Off Track Planet's San Francisco Travel Guide for the Young, Sexy, and Broke
Book
No amount of fog can hold San Francisco down San Francisco's colourful activity echoes around its...
The World Atlas of Tattoo
Anna Felicity Friedman and James Elkins
Book
Lively and informative, The World Atlas of Tattoo is a superbly illustrated and compelling reference...
Gone Too Far!
Book
Nigeria, England, America, Jamaica; are you proud of where you're from? Dark skinned, light skinned,...
Boundaries of Toleration
Charles Taylor and Alfred Stepan
Book
How can people of diverse religious, ethnic, and linguistic allegiances and identities live together...
The Essential Fictions
Book
The Essential Fictions offers contemporary readers seventy-two short stories by one of...
Preserving Our Heritage: Perspectives from Antiquity to the Digital Age
Book
Drawing on historical texts, this all-encompassing, accessible volume provides a comprehensive...
Downwardly Global: Women, Work, and Citizenship in the Pakistani Diaspora
Book
In Downwardly Global Lalaie Ameeriar examines the transnational labor migration of Pakistani women...
Year of the Jackal (Bramburgh Jackals #2)
Book
It’s Silicon Valley meets the Ivy League in this new adult romantic comedy starring a computer...
Contemporary MM Romance Romantic Comedy Enemies to Lvers Opposites Attrace
Caffeinated Fae (464 KP) rated Things Fall Apart in Books
Jul 10, 2018
I liked this book for the multicultural issues that it proposes. It had elements that I have never grasped or read before which I enjoyed. I loved learning about the culture and customs of this tribe. I also loved how complex the main character was. I loved how at moments you're wanting him to be shunned and at other moments you want him to be fully embraced by his tribe.
I didn't like how abrupt the ending was. It was leading to the climax of the story and then just halted leaving me extremely unsatisfied. I want a resolution and I want a cookie cutter ending where everything is wrapped up tight with a cute little bow. Unfortunately, that isn't this book.
All in all, I'm happy that I read this book. I'm thrilled that I finally found time to read it. I'm just not so sure how I feel about it either.
The Dream Cafe: Lessons in the Art of Radical Innovation
Duncan W. Bruce and Geoff Crook
Book
Get out of the office and dream! To keep your brand innovative you need to feed your creative spirit...