Puan vermedi·40 syf.··
2025 35. kitabı
About Girl Meets Boy book, actually I started this book to improve my reading skills, but at the same time I thought about this and decided to write a review to improve my writing skills. This book was very easy for me (A2 level), but I liked the story. It shows human relationships in the modern world, especially the relationships of young people, in a funny way. Also, I found one point in the book very ridiculous. main girl confuses the boy she loves with her brother.
Girl Meets BoyDerek Strange · Prentice Hall · 199813 okunma
Puan vermedi·304 syf.··
2025 932. kitabı
I'm so confused what I'm going to feel I don't know. I never thought it would end like this. And let me not eat the right of the book, I love the girl character. The girl immediately did not develop feelings for the person who kidnapped her and never stopped trying to escape, so I loved the girl. At the same time, in the book, the author processed the warmth and inclusiveness of nature, the artificiality and dullness of humanity very well. The fact that Ty was not my type with the age difference between Ty and Gemma made it difficult for me to connect between the characters, and I liked both of them as separate characters. The author's language was fluent and gripping. It was a great book about nature, the plasticization of humanity, how lonely a person actually needs someone who can understand himself or resembles himself.
Alıntı
Keşke Senden Nefret EdebilseydimLucy Christopher · Pegasus · 2014217 okunma
Home sweet home
9/10
·56 syf.·
2025 10. kitabı
it was fun to read. I dreamed the story while reading it. The story ,itself, was pitiful. I mustn't imagine myself in her shoes. Nevertheless it remainded to me the phrase of "witch hunting" again. Ah I matched the story and the phrase all together. Something that puzzled me about the story is she lived same destiny like her family. In spite of warm house, some foods and piece of dresses... She literally sold her family. What a shameless girl i said at the end of the lines. Eventually , she found, that is, what she deserved. Dot.
1K
The Witches of PendleRowena Akinyemi · Oxford University Press · 199539 okunma
Great Book!
8/10
·416 syf.··
Beğendi
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2023 14. kitabı
I’ve had the chance to read one of the classics again. In general I would say the book was really good. The energy between the sisters and their relationship with their mother was marvelous. The overall dialogues were much easier to read. I would say out of 4 sisters my favourite one would be Jo. Because she is so out of the ordinary and likes to do things no one expects from her. Also she is the most reasonable one among the sisters. Especially much more smarter, reasonable then Meg. In the book we read the story of 4 sisters who are trying to live in a poor condition. The sisters are: 1. Amy: The youngest March girl. Amy is an artist who adores visual beauty and has a weakness for pretty possessions. She is given to pouting, fits of temper, and vanity; but she does attempt to improve herself. Only her jelousy would be my only negative point especially when she burned Jo’s book. 2. Jo: Jo has a temper and a quick tongue, although she works hard to control both. She is a tomboy, and reacts with impatience to the many limitations placed on women and girls. She hates romance in her real life, and wants nothing more than to hold her family together. (My Personal Favorite) 3. Beth: The third March daughter. Beth is very quiet and very virtuous, and she does nothing but try to please others. She adores music and plays the piano very well. 4. Meg: The oldest March sister. Responsible and kind, Meg mothers her younger sisters. She has a small weakness for luxury and leisure, but the greater part of her is gentle, loving, and morally vigorous. (Least Favorite) In General, I liked the little conversations between girls. I think the main reason would be because they’re child and they always talk meaningless stuff and it’s easy to understand. The way they fight through
1000k
Little WomenLouisa May Alcott · Vintage Classics Library · 201719,6bin okunma
reading the blind owl from perspective of nietzsche
Puan vermedi
Sadeq Hedayat is one of my favorite author in the literary world. The Blind Owl that introduced me to Sadeq Hedayat many years ago and it has entered my list of the best. Hedayat's masterpiece The Blind Owl attracted me with the very first lines, and caused me to experience a kind of hysteria with the last page of the book. Coming to the content of the book; the hero is a heavily depressed man who earn his income with the paintings. He takes alcohol and opium continuously to make himself numb and stop thinking. One day as he walks to the kitchen to deliver wine to his uncle, he sees the elderly man and the stunningly beautiful girl through a hole in his wall, which causes his lonely existence to change. After this sight, he begins to think her all day hysterically. One night, he finds her waiting at the door of his home. After this strange encounter, he searches for anything to offer her then goes to get a bottle of wine for her. When he brings the wine, he thinks that the girl is asleep, and drops a sip in her mouth. He did, however, realize that she had passed away.He wants to ignore the cold of death with the warmth of his body, but later on realizes that it's not working. Then, he henhe decides to bury the girl by dismembering her and packing her pieces into a suitcase since he thinks she has given up on life and given her soul to him. The old man he saw with the girl, the carriage driver who came to pick her up, his uncle who came to visit, and even himself in some parts of the book, are actually all the same person transformed according to his descriptions. All the characters transform into each other and repeat themselves like eternal recurrence, creating a metaphoric effect. Always different faces, but same suffering. According to
The Blind OwlSadık Hidayet · Alma books · 036,7bin okunma
Puan vermedi
Notes from Underground consists of two parts. The first section is the Underground section. In this section, the worldly and psychological depression experienced by a forty-year-old man whose name is not mentioned is described. The author did not give a name to the hero. We can call this man an Underground Man. An Underground Man is someone who regrets what he has done, does not get angry. He probably likes sweetened tea and people too. Would want to hurt them.19. a century person can't handle being a character. Being conscious is considered a disease in this era. He'd rather be an insect than be so self-conscious. According to him, people with character are very excluded in this era. At the beginning of the work, this Underground Man begins to tell by saying that he is a sick man. The intellectuals of this century are suffering from this disease. There are also those who boast about this disease. The Underground Man, like a doctor, made his own diagnosis himself. He is trying to cure himself. The condition he complains about the most is the feeling of awareness . He is a man who has reached the age of forty, but has not been able to interfere with the forties, he has always been marginalized. The fact that he is so full of anger is a big part of the fact that he cannot be included among people. Dec. He talks about the greatest pleasures in pain. As a pain progresses or December continues, a person gets used to it and begins to feel pleasure, not pain anymore. In the second part of the book, the Underground Man tells why he came to this situation. He is a twenty-four-year-old civil servant. Communication with people is disconnected. He lives in disgust with himself. He mentions the disgusting face of an officer who was working again at that time. He thinks that if he
Notes From UndergroundFyodor Dostoyevski · Karbon Kitaplar · 2016159,8bin okunma