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The opening of the Savoy in 1889, with Auguste Escoffier at the helm of its kitchen, rang in the new...

The North Norfolk Coast: A Short Introduction
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The North Norfolk Coast is one of the UK's most beautiful natural coastlines. In this book, Anthony...

The Oxford Handbook of Mobile Music Studies: Volume 2
Jason Stanyek and Sumanth S. Gopinath
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The two volumes of The Oxford Handbook of Mobile Music Studies consolidate an area of scholarly...

Colin Newman recommended Clear by Spirit in Music (curated)

Simple Organic Kitchen & Garden: A Complete Guide to Growing and Cooking Perfect Natural Produce, with Over 150 Step-by-step Recipes
Ysanne Spevack, Michael Lavelle and Christine Lavelle
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This is a complete guide to growing and cooking perfect natural produce, with over 150 step-by-step...

The Vineyard at the End of the World: Maverick Winemakers and the Rebirth of Malbec
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As wine connoisseurs know, Argentine wine was once famously bad. The grapes were overwatered,...

Yumuniverse: Infinite Possibilities for a Gluten-Free, Plant-Powerful, Whole-Food Lifestyle
Heather Crosby and Brendan Brazier
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More than 150 plant-based, gluten-free, soy-free recipes! No matter where you land on the diet...

Homo Britannicus: The Incredible Story of Human Life in Britain
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Chris Stringer's Homo Britannicus is the epic history of life in Britain, from man's very first...

Leanne Crabtree (480 KP) rated Three Blind Dates in Books
Jan 11, 2021
So this starts with Noely doing her Going in Blind profile interview. She's a Good Morning Malibu show host and has used some of their equipment to film the interview, which, when her producer finds the disc informs her that she will be doing a segment on the show detailing her dates. She tries to protest but he's not having any of it and she reluctantly agrees.
Noely has three dates, as the title suggest and has a great time with all three, all for different reasons. Jack is her first option, the mysterious Suit. Then Beck, the bike riding Rebel. And lastly Hayden, the ice hockey Jock. She gets on with all three really well but something seems to go wrong on the second dates, leading her to look for someone else.
Then we get a "mystery man". One of the above guys who starts messaging Noely in the hopes of getting her to fall for him after the mess he made of their date. I was a bit stumped about who it was going to end up being but a certain guy did keep turning up places quite regularly.
I liked this but it did seem quite long for what went down. Each guy took up about a quarter of the book, including the final mystery one. It didn't entirely pull me in but there were some truly fun bits, and for me, personally, those involved Noely's brother, Alex, and his wife, Lauren. And little Chloe, too.

Emma @ The Movies (1786 KP) rated I, Tonya (2017) in Movies
Sep 25, 2019
I was very excited to see this one as an Unlimited Screening... you know how I love rubbing it in people's faces when I see things before them! I was looking forward to it even more as I'm a fan of sporty films. [Which always strikes me as odd considering I don't do sports.]
As a story [regardless of it's accuracy] I enjoyed it. I don't think I've seen a film done in this way before. Part film, part documentary, but more than that. The odd occasion where the two we're entwined really made it something different.
Both Margot Robbie and Allison Janney made this film for me. The pair together made the perfect duo bouncing off each other. There was a wonderful presence from them in all their scenes, and I was taken aback by how well they both seamlessly acted their way through the years with what felt like amazing accuracy. I had also been looking forward to seeing Sebastian Stan playing Tonya's husband, but with such strong performances from the actresses around him his character was lost. Obviously you're not going to end up loving him as a character, but usually you can still enjoy the horrible characters if they're acted well.
It's probably not going to be everyone's cup of tea but honestly I really enjoyed the whole thing. Margot Robbie's performance at the very end actually had me gasp for breath through tears, it was so convincing, and so devastating.