Akış
Ara
Ne Okusam?
Giriş Yap
Kaydol
·
Puan vermedi
Uncle Tom's Cabin
 Tom Uncle’s Cabin was written in 1850 by Harriet Beecher Stowe and was published in 1852. This book articulates nineteenth-century America's shameful attitude to slavery, the horrors of slavery, its contradictions to human nature, its moral and religious fallacy.  The author tackles slavery as a problem for whites and prioritizes the
Uncle Tom's Cabin
Uncle Tom's CabinHarriet Beecher Stowe · Wordsworth · 01,744 okunma
250 syf.
6/10 puan verdi
·
1 saatte okudu
3/5 Stars (%66/100) I'm seeing a pattern and find it very annoying. The Demon King is not dead, of course, (what a surprise everyone) and now possesses Zeldris. Meliodas and Elizabeth fight him alone for a while while the Sins fight an Indura and its offspring (the scene with Escanor was amazing btw). Ban gets his Sacred Treasure after 300+ chapters. The pattern was Meliodas trying to do things alone and the Sins joining and saying "captain don't ignore us we're here too." This happened so many times and for the Sins to be able to keep up with Meliodas (who is too op), they all get power-ups. It was okay for a couple times but now I'm like uuggghh again...
The Seven Deadly Sins, Vol. 38
The Seven Deadly Sins, Vol. 38Nakaba Suzuki · 201910 okunma
Reklam
180 syf.
·
Puan vermedi
·
28 saatte okudu
In the "ideal" world into which Jonas was born, everybody has sensibly agreed that well-matched married couples will raise exactly two offspring, one boy and one girl. These children's adolescent sexual impulses will be stifled with specially prescribed drugs; at age 12 they will receive an appropriate career assignment, sensibly chosen by the community's Elders. This is a world in which the old live in group homes and are "released"--to great celebration--at the proper time; the few infants who do not develop according to schedule are also "released," but with no fanfare. Lowry's development of this civilization is so deft that her readers, like the community's citizens, will be easily seduced by the chimera of this ordered, pain-free society. Until the time that Jonah begins training for his job assignment--the rigorous and prestigious position of Receiver of Memory--he, too, is a complacent model citizen. But as his near-mystical training progresses, and he is weighed down and enriched with society's collective memories of a world as stimulating as it was flawed, Jonas grows increasingly aware of the hypocrisy that rules his world.
The Giver
The GiverLois Lowry · Laurel Leaf Publishing · 2002884 okunma