NKBA Kitchen & Bathroom Planning Guidelines with Access Standards
NKBA (National Kitchen & Bath Association)
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The essential kitchen and bath design reference, updated with the latest codes NKBA Kitchen &...
Integral Operational Leadership: A Relationally Intelligent Approach to Sustained Performance in the Twenty First Century
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Throughout Integral Operational Leadership, Park acknowledges that the principles, perspectives and...
Data-Driven Design and Construction: 25 Strategies for Capturing, Analyzing and Applying Building Data
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In this comprehensive book, Professor Randy Deutsch has unlocked and laid bare the twenty-first...
This is a prequel to Bram Stokers Dracula, and is the story of Bram himself. It postulates that Dracula and vampires really do exist, Bram and his family had an intimate relationship with one (not like THAT!), and Dracula was written as a warning about the Undead. Well, I clearly don't know what to believe now!
The language used in this novel is a little more up to date than Bram Stokers original: it's written for the modern reader (as Bram's was at the time, I suppose), and is consequently much easier to read. This book is supposedly based on notes that Bram left behind - whether they were ideas for another book, or they were 'actual occurrences', we'll never really know.
Bram and his family are followed from Bram's early childhood, up until well after their encounter with Dracul. It's exciting, there's loads of action, and I had some serious worries about Bram's siblings! There's loads of historical detail (potato famine in Ireland, disease, poverty) which I rather enjoyed. But it's the encounters with the vampires that I really loved. There's always going to be someone that makes the comparison to 'that' vampire series, and so I'll be the one. There IS NO comparison. These aren't nicey-nicey vampires who sparkle. These are largely speaking, evil, dark-magic-using, killing machines. Much more fun.
I think this is probably going to be a series. Which I will obviously be reading. Obviously.
Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for my copy of this book.
The Incomplete Currency: The Future of the Euro & Solutions for the Eurozone
Marcello Minenna, Giovanna Maria Boi and Paolo Verzella
Book
A fact-based treatise on the Eurozone crisis, with analysis of possible solutions The Incomplete...
Louise (64 KP) rated Flame in the Mist in Books
Jul 2, 2018
This was my first time reading anything by Renee Ahdieh, as usual I do things back to front. Her Wrath and the Dawn duology has got nothing but praise so when I saw she had another book coming out I jumped at the chance to read it.I was really intrigued as I heard it was a Mulan retelling and plus the cover is absolutely stunning.
Flame in the Mist follows Mariko, she is 17 years old and is destined to marry, she has had a sheltered life and brought up for the sole purpose to marry to support his social standing. She is on her way to marry a prince from another part of Japan when her litter and convoy are attacked by the Black Clan. Mariko manages to make it out alive, instead of returning home to her family she decides to disguise herself as a boy to find out who tried to kill her and why.
I found this story hard to get into at the beginning, I wasn't totally gripped and didn't have the inclination to carry on reading. I didn't know what to expect with Renee Ahdieh's writing style but I was pleasantly surprised and she had this knack for creating an atmosphere and world building. The downfall to this book was that Mariko was a very boring character. We were told how smart she was several times but we wasn't shown. She was headstrong and knew that she was born the wrong gender to be perceived as anything other than marriage material.
I liked the romance and loved the buildup of tension between the love birds even if it did have some problems. I didn't see the twist at the end coming. This is supposed to be a fantasy but there were no fantastical creatures and very little magic involved. The Mulan retelling is 'loosely based'.
I think for me I am going to have reread this book at a later date - it didn't hold my attention enough to take a lot of it in. I still would like to read her Wrath and the Dawn duology.
I rated this 3 out of 5 stars
The Image of Restoration Science: The Frontispiece to Thomas Sprat's History of the Royal Society (1667)
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This book is about a single image - the frontispiece to Thomas Sprat's History of the Royal Society...
People Analytics in the Era of Big Data: Changing the Way You Attract, Acquire, Develop, and Retain Talent
Jean-Paul Isson, Jesse S. Harriott and Jac Fitz-enz
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Apply predictive analytics throughout all stages of workforce management People Analytics in the Era...
The Adventures of an IT Leader
Robert D Austin, Shannon O'Donnell and Richard L Nolan
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What does it take to lead and manage your company's tech? Becoming an effective IT leader and...
The Directors Manual: A Framework for Board Governance
Peter C. Browning and William L. Sparks
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Directors: Improve Board Performance The Director's Manual: A Framework for Board Governance offers...


Ross (3284 KP) Dec 11, 2018
ClareR (6054 KP) Dec 11, 2018