Larousse Spanish Basic Dictionary
Reference and Education
App
Larousse Spanish Basic Dictionary - More than 75,000 complete definitions for 30,000 terms in...
Perfecting Sound Forever: An Aural History of Recorded Music
Book
In 1915, Thomas Edison proclaimed that he could record a live performance and reproduce it...
Malcolm X at Oxford Union: Radical Politics In a Global Era
Book
In 1964 Malcolm X was invited to debate at the Oxford Union Society at Oxford University. The topic...
She Sees Ghosts (Adirondack Spirit Series)
Book
A blazing fire killed her family and devoured her home. A vengeful demon haunted her. Ghosts of the...
Historical Supernatural
Against the Loveless World
Book
Nahr has been confined to the Cube: nine square metres of glossy grey cinderblock, devoid of time,...
Historical fiction Literary fiction War Palestinians Palestine
We'll Always Have Poison (A Dr. Lily Robinson Novel)
Book
In this series finale, pathologist Dr. Lily Robinson races around the globe to hunt an assassin who,...
Enemies to Lovers Romantic Suspense
Eleanor (1463 KP) rated Star Trek: Discovery - Season 1 in TV
May 24, 2019 (Updated May 24, 2019)
Set before the adventures of the Original series Discovery is a star-ship with a revolutionary propulsion system and set to be a key part in the battle against the Klingons which this series focuses on (the look they went for with the Klingons in this didn’t work for me - too much like a Cornish pasty head.)
Unlike previous incarnations, Discovery doesn't focus around the Captain, instead we focus more on the character of Michael Burnham who’s pretty a smart kick ass type of girl. It’s the characters and the acting in this that really engaged, I don’t think I’ve liked as many of the main cast as this before.
When we start dealing with the Mirror universe (remember goatee Spock in the original series?) this series really got going for me I love the Terran empire and when we meet the Emperor it’s just great.
This series was full of continuing story lines (unlike the more traditional Trek standalone episode formula) and had a lot more action based feel to it. It’s different but enjoyable, looking forward to watching series 2.
Awix (3310 KP) rated War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches in Books
Feb 3, 2020
A bit of a mixed bag, to be honest: some of the stories just restage elements of Wells with a different backdrop, others treat the Martians as a backdrop for more introspective tales, still others indulge in literary pastiche. Unlikely juxtapositions and in-jokes abound - Rudyard Kipling meets Gandhi, Tolstoy meets Stalin, Samuel Clemens (d. 1910) makes reference to John Christopher (b. 1922). The best stories are mostly the ones which recognise the political/satirical subtext powering the Wells novel and attempt to do something similar - so Barbara Hambly's story concerns British imperialism in India, and the effect of the Martians on the situation there, while another looks at the consequences for pre-revolutionary Russia. That said, Connie Willis' Hugo-winning contribution sends the whole conceit of the novel up with a predictable mixture of tongue-in-cheek drollery and sheer absurd silliness, as the unlikely effect of a Martian encounter on the poetry of Emily Dickinson is revealed (especially considering Dickinson died twelve years before the coming of the Martians). The good stories are very good indeed, the less good ones merely a bit tedious. A worthy and worthwhile tribute to the original novel.
Mad City Gangs: Nice City
Games
App
Become the grand auto driver in this open-world 3D adventure full of crime-fighting and non-stop...
Montessori 1st Operations - addition & subtraction made simple
Education and Games
App
An Amazing app dedicated to the discovery of additions & subtractions, for children 5 to 8 years! -...