Translate Website Extension for Safari
Utilities and Travel
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Translate websites directly inside Safari on iPhone and iPad. Download the app, set your output...
Translate Pro - Dictionary & Translator - Photo and Voice translation in 80+ languages
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Translate is a powerful tool that will help to break down language barriers. It gathers together,...
Translate - Dictionary & free Translator - Photo and Voice translation in 80+ languages
Business and Utilities
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Translate is a powerful tool that will help to break down language barriers. It gathers together,...
Tripoli: A History
Book
It has been called a "Noble Possession", abused as "A Nest of Corsairs" and extolled as "The Pearl...
Live Translator - Instant Voice & Text Translator
Reference and Travel
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Translator Live is a simple yet powerful tool to translate text, speech and even to have real-time...
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Island of Missing Trees in Books
Sep 28, 2021
There’s a feel of Romeo and Juliet about this: a Greek-Cypriot boy (Kostas), and a Turkish-Cypriot girl (Defne) fall in love - something forbidden in the climate they’re living in. They meet in secret in a tavern that has a fig tree growing through the centre of it. This is a significant tree - it’s one of the main narrators of this story. And what a story it has to tell. It talks about the natural world in which it lives, the humans that it comes into contact with, the conflict it lives through, the sorrow, the loss.
This book describes the fracturing of a country, people forced to leave the country they love. Kostas is one of these people. He moves to London to live with his uncle, but he never seems to feel as though he fits in in there. He does follow his passion though, and becomes an expert in Natural History: the trees and plants around him, around the world, and in his native Cyprus. Which is what brings him and Defne back together, and reunites them with the fig tree.
The three of them return to London together, all cast adrift from their homeland.
Later, Kostas and Defne’s daughter carries this feeling of not quite belonging as well, but her father doesn’t seem to be able to give her what she needs. She knows nothing of her roots: she has no contact with her Cypriot family - until the day her aunt arrives.
The way that Shafak writes about loss and the pain of loss is visceral, but there’s a great deal of hope and the promise of healing. This book just has it all. I was completely enveloped in this story, and I’ve been left with a pressing need to read everything else that Elif Shafak has written!
Many thanks to Jellybooks and Penguin for providing me with a copy of this book to read.
Suswatibasu (1701 KP) rated The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe in Books
Oct 10, 2017 (Updated Oct 11, 2017)
First published in 1950, this is one of the most classic portal fantasies ever written. Four children are sent from London to an old house in the country during the evacuations of World War II. Through a magic wardrobe, they enter the fantasy land of Narnia, which is a jumbled mixture of Greek mythology, Bible stories, and Arthurian romances, with a bit of Medieval Bestiaries thrown in.
The White Witch has made herself Queen of Narnia, and put it under the spell of an ever-constant winter. With the arrival of the children and the lion Aslan, an old prophecy is met, spring comes to Narnia, and there is a major clash between the good and evil Narnians on who gets to dominate Narnia.
I like the book better than the film just because of the amount of detail used by the master of fantasy C. S. Lewis.
Black Milk: On Motherhood and Writing
Book
Black Milk is the affecting and beautifully written memoir on motherhood and writing by Turkey's...
Inside Coca-Cola
Neville Isdell and George Witte
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The first book by a Coca-Cola CEO tells the remarkable story of the company's revival. Neville...
The 'Big Four' of the White Star Fleet: Celtic, Cedric, Baltic & Adriatic
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The White Star Line's Celtic (1901), Cedric (1903), Baltic (1904) and Adriatic (1907), collectively...