We Give Ourselves
Book
The acclaimed actress and dedicated activist shares her personal journey of discovery, and destroys...