Vlogger Go Viral - Clicker Game & Vlog Simulator
Games and Entertainment
App
Get ready to become the next Internet sensation in Vlogger Go Viral, the idle clicker game where...
Harry Potter: Page to Screen
Book
From the acquisition of the film rights to the casting of Harry, Ron, and Hermione and the assembly...
Autonomic Road Transport Support Systems: 2016
Thomas Leo McCluskey, Apostolos Kotsialos, J.P. Muller and Rene Schumann
Book
The work on Autonomic Road Transport Support (ARTS) presented here aims at meeting the challenge of...
Practical Data Science with Hadoop and Spark: Designing and Building Effective Analytics at Scale
Ofer Mendelevitch, Casey Stella and Douglas Eadline
Book
The Complete Guide to Data Science with Hadoop-For Technical Professionals, Businesspeople, and...
The Internet of Things: Enabling Technologies, Platforms, and Use Cases
Pethuru Raj and Anupama C. Raman
Book
As more and more devices become interconnected through the Internet of Things (IoT), there is an...
Words are My Matter: Writings About Life and Books, 2000-2016, with a Journal of a Writer's Week
Book
"Hard times are coming, when we'll be wanting the voices of writers who can see alternatives to how...
TravelersWife4Life (31 KP) rated Love and a Little White Lie (State of Grace, #1) in Books
Feb 23, 2021
Tammy L. Gray writes this story from a first-person perspective and it was fascinating. I loved the raw emotions, and actions of the characters; they felt real and not cushioned by the reader’s expectations. January is a very well-developed character whom I could totally relate too (I mean honestly, how many of us have not dressed up for someone we hoped to impress and had less than satisfactory results?). But January takes it all in stride and turns her misfortunes around without even realizing that she is doing it. I also really enjoyed the slow build romance in this story, it was not the focus, but it was a great side-benefit.
The setting of this book was in Texas, which was awesome, as I know many of the places that were mentioned in this book. It was just the right amount of small-town charm mixed with the feeling of being apart of something bigger. I enjoyed the offhanded humor and the amazing message of accepting people as they are and letting the Lord work. Truly a great portrayal of the gospel.
I give this book 5 out of 5 stars for the great story-line, the real and edgy characters, and for the underlying themes throughout the whole book! I highly recommend picking this book up to read.
*I volunteered to read this book in return for my honest feedback. The thoughts and opinions expressed within are my own.
Travis Knight recommended Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1992) in Movies (curated)
Sarah (7800 KP) rated Unnatural Causes: The Life and Many Deaths of Britain's Top Forensic Pathologist in Books
Oct 17, 2020
This book is truly a fascinating read. It’s an interesting mixture detailing Richard Shepherd’s personal life and the many cases he’s had involvement in over the years. It balances these two aspects very well, and I found I was as interested in his personal life as I was in the cases. It is the cases though that take precedence in this book and Shepherd really has left no stone unturned. There is an immense amount of detail in this about the deaths, bodies, medical terms and outcomes of the cases, and by the end of the book you feel completely satisfied that nothing has been missed.
Shepherd has had a truly impressive career, spanning a number of decades and quite a lot of high profile cases and inquests; Stephen Lawrence, Princess Diana, 9/11, 7/7, Derrick Bird, Harold Shipman. His involvement in all of these cases is impressive and with some, I’ve learnt a fair amount that I’d never known previously (i.e. Diana’s cause of death and the pathology side of 9/11). Shepherd is obviously a very knowledgeable and respected pathologist and it shows from his experience and his writing.
I may be biased as forensics, crime and pathology have always been an interest of mine (I did my dissertation at university on alternatives to traditional post-mortems), but this book is engaging, intriguing and beyond fascinating. I’d liken it to This is Going to Hurt by Adam McKay, obviously this is a lot more serious without the funny anecdotes but if you enjoyed the medical side then you’d probably enjoy this too.
Voice Morphing
Utilities and Entertainment
App
VOTED BEST VOICE MORPHING APP OF THE STORE ! MORE THAN 1 MILLION USERS ALL OVER THE WORLD ! JOIN...



