Standardized Work with TWI: Eliminating Human Errors in Production and Service Processes
Book
Standardized Work with TWI: Eliminating Human Errors in Production and Service Processes presents...
Ketogenic Diet and Metabolic Therapies: Expanded Roles in Health and Disease
Book
Ketogenic diets have been used to successfully treat epilepsy and stop seizures for nearly a...
I’ve never been able to find myself wanting to read Stephen King, and after a few attempts when I was younger to start one of his novels, I still couldn’t and so until this book I have never finished a Stephen King. I persevered through this one because it had been lent to me by a friend with a good review and I had watched the tv series based on it a few years ago.
The start of this novel was very slow and confused me in a few points (but I think that was intentional as our main character – Jake Epping – was also pretty confused at the same time). But because not much was happening, I kept putting the book down, distracted to do something else and really having to force myself to pick it back up. Once I managed to get to part 2, I found that I was much more interested in the story and the plot line and it wasn’t such a chore to make the time to read it. I then had a difficult time to put the book down, and most nights I was only putting it down because I was falling asleep in the middle of a sentence! I read the last quarter of the book in a day, because I just wanted to know what was going to happen and whether he was going to be able to stop the assassination of John F. Kennedy.
Overall, I found the concept very interesting and not just the time travel. I found the concept of the past not wanting to be changed and actively trying to stop someone from changing it interesting, and sometimes it was quite comical the amount of things that went wrong when Jake was trying to change the past. I did, however, find the ending very disappointing. It felt like it was starting to be set up for a different ending and then at the last minute the author decided to change it completely. It just didn’t seem to fit with the set up of the last chapter or so, but I can see why it was done and that the ending that was being set up wouldn’t work in terms of not changing the past.
A very interesting read, but with a disappointing ending, but I would still recommend it!
Changing Inequalities and Societal Impacts in Rich Countries: Thirty Countries' Experiences
Brian Nolan, Wiemer Salverda, Daniele Checchi and Ive Marx
Book
There has been a remarkable upsurge of debate about increasing inequalities and their societal...
Inverting the Paradox of Excellence: How Companies Use Variations for Business Excellence and How Enterprise Variations are Enabled by SAP
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Over time, overemphasis and adherence to the same proven routines that helped your organization...
Strongly Correlated Electrons in Two Dimensions
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The properties of strongly correlated electrons confined in two dimensions are a forefront area of...
Sport and Social Movements: From the Local to the Global
Jean Harvey, John Horne, Parissa Safai and Simon Darnell
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From neighborhood coalitions organizing against the building of a sport facility for professional...
BeagleBone Home Automation Blueprints
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Automate and control your home using the power of the BeagleBone Black with practical home...
John Ruskin and the Fabric of Architecture: John Ruskin's Adorned Wall Veil
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Through the theoretical lenses of dress studies, gender, science, and visual studies, this volume...


