
Death of a Macho Man
Book
The unconventional Hamish Macbeth finds that his own impetuousness places him at the center of a...

Be-be-bears - Creative world
Games and Entertainment
App
We are delighted to present the second free Bjorn & Bucky game, based on the popular cartoon series....

Sago Mini Trucks and Diggers
Education and Games
App
Drive a dump truck with Rosie the hamster! Pile dirt high and dig deep in the ground with diggers,...

ClareR (5854 KP) rated Hold Back the Night in Books
Jul 7, 2024
Hold Back the Night is set in 3 timelines:
1959, Annie and Ruth are training to be psychiatric nurses in an institution that believes they’re at the forefront of treatment. They learn to speed-shave and dress male patients, hold down women receiving ECT, and take part in conversion therapy for some male patients. “Conversion therapy” sounds pretty harmless, doesn’t it? In reality it wasn’t.
1983, Annie is widowed and bringing up her daughter, Rosie, alone. She meets a young man who is ill, and his friend. She learns that he has been evicted because he has HIV. Annie offers them a home and nursing care. Soon her home becomes a haven for infected, homeless, shunned boys. I think in the back of her mind, she knows she’s trying to make amends for her part in the conversion therapies she took part in.
Which brings us to the third timeline in 2020, and Covid.
There are some parallels to be drawn (uncertainty, fear), but this timeline wraps everything up together, and Annie faces up to her part in 1959.
I loved this book, and the way the timelines wove together really helped me to understand Annie and her reasons for doing just what she did - rightly or wrongly.
Definitely one of my books of the year.

How to Avoid Being Killed in a Warzone: The Essential Survival Guide for Dangerous Places
Book
Everyone needs this book if they want to know how to get out of difficult situations whether at home...

After Isabella
Book
'A compelling and provocative read, nicely paced and thoroughly absorbing. At times, both...

The Songs
Book
From the bestselling author of Mr Toppit, a Richard & Judy Book Club pick, comes a riotous, darkly...

Learn To Play Guitar Solos
Music and Education
App
Learn how to play guitar solos with this selection of 176 easy to follow tutorial lessons. ...

Suswatibasu (1703 KP) rated Time: The Kalief Browder Story in TV
Sep 19, 2017
An innocent boy was held without trial, without conviction for three years in one of the most notorious prisons (Rikers Prison) where he was beaten senselessly by correction officers and inmates alike. He was then held in solitary confinement for 322 days (UN calls 15 days a human rights violation), tortured, starved and attempted suicide. This is New York. This is the American justice system.
When he was eventually released his mental health suffered, and it just gets worse and worse. I won't say anymore before I burst into tears again.
There are some remarkable interviews in here with Kalief's family, who were torn to shreds, top speakers such as Attorney General Eric Holder, "The New Jim Crow" author Michelle Alexander, journalist Shaun King, and even Jay-Z and Rosie O'Donnell, who were close friends. The biggest take away is how broken the system is / intended racial segregation and how important it is for the civil rights movement to join forces with the greater American populace to stop further injustices.
Seriously keep the tissues at hand. This is a hundred times more disturbing than Making A Murderer and The Keepers.