My First Bible Games for Kids, Family and School
Book and Education
App
Engage your kids with the Bible with fun and faithful Games, Movies and Activities. • 360...
Learn English - Live Teachers!
Education, Games and Stickers
App
Join the over 1 million people who love learning English using OKpanda. When you use OKpanda you...
Discovering Statistics Using IBM SPSS Statistics
Book
Lecturers/instructors - request a free digital inspection copy here With a little help from his...
Interactive Clock Telling Time to Read Clocks
Entertainment
App
If you are looking for fun and easy games for kids, search no more because we've created a perfect...
SetMyCameraPro - Tools for Photography
Photo & Video and Utilities
App
If you are a photo enthusiast and want high quality professional photos, SetMyCamera Pro can help!...
Kids Games Educational Babies
Games and Education
App
"Funny Food 2" it includes 15 various amusing games in ALL topics which are required for your...
Jolly Phonics Letter Sounds
Education and Entertainment
App
Thank you for all the feedback we've received. It's great to hear that the app is helping children...
My Incredible Body - Guide to Learn About the Human Body for Children - Educational Science App with Anatomy for Kids
Education and Games
App
Winner of a Parents' Choice Silver Honor Award and awarded "Best App for Teaching & Learning" from...
Steven Sklansky (231 KP) rated American Assassin (2017) in Movies
Sep 14, 2017
But in American Assassin you get a crazy mix of both and it almost works. This is a movie about a guy that loses his girl to terrorists and spends his time being a solo assassin trying to single handedly take down terrorist cells. Which makes sense because who doesn't like a good revenge story. But then he gets picked up by the CIA to train him how to be a better killer. I thought maybe they would be teaching him how to be a spy and an assassin and go on missions alone like any other movie. Like Bourne or The Recruit. But this movie takes it a different way. They train as a team and go on missions as a team. Which is fine, I don't have a problem with that, but it really doesn't make it seem like they are training him to be an assassin which the title of the movie suggests.
The action in this movie does keep you on the edge of your set, which is always a good thing. And the time spent when they aren't running or driving around killing people is also good. There is a lot of story to this movie which keeps things interesting all while keeping the twists to a minimum.
I say for an action movie it was good, not great. I walked into the movie looking for people to be assassinated or trained to assassinate people, but walked out a little disappointed. If you like action see it, I don't know if it is theater worthy, but rent it when it comes out.
ClareR (5726 KP) rated Ayesha At Last in Books
Apr 4, 2019
It’s Pride and Prejudice set in modern Canada with a Muslim cast. Ayesha wants to work to pay her Uncle back for all the help he has given her and her family, but her real love is poetry, not teaching High School. She is asked by her rather spoilt cousin, Hafsa, to cover for her at a mosque event meeting under the guise of being Hafsa. There, she meets Khalid, and finds herself falling for a devout, conservative Muslim - something she doesn’t want to do - who is also shy, kind and handsome. However, when Khalid’s controlling mother organises marriage between the real Hafsa and Khalid, knowing the identity of the Hafsa that Khalid has met, both Khalid and Ayesha realise that they haven’t necessarily got what they want.
There was so much heart in this story - I particularly loved the characters of Nani and Nana. They acted as the voice of reason on more than one occasion. I also loved the Shakespeare quotations: Nani always had the right quote at exactly the right time (and it was all very meta - Shakespeare quotes in an Austen retelling!).
Even the more unsavoury characters were written in such a way that I felt sorry for them - life and experiences clearly making them the way they were.
I read this on The Pigeonhole app (one section, or stave, per day for ten days) and I can honestly say that I looked forward to every single stave. If I’d had the book in my hand, I would have read it in one sitting. So I’m actually glad that The Pigeonhole forced me to savour and enjoy this gorgeous book for longer. It deserves to be savoured, and it deserves to be read a lot too!!
I really do highly recommend this book!