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The definitive text for students of digital forensics, as well as professionals looking to deepen...

Digital Photogrammetry: A Practical Course: 2016
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The fourth edition is again an "all-in-one" combination of basic theory and practical exercises with...

Linked Lexical Knowledge Bases: Foundations and Applications
Iryna Gurevych, Judith Eckle-Kohler and Michael Matuschek
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This book conveys the fundamentals of Linked Lexical Knowledge Bases (LLKB) and sheds light on their...

Machine Learning: Hands-On for Developers and Technical Professionals
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Dig deep into the data with a hands-on guide to machine learning Machine Learning: Hands-On for...

Practical Research: Planning and Design
Paul D. Leedy and Jeanne Ellis Ormrod
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For introductory courses Research Methods in any area of study-from Anthropology to Zoology...

Visual Design Solutions: Principles and Creative Inspiration for Learning Professionals
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Enhance learners' interest and understanding with visual design for instructional and information...

Willkommen! 2 German Intermediate course: Activity Book
Paul Coggle and Heiner Schenke
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Willkommen! 2 Intermediate course is a brand new multi-format German adult learning programme for...

Botanical Shakespeare: An Illustrated Compendium of All the Flowers, Fruits, Herbs, Trees, Seeds, and Grasses Cited by the World's Greatest Playwright
Gerit Quealy, Sumie Hasegawa Collins and Helen Mirren
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A captivating, beautifully illustrated, one-of-a-kind color compendium of the flowers, fruits,...

The New Oxford Shakespeare: Authorship Companion
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This companion volume to The New Oxford Shakespeare: The Complete Works concentrates on the issues...

Sarah (7799 KP) rated The Last Librarian in Books
Jul 24, 2020
The good thing about this book is that the idea behind it. Set in a futuristic society where a pandemic has wiped out a large part of the population, the thought behind it is fairly relevant and in keeping with today’s events and you can almost imagine that this could’ve easily happened today. That however is where the good stops. The story is far too overly complicated and predictable, and also pretty dull. It doesn’t help that the author has decided that despite being set less than 80 years from today, everything has changed - the language, the continents, technology to the point where everything has a ridiculous and laughable new name. I never understand why authors try and rename everything just because it’s classed as a futuristic book, it’s entirely unnecessary. And then there’s the acronyms. Within the first half of the book so many silly acronyms are introduced that I quickly lost the will to even try and remember what they stood for, it’s far too many.
The characters are whiny and self absorbed, with a large part of the chapters taken up by their monotonous and rambling inner monologuing. And then they all seem to inexplicably talk in literary quotes all the time, to constantly stress their self importance and the worthiness of the books. The relationships between characters also seem poorly developed yet progress far too quickly.
Overall I really didn’t enjoy this book, and the fact that it has been set up for 2 further sequels doesn’t interest me in the slightest. I’d have to be very desperate to read those.