
My Tiny Home Farm: Simple Ideas for Small Spaces
Francine Raymond and Bill Mason
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Think you don't have enough room to green up your act? My Tiny Garden Farm is bursting with...

Bad News: A Zack Walker Mystery #4
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The explosive and hilarious final book in the Zack Walker series from bestselling author and master...

Smart Driver Championship
Lifestyle and Social Networking
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With Enerfy® Driving you share and compare how smart you drive. Enerfy tells you how good you drive...

Stealing Harper (Taking Chances, #1.5)
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Chase Grayson has never been interested in having a relationship that lasts longer than it takes for...

Small Talk
Education, Entertainment and Lifestyle
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Small Talk is a daily dose of knowledge and inspiration, delivered fresh to your phone every day....
This is however a valuable read if you want to get some idea of what it was like for a "simple" German soldier; the vivid descriptions of the hardships of being on the Eastern frontline and how luck played a huge part in his life are well documented and it also gives a really good account of Raffeiner's tough early years growing up and the choices he had to make.
Whilst this isn't what I feel a comprehensive book on this subject, it is an important individual and personal story that is captivating and I need to thank Pen & Sword Books and NetGalley for a copy in return for an honest, unbiased and unedited review.

Lindsay (1774 KP) rated Helping Hats in Books
Jan 17, 2022
Helping Hats is a good one with that. However, it is for older children to read. Parents can read this book to their child or children; They can help with reading the book. The pictures made done well. They describe what the person is trying to say and show through the different things our heroes do or need to do to help us.
Helping Hats shows our hometown heroes, from farmers to firefighters, in a job or career. The book helps to teach and show how hard work and dedication are for a job or a career. What a life is for each hero in our lives to help feed us or save us; Even to teach us. Can your child or children come up with some hometown heroes in your neighborhood? Maybe they can appreciate all their work and understand many different kinds of heroes through various careers.

ClareR (5950 KP) rated People Like Them in Books
Jan 29, 2024
These are all questions that Anna Guillot asks herself about her husband, Constant.
It all starts so innocently: Constant and Bakary Langlois are good friends, even if the differences in their financial statuses are vast. Bakary starts to help other neighbours with their investments, and Constant is upset that he doesn’t seem to want to help him. Perhaps this should have been Constant’s warning.
Relationships change between the two families when Anna starts to work as the Langlois’ housekeeper/ cleaner, because how can they stay the same under these conditions?
It’s just one thing after another, until the final denouement where Anna is left to pick up the pieces of her family’s destroyed life, her guilt driving her? Was Constant racist? Were his actions based around those thoughts?
This was really disturbing and quite a distressing read. It was well worth it though.

A Bibliophagist (113 KP) rated The Gentlemen (2020) in Movies
Jan 27, 2020 (Updated Jan 27, 2020)
If "Snatch" is Ritchie's attempt at perfecting "Lock Stock and two smoking barrels" then "The Gentlemen" is the final attempt at perfecting this formula. He absolutely succeeded in this in every way. "Snatch" is a GOOD movie, but this is a good FILM, in the same distinction as literature from standard fiction. We revisit his pentient for sprawling plots with a slew of characters, all intertwined but the full scale of their involvement coming to a head at the end, but he elevated this with "The Gentlemen".
We open with Charlie Hunnan, proving to me he is a capable actor when he's not faking an american accent and given a role that suits him. A pot kingpin's right hand man being greeted by Hugh Grant in a role I've never seen him in, skeezy, unattractive, cockney accent, a reporter for tabloids offering his story for a mere 20mil pounds. Grant preceeds to tell this thrilling tale of Micky (mcconaughy) the aforementioned kingpin, attempting to sell his impressive pot empire so he can retire with his wife who he absolutely loves. Through Grant, we are given a new twist on the Ritchie formula, an unreliable narrator, which just brings the story to life. We see what goes down during these days of attempted sale, the involvent of another druglord wannabe (golding), wanting a piece of the pie, the accidental involvement of Coach(Farrel) when his group of trainees piss off the wrong people, and the twisty, turny, bullet flinging fights that ensue. This movie is beautifully paced, not feeling as long as it was, witty, with plenty of laugh out loud moments, but balanced with enough gritty reality to leave you quiet as soon as you finished laughing. In true Ritchie form, by the end all the pieces fall into place, the full reality revealed in a satisfying, fun finale. However, the twist of the unreliable narrator, leaves us with the reality that we may not know everything that happened. I would argue that beyond a part with some Russians, every character and event (and there were a number of them) felt purposeful, well thought oit and completely necessary to the plot. Like it's predecessors, the music was on point, the editting and cutting perfect and leading to a slightly old school vibe while feeling fully rooted to the present. The plot was over the top, but modern and believable. Overall, it was just exceptionally fun.
He finally figured it out, and gave us something as fun as "Snatch" but elevated it to true FILM status. Making it, arguably, the better film. Highly recommend it.
If I Were You (Inside Out, #1)
Book
How it all started… One day I was a high school teacher on summer break, leading a relatively...