The Smart Girl's Guide to Getting What You Want: How to be Assertive with Wit, Style and Grace
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In this book, personal development coach Mary Hartley explains how women can discover the secrets of...
University Success Reading, Transition Level, with MyEnglishLab
Lawrence J. Zwier, Maggie Vosters and Deborah Gordon
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University Success Reading Transition Level is one strand of a three-strand developmental course...
Global Norms and Local Courts: Translating the Rule of Law in Bangladesh
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What happens to transnational norms when they travel from one place to another? How do norms change...
How the Gloves Came off: Lawyers, Policy Makers, and Norms in the Debate on Torture
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The treatment of detainees at Abu Ghraib prison, Guantanamo Bay, and far-flung CIA "black sites"...
Human Rights of, by, and for the People: How to Critique and Change the US Constitution
Keri E. Iyall Smith, Louis Edgar Esparza and Judith R. Blau
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Together, the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights comprise the constitutional foundation of the...
Christopher McQuarrie recommended Ford v Ferrari (aka Le Mans '66) (2019) in Movies (curated)
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2492 KP) rated Swift Edge in Books
Nov 22, 2020
I read the first book in this series years ago, and I kept meaning to go back and read this one. I’m so glad I did. This book is as much fun as I remember the first being. The plot is fast paced with plenty of action and a page turning climax. What Gigi doesn’t know about the PI business she makes up for in enthusiasm, and her antics add some great laughs. Yet none of the characters come across as caricatures; there is a depth to all of them. Mostly, we only see glimpses of that depth, but it is enough to make them seem real. The book skirts around the edges of the cozy genre with just a touch more violence and language than a traditional cozy, but as long as you expect that, you’ll be fine. I really did enjoy this book, and it won’t be as long before I go back to visit these characters again.
Mark @ Carstairs Considers (2492 KP) rated Every Day Above Ground in Books
Mar 16, 2021
This is very different from my normal cozy reads, both in the inclusion of language and violence, but also because Van is really an anti-hero. This is the most he’s slipped into that role, however, and knowing him from the previous two books helped me still root for him. It really helps that I do like him and the other regular characters and I want to see them succeed. While a few of the events of the book are expected, there were still some twists I wasn’t expecting along the way, and I loved the creativity of some of the locations Van used over the course of the book in his attempts to defeat the villains and come out on top. This is a fun, fasted paced thriller that will keep you turning pages.
ClareR (6091 KP) rated Many Different Kinds of Love: A Story of Life, Death and The NHS in Books
Apr 6, 2021
I can remember being really worried when Michael Rosen said he was feeling unwell last year, and even more so when it was reported that he had been taken in to hospital. There was that long period where I could only imagine how distressed his family must have been feeling.
This book documents it all. There are the diary entries from the carers whilst Michael Rosen was in an induced coma: the nurses, physiotherapists, speech and language therapists - all those from right across the NHS who helped him, turned him, talked to him, kept him clean and made sure that he heard from his family. They clearly did an amazing job, and this showed the sheer volume of people who cared for him.
It’s a really moving book. I read much of this with a lump in my throat and tears in my eyes. And of course there were the funny bits, as there always is with Michael Rosen.
I’m just so glad he made it. This book is going on the Keeper Shelf, because this will be a book that we will all look back on in years to come, when memories of Covid-19 start to dim.





