
The Awakening (The Vampire Diaries, #1)
Book
This special paperback TV tie-in edition of the first book in L.J. Smith’s New York Times...

Buckley the Highland Cow and Ralphy the Goat: A True Story about Kindness, Friendship, and Being Yourself
Book
Follow this charming true story of Buckley, an orphaned cow, and his best friend Ralphy, along their...
Farm animals animals Friendship Children Picture books Rescue

Miranda Nights (A Miranda Quinn Legal Twist #2)
Book
She has a loving husband and a successful career–who says you can’t have it all? Miranda Quinn...
Contemporary Women's Fiction

Lindsay (1760 KP) rated Goodness Gracious Golly Gee: I Forgot My Christmas Tree in Books
Apr 29, 2022
The way this book is done is quite cute. I enjoy the poem feel in this book; it is not complicated to read. The pictures did well. Children will enjoy this book and want you to read it repeatedly around the holiday season.
Their Goodness Gracious Golly Gee is hilarious and enjoyable throughout the book. Children will be laughing and enjoying saying these words Goodness Gracious Golly Gee, ever so often. Children can learn to read with this book with the help of a parent.
This book teaches us what is essential in life and that Santa will not be upset or mad because we do not have a tree or decorations or presidents. If you enjoy the love and kindness and are happy, Santa will be just as happy. The real meaning of Christmas lives shown through this whimsical story.

The Memoirs of Stockholm Sven
Book
In 1916, Sven Ormson leaves Stockholm to seek adventure in Svalbard, an Arctic archipelago where...
Arctic Memoir Historical Fiction

Saving Madonna
Book
Inspired by real events, an unforgettable story of love, courage and sacrifice to save a country’s...
Historical Fiction

Sealed with a Curse
Book
The kingdom of Melthkior was rich in both resources and people. The Royal Family were admired by one...
Fairytale Retelling Fantasy Romance Mythology Brothers Grimm The Six Swans

David McK (3562 KP) rated The Imitation Game (2014) in Movies
Feb 26, 2022
This flits back and forth between three timelines: the 1950s (just before Turing committed society, after being found guilty of Homosexual behaviour, which was outlawed at the time), the late 30s/early 40s (his work at Bletchley) and the 1920s (his childhood at a public boarding school, where he was bullied).
Cumberbatch manages to bring a different aura to his portrayal of Turing than he did previously to Sherlock - even though both are geniuses who struggle with a low EQ (Emotional Quotient) - while Kiera Knightley does her period piece acting as his fellow (perhaps even smarter) codebreaker Joan, who has to also put up with the misogynistic attitudes of the time.
And yes, the Imitation Game of the title is a real philosophical conundrum (which is described during the movie itself).

Starfolk Falling (The Starfolk Trilogy #2) by Martha Dunlop
Book
A woman destined to change the world. A timeless adversary determined to stop her. Only one will...
Urban Fantasy Paranormal

LeftSideCut (3776 KP) rated Paranormal Activity (2007) in Movies
Oct 13, 2022
The acting is certainly questionable. I get that the filmmakers were going for a realistic couple with Katie and Micah, but the dialogue definitely comes across as improvised in an amateur kind of way. I can't imagine any couple talking like that in real life, and it's a bit jarring.
The narrative ramps up nicely and certainly ends with a bang, but the vast majority is a little too uneventful considering we spend all of it with two unlikable characters.
For what it is though, PA does what it's sets out to do. It's unnerving horror that appeals to everyone and anyone looking for a fun kind of scare, nothing more, nothing less.