Pango is dreaming
Games and Book
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Discover 5 unpublished PANGO stories ! An interactive book to share with your child. Pango is...
Logan Eccles (135 KP) rated Welcome to Marwen (2018) in Movies
Oct 1, 2020 (Updated Oct 2, 2020)
Jacob Wilding (39 KP) rated We're Alive - A "Zombie" Story of Survival in Podcasts
May 10, 2020
Only struggle I had was near the end conversations felt rushed sometimes and at other times it was hard to hear what other people were saying. Overall an amazing podcast for the zombie/apocalypse enthusiast.
The Pact: Three Young Men Make a Promise and Fulfill a Dream
Sampson Davis, George Jenkins, Rameck Hunt and Lisa Frazier Page
Book
Chosen by Essence to be among the forty most influential African Americans, the three doctors grew...
A Storm of Stories
Book
Sometimes telling a story is just another way to stay alive. Swerving to avoid a hitchhiker out in a...
Literary fiction short stories
Love and War: Tales, Volume 3 (Dragonlance Tales)
Book
The legend of Raistlin's daughter! A strange story that cannot be confirmed, yet it is whispered...
Spark
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Second chances at lost love are rare. Years after they drifted apart, Hugo and Kevin’s passion...
Whatchareadin (174 KP) rated The Map That Leads to You in Books
May 10, 2018
Thank you to St. Martins Press along with Karen Masnica and Caitlin Dareff for sharing their reading, discussing and experiences with this love story. I received two copies from them along with a letter that told me to share my second copy and I did that with my mother. I can't wait to share my thoughts with her on this book.
The story starts with the three girls traveling across Europe after graduating from college. This is something I have always wanted dreamed of doing. When Heather meets the handsome stranger on the train to Amsterdam, he changes her life forever. He makes her think about her future and life in general in a entirely different way. Their connection is instant but the trip won't last forever. What is going to happen when the time comes for Heather to return home. Will Jack change his plans for her or will this just be a summer fling?
This book evoked a lot of emotion in me. Heather is following Hemingway's story through Europe while Jack is following his grandfather's journal from after WWII. I gave this book a 3 star rating because it didn't really grab me the way I thought it would. The story was interesting and the flow was good, but there were parts that had me confused. Some of the language seemed European even though the main characters were American. I'm not sure if that was because of their education and love of books, or as the writing was intended. For those who like a good love story will enjoy this book. Get your tissues though!
The novel is set in two different time periods, the first the aftermath of the Second World War, the second during the 1740s and the build up to the battle of Culloden. One of the strengths of this book, is that Diana Gabaldon has researched the historical settings of this novel well, and paints a fantastic image of the times for the reader. With a background in the study of history, I am normally the first to start picking faults in the historiography of a story, however in this case, I was unable to, and instead able to relax into the plot line itself. The novel also encouraged me to carry out further research into Scotland in the 1740s and even visit the Culloden battlefield (and of course the Fraser stone).
The characters in the novel are well thought out and all have their faults as well as strengths (which in my eyes makes them more believable). Clare, the main character is a strong willed and independent woman, however can be outspoken before her time. Jamie is a character that see through Clare’s eyes and as such, we understand why she falls in love with him, is at times held by the constraints about how men and women should act in marriage during the 1740s, and struggles to cope with Clare’s independence.
As readers we are led through a story of 1740s clan culture in Scotland (including the brutal behaviour of the British officer Jack Randall), as well as the emerging love story between Jamie and Clare. This is ultimately a love story, but sexual scenes are much more subtle in text than the dramatisation of the TV series. As is often the case with books that have been dramatised onto the screen, we also get a much deeper insight into the feelings and emotions of a character, which often struggles to translate onto screen.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this book and eagerly await picking up the sequel to find out what will happen next to Clare, Jamie and Frank.




