The Love Diet: A Personalized, Proven Program That Changes the Way You Feel to Transform the Way You Look
Connie Guttersen and Mark Dedomenico
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All You Need is Love: From the New York Times best-selling author of The Sonoma Diet and the...
Earth's Deep History: How it Was Discovered and Why it Matters
Book
Earth has been witness to mammoths and dinosaurs, global ice ages, continents colliding or splitting...
Great Railway Maps of the World
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From Mark Ovenden, the author of London Underground by Design and Metro Maps of the World, comes...
Bob Eckstein recommended In the Heart of the Sea: The Tragedy of the Whaleship Essex in Books (curated)
ClareR (6230 KP) rated A Net for Small Fishes in Books
Feb 17, 2021
This is a story that I already knew a little about: I read The Poison Bed by E. C. Fremantle on The Pigeonhole about 3 years ago, where the story was told from Frances Howards point of view, and A Net for Small Fishes does nothing to contradict that story. They both illustrate really well how women were expected to conform and be perfect, docile, brood mares for their influential husbands, and in Frankie’s case, how political marriages weren’t always happy ones. It also illustrated how desperation to escape a loveless marriage made two women take desperate action. As so often happens throughout history, the women in this story are punished for the barefaced cheek they had to want better lives for themselves. It’s a frustrating conclusion - but I could see that it was inevitable. It showed that it didn’t matter if you were a woman in one of the most influential families in the country or a doctors widow, you toed the line or suffered the consequences. But what a journey they had!
This is such a good story, as real life often is, and it’s a book that’s going on the Keeper shelf (yes, I bought a copy after I read it on The Pigeonhole - that’s how much I liked it).
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole for serialising this, and to Lucy Jago for contributing to the conversation.
ClareR (6230 KP) rated The Illustrated Child in Books
Oct 26, 2020
Tobias creates a series of beautifully illustrated books starring both Romilly and Monty, and their lives are changed. They find fame, as readers believe that the books are a kind of treasure hunt - which, incidentally, reminded me of the Kit Williams book, Masquerade, published in the late 1970’s. Strangers start to camp out in their garden, digging holes all over their land to find the treasure - meaning that Romilly is unable to leave the house.
Life changes again when Tobias’ behaviour becomes more and more erratic, Romilly’s mother comes back in to her life, and she meets her grandmother. Things seem to be continuously changing, and nothing is consistent - there’s no stability in Romilly’s life.
This book was not at all what I expected. It started out as something of an idyllic childhood, but as time went on, Romilly’s life is irrevocably changed. I felt so much sadness for her, and there were times when I was almost in tears (you might need a hanky!). This deals with some pretty serious themes: dementia, mental illness, death and child abuse. All the way through I was rooting for Romilly and hoping that she would get the help that she needed and deserved. This is such a beautifully written book, and I would have no hesitation in recommending it.
Many thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for my e-ARC.
Sex&Roll Sex Positions of Kamasutra Guide and Game Premium
Lifestyle and Entertainment
App
● The one and only app with position animation! ● One of the first position app on iTunes ● 5...
Sex&Roll Sex Positions of Kamasutra Guide and Game
Lifestyle and Health & Fitness
App
● The one and only app with position animation! ● One of the first position app on iTunes ● 5...
Biodiversity and Earth History
Jens Boenigk, Sabina Wodniok and Edvard Glucksman
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This uniquely interdisciplinary textbook explores the exciting and complex relationship between...
Birds and People
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There are 10,500 species of bird worldwide and wherever they occur people marvel at their glorious...


