21st Century Point and Figure: New and Advanced Techniques for Using Point and Figure Charts
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Advancing Point and Figure in the 21st Century Point and Figure has been around for over 130 years...
The Greatest Traitor: The Secret Lives of Agent George Blake
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'Sober, accurate and all the more thrilling for it. The best thing on Blake that we are likely to...
The Flexible Body: Move better anywhere, anytime in 10 minutes a day
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'Roger is an excellent trainer - and has a truly unique approach. It's perfect if you're bored with...
Management of Periprosthetic Joint Infection: A Global Perspective on Diagnosis, Treatment Options, Prevention Strategies and Their Economic Impact: 2017
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Periprosthetic joint infection (PJI) is among the most serious complications in the field of...
Mobile Electrician
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Basic electrical calculations on your mobile Mobile Electrician is a simple and powerful collection...
The Trading Playbook: Two Rule-Based Plans for Day Trading and Swing Trading
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Traders have a tendency to over-complicate. Many search for the latest new indicator that will give...
ClareR (6118 KP) rated The Paris Library in Books
Mar 2, 2021
In 1930’s - 1940’s Paris, we follow Odile, a young woman who wants to be a librarian in the American Library. She gets her dream job - much to her parents dismay. She meets and falls in love with a young police officer, but life begins to get much more difficult when the Germans invade France, occupying Paris. Odile’s twin brother is imprisoned in a camp after he is captured on the front, and her Jewish subscribers at the library are forbidden from going there. Odile’s wartime experiences are fascinating to read about, and I really enjoyed these flashbacks.
We also meet Lily in the 1980’s - Odile’s neighbour in the small Montana town that they both live in. They become good friends when Lily decides that she wants to write a school report about France during the Occupation. Odile teaches Lily to speak French, and they share a love of books. Odile becomes a grandmotherly figure in Lily’s life, and I loved the relationship between the two of them.
I found this book so interesting: when I was reading about Lily, I was desperate to know what would happen in the next Paris flashback, and when I was reading about Odile’s Paris, I wanted to know what would happen to Lily in her next section. I would say that this is the sign of a good book!
The Parisian sections weren’t gratuitously violent - in fact the Nazi heading the library department of the invading forces seemed to be a reasonable man. It’s made clear that the characters don’t like the Germans, and we’re told that Jews go missing, but the German’s themselves are very low key. This is about Odile’s experience, and Lily’s life in the 80’s. And the power of books.
The bravery of the Parisian librarians was admirable, especially as they could have been imprisoned or killed if their acts of resistance had ever been revealed.
I wouldn’t hesitate to recommend this book - it was a pleasure to read.
Gareth von Kallenbach (980 KP) rated The Post (2017) in Movies
Jul 11, 2019
When you hear the high caliber names such as Hanks, Streep, Speilberg, you can almost guarantee a top notch film with unbelievable emphasis on character development. They definitely did not disappoint! The Post works as a history lesson. Not only does it portray the events that took place with such thorough details, it exemplifies the relationship between not only a journalist and their source, but also the personal struggle between the editor, the owner of the newspaper, their friends who hold major positions within the government, and the moral obligation to at least get the truth out to the public.
The set design, the costume design, the characters’ mannerisms are flawless. Even the way social interaction was demonstrated between men and women. Women’s role is in the home, cooking, cleaning, and entertaining. Something so simple as the use of a rotary phone played such a nostalgic role. I can’t say enough about the wonderful acting skills of both Streep and Hanks. I suspect one or both with be receiving some serious accolades during awards season. Streep and Hanks both shine throughout the entire film. They both did a great job at relaying the emotions and the turmoil these characters faced.
Many lines throughout the movie–“if we don’t hold them accountable, than who will?”–ring true to a lot of the issues affecting us today.
Dying of Whiteness: How the Politics of Racial Resentment Is Killing America's Heartland
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Dying of Whiteness is What's the Matter with Kansas but with an emphasis on public health. In the...
The Missing Matisse: A Memoir
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Nazi planes were bombing Paris the day a lifelong, more personal war began for Pierre. It was the...

