ayaebrahim

Aya Ebrahim Ebrahim itibaren Portnaguran, Isle of Lewis, Na h-Eileanan an Iar HS2, İngiltere itibaren Portnaguran, Isle of Lewis, Na h-Eileanan an Iar HS2, İngiltere

Okuyucu Aya Ebrahim Ebrahim itibaren Portnaguran, Isle of Lewis, Na h-Eileanan an Iar HS2, İngiltere

Aya Ebrahim Ebrahim itibaren Portnaguran, Isle of Lewis, Na h-Eileanan an Iar HS2, İngiltere

ayaebrahim

basit, ince ve düz

ayaebrahim

tamam bu anı ile kim ilişki kuramaz? Hepimiz acı dolu bir içgözlem ve depresyon geçirmedik. Hepimiz çok fazla SSRI almadık mı? Ne yazık ki, babamla birlikte Avrupa'dan seyahat ederken bu kitabı okudum, tüm bunalımı almak ve kapsamlı bir kriz yaşamak için harika bir zaman değil.

ayaebrahim

Aşk, aşk onu sevdi! 4.5 yıldız. Karakterleri ve hikayeyi tüm farklı bakış açılarıyla anlatmanın şeklini sevdim. Bu kitap hakkında her şeyi sevdim, özellikle uzunluk! Uzun karmaşık serileri seviyorsanız, bu kitabı seveceksiniz! Her şeyden biraz var

ayaebrahim

did you see on Oprah, the other day, this is now a movie? Cameron Diaz is the mom... looks compelling. I think it opens in the summer.

ayaebrahim

** spoiler alert ** A fun read with lots of interesting characters. The periodic action sequences are very well-written, with enough humor thrown into the book to really make the characters and dialogue seem realistic. First we have Corvis, a warlord whose plans go horribly awry early in the book. He takes a hostage (Tyannon) to ensure his own safe escape. They end up falling in love and marrying (which when you read it is not nearly as misogynist as it sounds). Seventeen years later, Corvis must re-adopt his warlord persona to protect his new family from a greater threat than he ever hoped to become. Here, he walks a delicate line between committing necessary evils to accomplish his goal, but not so much that he becomes the evil that he denounced years ago. Then there’s Khanda, the obnoxious demon imprisoned in Corvis’s necklace. He mostly functions to assist Corvis with complex magic spells, but his constant jokes and one-liners offers a fun comedic distraction that fits in surprisingly well. Other characters include Davro the farmer/ogre, Seilloah the cannibalistic sorceress, and many others. All of the major characters feel very well-conceived and complete, which I find very important in any fiction. Nothing bores me more than characters who are unbelievable, one-dimensional, predictable place-holders for the plot to hang on. Marmell avoided that pitfall quite nicely with a great collection of characters, any one of which could have an interesting spin-off story written about them. The primary narrative is interspersed quite well with flashback-style stories that tell the characters’ histories and fills in a few of the gaps along the way. The first two to three pages of each chapter answer questions such as “How did Corvis first receive Khanda?” or “How did Tyannon go from ‘prisoner’ to ‘wife’?” It served as a great way to answer some (but unfortunately not ALL) of the lingering questions without overwhelming readers all at once. Overall, I highly recommend this book to anyone who likes fantasy or action. The book is not, nor does it try to be, a life-changing thought-provoking insight into anything philosophical. It’s a fun, action-packed, humorous, excellent summer read.

ayaebrahim

Furst gets his historical facts right, but his prose leaves something to be desired. His stories and characters do not grab you.

ayaebrahim

This book is full of beautiful drawings of fairies crushed like flies on a page. It is wonderful and funny. Please read it.