Victorian Fairy Tales
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'The Queen and the bat had been talking a good deal that afternoon...' The Victorian fascination...
Fuzzy Logic Control in Energy Systems with MATLAB
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This book is about fuzzy logic control and its applications in managing, controlling and operating...
The Nook Book: An Unofficial Guide: Everything You Need to Know About the Nook Tablet, Nook Color, and the Nook Simple Touch
Book
#1 Bestseller! Make the Most of Any B&N NOOK--Including NOOK Tablet, NOOK Color, or NOOK Simple...
A Companion to Latin American Women Writers
Brigida M. Pastor and Lloyd Hughes Davies
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This volume offers a critical study of a representative selection of Latin American women writers...
S.
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One book. Two readers. A world of mystery, menace and desire. A young woman picks up a book left...
Feminist Surveillance Studies
Rachel E. Dubrofsky and Shoshana Amielle Magnet
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Questions of gender, race, class, and sexuality have largely been left unexamined in surveillance...
Cassiobury: The Ancient Seat of the Earls of Essex
Paul Rabbitts and Sarah Kerenza Priestley
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One of the remnants of the great lost estates of the United Kingdom, Cassiobury Park is now the...
TravelersWife4Life (31 KP) rated On Wings of Devotion (The Codebreakers, #2) in Books
Feb 24, 2021
I have not previously read any books by Roseanna M. White and I am now scratching my head wondering how I could have missed her? This book On Wings of Devotion is actually the second book in her Codebreaker series. However, I was not lost at all just jumping into this one (I will definitely be going back and reading the first one though).
The character interactions in this book are the best I have read in a while. They banter back and forth so much, and you just can’t help but smile or laugh, through it all. They did have their ups and downs, but I was amazed by Ara’s absolute faith in the face of everything that happened. Yes, she had doubts but they never lasted for long. That is what I personally strive to do even though it doesn’t always work out as well as in this book. Camden was also a great character who I enjoyed getting to know. He was the picture of a flamboyant flyboy with a teddy bear heart underneath. So much mystery surrounds him, and we get fed little bits of his true character throughout the book. It was like getting to know someone in real life, you slowly get to know them over time.
The storyline in this book was riveting like it literally sucked me in (Laundry did not get done that day
Richard Curtis recommended National Lampoon's Animal House (1978) in Movies (curated)
LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated The ABCs of Death (2013) in Movies
Oct 3, 2020 (Updated Oct 3, 2020)
Q > O > T > L > J > I > Y > F > H > R > Z > A > D > G > M > P > S > U > X > B > W > V > C > K > N > E
I know everyone else generally has a distaste for them but I have such a soft spot for horror anthology films. Even the ones I don't really like such as 𝘟𝘟 I always find myself remembering vividly. This one in particular I not only thought was an absolute blast, but it also has a mightily commendable gimmick at the forefront (26 different directors of 26 different nationalities). Legit one of the weirdest, most devilishly fucked-up, humorous, grotesquely fetishistic + scatological horror films I've ever seen - a few of these segments I'm convinced are just actual kink porn lmfao. As you can probably surmise, a handful of the segments aren't so hot but truthfully none of them I thought were even close to awful (well, E was kind of crappy); the vast majority of them I found to be immensely enjoyable and all of them strung together make this a super fun ride as a whole. Guessing which word each director will utilize for their assigned letter is nearly as fun as watching them all play out. Luridly singular, sincerely morbid, and entertaining as hell - I'm fine with being one of the only ones who finds this surreal curio legitimately great.