Salvage Trouble (Black Ocean Mission 1)
Book
Carl Ramsey has a starship to run. Down on his luck, struggling to pay the cost of fuel, he’s just...
SciFi Aliens Space Wizards
ClareR (5726 KP) rated Against the Loveless World in Books
Aug 15, 2021
When she returns to Palestine to her husband’s family in order to divorce him, she meets his brother and falls in love. However, this is the start of more problems for her, as she becomes radicalised.
It did seem hard to believe that she had quite so many problems and terrible things happen to her, but I’ve since read that Nahr’s character is an amalgamation of several real-life stories. So, in a way, it reassured me that one person couldn’t experience ALL of these things, whilst at the same time I felt so sad that anyone could experience ANY of these things.
I couldn’t put this book down, though. It’s a fascinating, yet horrifying novel, and not something that I’ve read about in fiction before - and I’m so glad that I have.
The Scent of a Storm
Book
A heart-wrenching love story for the ages – inspired by true events Eastern Prussia, 1944:...
Historical Fiction WWII
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Mars House in Books
Oct 1, 2024
Ok, a short summary:
January Sterling is a climate refugee, escaping the floods and intense heat for the Mars colony of Tharsis. Life as an Earthstronger on Mars isn’t ideal. He and the other Earthstrongers are seen as a danger to the native Martians: they are much stronger because of the weaker gravity, even though they’re much smaller. January and his fellow Earthstrongers are discriminated against and given the worst manual labour jobs.
January meets a Martian politician who is staunchly anti-Earth stronger, an somehow ends up in a sham-marriage. Of course, it’s a slow-burn romance with lots of peril, lies and climate change politics.
My only complaint, is that in trying to make the characters asexual, they all read as being very male. Perhaps it was just the way I read it.
The Mars House has a lot to say about climate change and its refugees - and the predictable refugee-haters. Instead of boats, they arrive in space ships, and the inhabitants of Mars are as scared of, and enraged by, these people, as some elements in our own society today.
I really enjoyed this book, and I loved how different it was to Natasha Pulley’s previous books. Whatever will she write next? I’ll be waiting!
Sara Cox (1845 KP) rated The End of the Ocean in Books
Nov 18, 2019 (Updated Mar 15, 2020)
The story telling of this book is amazing! I really enjoyed reading it. A lot of the way through I was curious as to how these timelines interlinked. I'm glad I stuck with the curiosityy because the way that they do is truly beautiful.
Meeting Evil with Mercy: An Anglican Priest's Bold Answer to Atrocity - Reflections Upon the Ministry of Martin Israel
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Meeting Evil with Mercy tells the absorbing story of Martin Israel, a Jewish doctor turned Christian...
The Good Immigrants: How the Yellow Peril Became the Model Minority
Book
Conventionally, US immigration history has been understood through the lens of restriction and those...
What a Life!: 50 Years of Fleet Street Photography
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From his humble beginnings in London's East End, Ted Blackbrow went on to become one of the UK's...
A Home Front Diary 1914-1918
Lillie Scales and Peter Scales
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'One of the saddest and yet most thrilling sights to me was to see parties of those young fellows...
Switching to the MAC: the Missing Manual
Book
What makes Windows refugees decide to get a Mac? Enthusiastic friends? The Apple Stores?...