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Looking for Beautiful Eye Shadows Makeup Ideas?? Then this app is made for you! Pimp your Eye...
Chevron Wallpapers HD - Cute Girly Backgrounds
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Personalize Your Lock Screen more beautiful by using amazing different + Custom Chevron Wallpapers. ...
Free Wedding Card Designs | Best Invitation Cards
Catalogs and Lifestyle
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Check out wide range of wedding card design selection for your life's precious moment! Now a days,...
Layers of Fear 2
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Layers of Fear 2 is a first-person, psychological thriller, horror video game with an emphasis on...
Underland
Book
Discover the hidden worlds beneath our feet... In Underland, Robert Macfarlane takes us on a...
Non-Fiction
Mermaid Craft: Ocean Princess. Sea Adventure Games
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App
Dive under waters of a deep blue sea for a blocky cube exploration adventure! Become a mermaid - a...
games
Arydia: The Paths We Dare Tread
Tabletop Game
A Green Legacy Game, Arydia is an open world, campaign based, cooperative fantasy role playing board...
LucyB (47 KP) rated Three Daughters of Eve in Books
Jul 23, 2017
It certainly lived up to expectations. The book is set both in the past and the present, focusing on Peri as a student in Oxford, and as a wealthy wife (14 years later) in Istanbul. It starts with something of a red herring, focusing on Peri's attack (and almost rape) by a beggar, then develops into an exploration of her past, as a Turkish Muslim at Oxford University.
She's flanked by Shirin, a non-believer, and Mona, a devout Muslim - making them 'the sinner, the believer and the confused'. They're united by a man called Professor Azur, who has a major influence in their lives, both positive and negative.
The book is an intriguing exploration into religion, belief and culture-clash - and in particular, the scenes detailing Peri's past, with a non-believing father and a devout mother, worked particularly well. A few moments jarred slightly - for example, the sudden revelation about the twin brother towards the end, and the abrupt shift in perspective from Peri to Professor Azur (again, towards the end), but for the most part, this book was masterfully executed and beautifully sustained throughout.
I think Shafak has a strong, resonant style, combined with a philosophical approach - which works really well. I'd definitely like to read more of her books
The Mapmaker's Wife: A True Tale of Love, Murder, and Survival in the Amazon
Book
In the early years of the 18th century, a band of French scientists set off on a daring, decade-long...