
Glint of Light on Broken Glass
Book
Jason Monaghan's historical novel Glint of Light on Broken Glass begins when sixteen year-old George...

Butler Plays: Made of Stone, Redundant, Lucky Dog, The Early Bird
Book
Butler Plays: 1 brings together into one volume four of the major plays by this award-winning...
Film: Museums, Curatorship and the Moving Image
Paolo Cherchi Usai, David Francis, Alexander Horwath and Michael Loebenstein
Book
What are the major issues and challenges film archives, cinematheques and film museums are bound to...

Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Management Science and Engineering Management: Focused on Electrical and Information Technology
Jiuping Xu, Masoom Yasinzai and Benjamin Lev
Book
Welcome to the proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Management Science and...

Reshaping Communications: Technology, Information and Social Change
Book
'It is a clich [ac]e but this book is timely, welcome and indeed a breath of fresh air...It is of...

Warhorses of Letters: The Poignant BBC Radio 4 Comedy
Full Cast, Marie Phillips, Robert Hudson and Daniel Rigby
Book
Stephen Fry, Daniel Rigby and Tamsin Greig star in all three series of the poignant BBC Radio 4...

Erika (17789 KP) rated Star Wars: Queen's Peril in Books
Jun 27, 2020
I liked how this book revealed a little more about Shmi, that she was also good with gadgets and fixed a screen so they could watch Anakin during the podrace.I want a book about Shmi now.
What I don't understand about these new SW writers is the need to slap in love interests and who is interested in who... I legitimately don't care, and it never adds anything to the story. Unless romantic interests/feelings drive a story, leave that crap out, I'm reading it for the Star Wars content.
Parts of this book I really liked and I would read it again. However, I still think Padme's character should have been given to Claudia Gray, rather than this author. I think Padme should be given at least one adult book, written by someone else.

Jesters_folly (230 KP) rated Bring it on, Ghost in TV
Jul 17, 2020
Bring it on, Ghost is a Korean, horror, romance, comedy romance series on Netflix. Each episode is a 'Monster of the week' type of story with also builds up the story of Park Bong-pal and how he gained the ability to see ghosts and what it means to his future.
The horror aspect of the series is quite tame, some of the ghosts are creepy but the show focus's on Park Bong-pal and Kim Hyeon-ji's relationship and works on building up the over aching series story line.
Being about ghosts there are the occasional episodes that touch on suicide and child abuse but these are handled well and manly focus on the effect such actions have on the survives and are not glorified or used for shock value.

Geek Sublime: Writing Fiction, Coding Software
Book
This is a great novelist on his twin obsessions: writing and coding. What is the relationship...