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Love, Rosie is a story told through letters, e-mails and instant messaging about the ever-changing...

Mr July (Calendar Men #7)
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One good deed threatens to undo everything Hector has worked so hard for. Hector Torres is a...

Haven (Rebecca Filmore Series, #1)
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Welcome to Haven; a community of families living together in isolation from the outside world....

Boy Scouts (The Umbrella Academy: Dallas #2)
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While Spaceboy watches reality TV and Number Five lies low in a seedy motel, a threat against the...

Star Wars: Lost Stars, Vol. 1 (Manga)
Claudia Gray and Yusaku Komiyama
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Seduced by the Galactic Empire's promises of unity and change, the planet's of the galaxy and the...

Everything Under
Book
It's been sixteen years since Gretel last saw her mother, half a lifetime to forget her childhood on...
Magical Realism Retellings Mythology Literary Fiction

Ivana A. | Diary of Difference (1171 KP) rated The Little Mermaid in Books
Nov 16, 2018
I grew up with Disney movies, and my favourite one was the one with the mermaid that has long red hair, and I loved her love story, and also enjoyed watching the rest of the movie series that followed years later.
And while loving Ariel for so long, I have never actually read the original story. So a few weeks ago, I decided to cherish it properly, as a true childhood love deserves to be cherished.
And I was left with my jaw dropped and my mouth open, unable to sleep. I can’t say this book crushed my childhood love, but it definitely shook me quite hard.
If you are expecting to read about the little mermaid, and her adventures in the water, and how she would give anything to see how people live on Earth, and fall in love with a prince – you will get all that. In fact – the book description is far better compared to the movie. Incomparable, actually. The book glows with bright colourful descriptions of the world under the sea, and it is so vividly enchantingly explained.
But if you are expecting to read about the adorable love story of Ariel and the prince, and their happily ever after – that is not happening. Because things go wrong. Horribly wrong. With a crushing, terrible end, that will torture you in your dreams.
It wasn’t my intention to make this review so dark. The story is still wonderful, and full of life. However, there is no happy ending, and that, for me, was crucial to not enjoy it.
And I am not usually upset with unhappy endings. It happens so often. But this one was so brutal and cruel, that it felt so disturbing. Maybe, because it is my favorite childhood movie. Maybe, because I knew this to be a happy story. Maybe, because I didn’t expect this at all.
Hans Christian Andersen is an amazing writer. I have read many of his stories, and enjoyed them greatly. I honestly don’t know what was going on in his life when he was writing this, but wow. Just wow.

An American Harvest: How One Family Moved from Dirt-Poor Farming to A Better Life in the Early 1900s
Book
Green Writers Press is proud to announce the first book in our place-based history series, An...
African American Children in American Political Life: The Literature and Politics of the Impossible
Book
This book explores the ways that figures of Black children and writing for them articulate complex...

Lenard (726 KP) rated It: Chapter Two (2019) in Movies
Sep 9, 2019
Now, The Losers' Club reunite to defeat the evil force that overtakes their town of Derry, Maine. Like any good Stephen King adaptation, the supernatural being that terrorizes is not such a huge component. It is the story of friends and the way they are able to colloborate and grow. It: Chapter 2 is a sort of The Big Chill if a murderous clown connected the friends. Bev and Ben rediscover old feelings. Richie hides a secret from his friend, Eddie. Bill is a writer who can't write an ending until the novelization of his childhood traumas are written. Stan is (spoiler alert) Kevin Costner, but still serves an important purpose for the Club to triumph.
The movie is a blueprint for horror movie direction. Andy is a master horror visual storyteller. The movie is not very scary if you are susceptible to that. It is more a terror than fearful. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie even if it did tend to drag in areas.
Ross (3284 KP) Nov 16, 2018 (Updated Nov 16, 2018)
Ivana A. | Diary of Difference (1171 KP) Nov 16, 2018