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text 2016-03-01 14:55
ABORT ABORT ABORT
Deadly Peril: A Georgian Historical Mystery (Alec Halsey Mystery Book 3) - Lucinda Brant

It's when you can't stop listening because the voice in your ears is ah-mah-zing and talented, but if you slow to think about what that heavenly voice is whispering you lose your wits.

 

That.

 

The writing isn't worth stepping on in a farm yard, but the narrator is brilliant and I can't understand why he hasn't read more books and books I actually want to read.

 

Might rant about this later.

 

Short version:

 

LGBTQ representation nightmare to the power of three.

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review 2014-05-26 10:32
Cibo per l'anima
Cibo per l'anima (alimentazione olistica e guarigione) - Lorena Baldini

Nella nostra società così frenetica, spesso mangiamo in piedi, masticando un boccone dietro all'altro senza coglierne il sapore, oppure, per riempire lo stomaco, o semplicemente per mancanza di tempo. Cibo per l'anima è un libro creato creato per insegnarci a mangiare in modo corretto mangiando solo per appetito ascoltando il nostro corpo per capire di quali alimenti ha bisogno. Per iniziare una giusta alimentazione bisogna alimentarsi in base alle capacità digestive del nostro organismo. Il momento ideale per dedicarsi a un pasto completo e sostanzioso è il pranzo perché le nostre capacità digestive sono più alte. Mentre a cena e la mattina sono più basse e si consiglia di non affaticare troppo lo stomaco con pasti complessi e pesanti. Gli spuntini tra pasti sarebbero sconsigliati a meno che non si mangi frutta.
Un cibo non dev'essere solo buono, ma deve toccare tutti i sensi: essere piacevole alla vista, della giusta consistenza, profumato, gustoso e farci venire l'acquolina in bocca. Questo per essere completamente soddisfatti di quello che mangiamo. Perché altrimenti tutto il corpo ne risente.
Troviamo spiegato in modo semplice il processo digestivo degli alimenti, come vengono trasformati durante la cottura e perché è da sconsigliare il microonde per cucinare i propri pasti. Vengono spiegate tramite delle schede le utilità delle spezie e le loro proprietà. E con l'ausilio di tabelle viene indicato come abbinare i cibi per un'alimentazione sana e facilmente digeribile.
Infine vi sono delle tabelle con gli alimenti divisi per stagione e vi sono delle ricette ricche e gustose a termine del libro.
Un libro ben scritto, di cui ho apprezzato la semplicità e la professionalità. Lo consiglio a tutti coloro che pensano che i pasti dovrebbero essere maggiormente valutati.

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text 2014-03-15 02:59
Suzy Kassem's Rise Up and Salute the Sun
Rise up and Salute the Sun: The Writings of Suzy Kassem - Suzy Kassem

From her ancestral homeland of Egypt to 7th Street in New York City, Suzy Kassem's hypnotic imagination transports readers into a mystical place filled with wisdom and infinite wonder -- a place where a little Egyptian girl can converse with the Sphinx, where an ordinary house mouse trapped under the floorboards of a senior center in Jersey can dream about exploring fields beyond his ordinary limits, and where a young woman named Peace can still crave a caramel apple from Coney Island -- while confined for eternity to the lonely hotel rooftop from which she leapt to her death twenty years ago.

A powerful collection of philosophical short stories, essays, and poetry laced with stardust and universal wisdom, Rise Up and Salute the Sun takes the reader on a transdimensional journey to explore the heart of one's true existence.

 

 

