Essential Tagalog: Speak Tagalog with Confidence
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This portable, user-friendly Tagalog language guide, phrasebook and dictionary is the cheapest and...
Another Morocco: Selected Stories
Abdellah Taia and Rachel Small
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Tangier is a possessed city, haunted by spirits of different faiths. When we have literature in our...
Recruiting and Retaining Lawyers: Innovative Strategies to Attract, Develop and Retain Legal Talent
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The competition for talent that leading experts started to describe in the 1990s has now become a...
Only When I Laugh: My Autobiography
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Known for his intelligent and often surreal humour, Paul Merton's weekly appearances on BBC1's Have...
A Brief History of Feminism
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The history of feminism? The right to vote, Susan B. Anthony, Gloria Steinem, white pantsuits? Oh,...
The World of Prostitution in Late Imperial Austria
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This study of prostitution addresses issues of female agency and experience, as well as contemporary...
ClareR (5721 KP) rated Mrs Death Misses Death in Books
Feb 15, 2021
“For surely only she who bears it, she who gave you life, can be she who has the power to take it.”
Seems logical to me.
“And there is no human more invisible, more easily talked over, ignored, betrayed and easy to walk past than a woman; than a poor old black woman.”
The thought of walking past death on a daily basis and not realising that’s who you’re passing, is rather a disconcerting thought!
I liked the playful language, starting with the title and moving on through prose mixed with poetry, and parts were written in script form too. This wasn’t reading for the lazy: it kept me on my toes. The historical deaths seen from Death’s point of view were fascinating too.
I did find myself wishing that Mrs Death had found herself another ghost writer, because Wolf Willeford is clearly a vulnerable person with mental health issues - I did wonder if it was written to illustrate a form of psychosis.
Either way, I loved it and read it FAR too quickly. If this is Salena Godden’s first foray into prose, I will be looking out for what she writes next - and looking out for some of her poetry too, when I can get back in to a library!
Many thanks to the publisher for providing me with an e-copy of this book through NetGalley.
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2200 KP) rated 21st Birthday in Books
Jun 2, 2021
Usually with this series, I complain about the characters having plotlines that rarely if ever intersect. Here, I was thrilled to see that the characters, including Claire and Yuki, are working together on one case, and they all get their moments to shine. While the characters are a bit thin, we did like them all and care enough to keep reading. The plot is compelling with twists that intrigue. However, the authors can’t land it. I get what we are supposed to think happened, but in the rush to wrap things up after the final twist, we don’t get a major plot point from earlier in the book explained. Meanwhile, the editing was sloppy, including students at a high school being in class on a Saturday, missing days, and Lindsay being in two places at once near the end of the book. This reads more like a first draft that needed an editor to help polish it up instead of a finished novel.
Only Time Will Tell (The Clifton Chronicles #1)
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The epic tale of Harry Clifton’s life begins in 1920, with the words “I was told that my father...
Toil & Trouble: 15 Tales of Women & Witchcraft
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A young adult fiction anthology of 15 stories featuring contemporary, historical, and futuristic...