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Sarah (7800 KP) rated Allied (2016) in Movies

Aug 27, 2017  
Allied (2016)
Allied (2016)
2016 | Drama, Romance, War
I wasnt the slightest bit surprised after watching this to find out it was a Robert Zemeckis film. It centres far too much on the romance side and is very lacking in tension, action or suspense. The acting is good but nothing special, and I just found the whole thing a little boring. Could be due to expecting a spy film rather a romantic WWII drama.
  
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Merissa (13023 KP) created a post

Jan 27, 2025  
"When Tommy returns to Britain, he soon discovers that not only is his own life in danger but also those of his nearest and dearest who become pawns in a savage game of revenge."

Excerpt: The Perfume of War (The Seventh of December #4) by Garrick Jones - #Historical, #Crime, #Thriller, #WWII,

https://archaeolibrarian.wixsite.com/website/post/excerpt-the-perfume-of-war-the-seventh-of-december-4-by-garrick-jones
     
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Lindsay (1760 KP) rated A Life Apart in Books

Sep 6, 2017  
A Life Apart
A Life Apart
L.Y. Marlow | 2014 | Fiction & Poetry
10
10.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
I enjoy this era a bit. I kept interest in WWII. I also like the way this book went about differently and how things got complicated between the father and mother of the book. I also like how a romance happened between a white soldier and a black soldier sister. You learn about some of the things going on Civil Rights. You see it though his daughters, their mothers. It really is a good book.
  
Memoirs of an Anti-Semite
Memoirs of an Anti-Semite
Gregor von Rezzori | 2011 | Fiction & Poetry, History & Politics, Religion
(0 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"Virtuosic linked stories, all but one set in Rumania, Austria, or Germany before WWII, whose charming, maddening, light-minded narrator has no particular need to notice that murderous thugs are rising up and closing ranks right in front of his nose. The book is an exceptionally vivid evocation of pre-war Central Europe, and it’s also terrifyingly funny in its examination of specious reasoning, casual complicity, and the obtuseness that’s the hallmark of privilege."

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