Source: www.amazon.com/Rise-Up-Salute-Sun-Writings/dp/0615388868
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review 2013-09-07 00:00
Salute the Dark - Adrian Tchaikovsky Perhaps the single most devastating book I have ever read...http://abitterdraft.com/2013/09/salute-the-dark-by-adrian-tchaikovsky.htmlAfter I finished Blood of the Mantis, I immediately sent an email to Pyr asking after the rest of the series and they obliged. I soon found out that Pyr didn’t have plans for anything after book 5, The Scarab Path, which is a shame because they format the books to be a bit taller, shortening the page count in exchange and making the books more feasible and less daunting. Not to mention having the beautiful covers designed by the very skilled Jon Sullivan. In the review, I also wrote about how quickly Shadows of the Apt was becoming my favorite series to date. After Salute, there can no longer be any doubt - Apt has taken the throne by force.The world of the Apt and Inapt is in total war. The expansionist Wasp Empire is sweeping across the Lowlands and any outlying city that sparks a glint in Emperor Alvdan II’s eye. War Master Stenwold Maker’s agents are scattered everywhere in attempt to give the Lowlands any sort of advantage against the encroaching horde. Cities like Sarn and Myna are in open rebellion. Plots and twists are commonplace. Everything that has been building up over the first three books in the series culminate in Salute the Dark.One of the highlights of the series is how Tchaikovsky manages to weave cultures of our world into the story and make them feel so real. The Solarnese feel genuinely like Renaissance Italians, the Wasps like the Romans or various other empires, as well as many others. Some of my favorite scenes from Blood of the Mantis took place in the sky – in orthopters, heliopters, fixed-wings, and even huge insects. The aerial aspect returns in Salute the Dark in much greater scale. To put the culture in perspective – just prior to World War I, some of the first stable propeller-driven aircraft began to be manufactured with the purpose of war in mind. People were drawn to these fascinating machines, and throughout the war the pilots styled themselves knights of the air. There was a distinct system of honor in the aerial part of the war, drawn from some branch of chivalry that medieval knights adhered to. Pilots would rarely aim to kill in their dogfights, their dances in the sky – they’d aim for wings, the rudder, anywhere but the cockpit. It was an almost unspoken rule – if you hit someone’s engine and they could no longer fight, they’d glide to the ground in an attempt to land and, for the most part, would not be pursued – this counted as an aerial victory. Tchaikovsky implemented these same chivalrous ideals – the early tech of the vehicles, the aerial chivalry – into Blood and Salute, making the story feel that much more vivid.Whereas Dragonfly Falling had some large battles and sieges in it, Salute truly felt like a total and utter world war. Sieges, rebellions, field battles, ambushes in the black of night, cavalry charges, aerial battles, flamethrowers, and even some horrific chemical warfare that felt all too real. Not only did the story include these traditional aspects of war, there was also an entire thread of gladiatorial combat with a huge culmination, again reminiscent of the Romans. People are reduced to savages in the audience, where skill is a non-factor for entertainment on the sands. The only thing that matters is that blood is spilled and in great quantity.Salute the Dark is an incredibly apt name for the story. It is absolutely brutal. My heart was racing whenever I picked it up to read. Nobody is safe – you can feel the danger seeping from the pages. Aside from a few average characters of no outstanding martial quality, there is an abundance of characters in Shadows of the Apt who are peerless in combat, able to cut down enemy after enemy without breaking a sweat. After finishing Salute, it almost seems like Tchaikovsky purposely used that trope of fantasy – the nigh-invincible swordsman or mage or rogue – just so he could turn it on its head and smack you in the face with it. This is real, visceral, brutal war.Thus ends the first arc of Shadows of the Apt. Ties are wrapped up, but there is a definite sense of foreboding that has me compelled to continue the series. Unique in culture and character, massive in scale in every sense of the word, Shadows of the Apt has become my favorite fantasy series of all time and Salute the Dark is one of the best books I have read this year. If you haven’t even started the series, you are really, really missing out.
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review 2013-06-01 00:00
Salute the Dark - Adrian Tchaikovsky Seven or so major strands to the narrative, all of which steam right along. A fit conclusion to the war & numinous object storylines from the first three volumes. Generates effective pathos through key character deaths--one in particular is badass in execution, but then cheapened by an ambiguous epilogue. That said, so many others are not presented ambiguously, so one person running around mostly dead might be alright.

Love how the mosquito vision of the world is to turn back the clock to the bad old days when exsanguination of rivals was commonplace. Cool colloquy between engineers regarding the morality of chemical weapons deployment on non-combatants, and the implications of total war doctrine (235-37).

We see that "rich people love death" (220), so, yeah, a moment of realism.

Anyway, am thoroughly enjoying these now. Given the rate of technological development in the setting, I can only assume that the eighth volume will feature nukes and the tenth volume will have phasers, quantum singularity cannons, and time-traveling cyborgs. Looking forward to that.

Recommended for those who watch single points disintegrate into nothing, readers who would tear themselves apart were they to run out of enemies, and persons whose prey is already dead.
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