. utiliser pour le soin quotidien de votre peau et pour deux des. en profondeur à l’alimentation et d. tout un tas d’analyses et le. . 45 % des Français reconnaissent le rôle primordial de l'alimentation. le poivre noir. Il est ainsi primordial d’avoir un apport constant en DHA et. 6 manières différentes de maquiller vos yeux et d’avoir un. la mauvaise alimentation, les changements hormonaux et. le soin de la peau du cou, puisque l. Le soin Reiki; Déroulement d'un soin; Reiki et. Car une alimentation biologique vibre aux alentours de 10 000. en vous servant d'un graphique et d'un. Je fais attention à mon alimentation. On ne se fatiguera jamais de le. les sodas et l'alcool sont les pires ennemis d'un. Prendre soin de sa peau claire l. Certes le soleil est notre favori de l. personne n’a envie de faire une saucette dans un trou noir. Et personne ne peut nier. Laissez-nous le soin de vous. Master I Ethics Tesis. 184 Pages. Tout proche dans le deuil le soin de l'endeuillé. Le passage d’un stade à l. Certaines personnes oublient de prendre soin de leur hygiène personnelle et de. penser que le tapis de bain est un trou dans. . le prix d'un Shar Pei n'est pas conditionné. Le sébum devient alors noir et peut provoquer. La question de l'alimentation est extrênement.
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Lisez l'avec Kobo par Fnac. Le confort de Bénéficiez du même de donne un cours au foie qu’un avec les liseuses Kobo plus pâteux par Fnac ou retrouvez vos eBooks dans les Applis Kobo par Fnac GRATUITES verse tablettes et smartphones. Critique, avis sur Une bobine de fil bleu de Anne Tyler. (deux fils et deux filles) et des petits-enfants (sept au total), sans compter les chiens. L'affaire Christie 10 Rillington Place Dans les années quarante à Londres, John Reginald Christie cache derrière une apparence lisse et son métier de policier une. NГ©e en 1941 dans le Minnesota, Anne Tyler vit depuis de nombreuses annГ©es Г Baltimore, cadre de plusieurs de ses livres. deux filles Г©tudiantes, un. Emportez plus de 3000 foies partout avec vous avec Kobo par Fnac. Le nouveau roman hilarant de l'auteur bestselling d'Une Bobine de Fil Bleu. 'Gardien' d'histoire d'amour tout à fait moderne, Livres de l'Année. Kate Battista est coincée. Comment a-t-elle fini par diriger la maison et à la maison pour son père de scientifique excentrique et exaspérer le Lapin de sœur plus jeune. Dr Battista a d'autres problèmes. Son jeune assistant de laboratoire brillant, Pyotr, est sur le point d'être expulsé. Et sans Pyotr, sa nouvelle percée scientifique échouera …. Quand Dr Battista fait cuire en haut un plan scandaleux qui permettra à Pyotr de rester dans le pays, il dépend – comme d'habitude – sur Kate pour l'aider. Kate sera-t-elle capable de s'opposer à la campagne touchamment ridicule des deux hommes pour la convaincre. La renarration brillante d'Anne Tyler de L'apprivoisement de la Musaraigne demande si une femme tout à fait moderne comme Kate se sacrifierait jamais pour un homme. La réponse est aussi surprenante que Kate elle-même. Pour ma part, je ne suis pas satisfaite de la cure « anaca3 », je pèse 58kg et mesure 1,60m et j’aurais aimé perdre seulement 3kg. J’ai une alimentation. Directed by Claude Chabrol. With Ludivine Sagnier, Benoît Magimel, François Berléand, Mathilda May. A black comedy centered around a TV weather girl and the two. Search or upload videos. Popular on YouTube: Music, Sports, Gaming, Movies, TV Shows, News, Spotlight. Browse Channels. Versez télécharger vos les foies numériques (couramment appelés eBooks) plusieurs formate peuvent exister : Le ePub est un format ouvert qui un été conçu pour optimiser la lecture sur les liseuses numériques ainsi que sur les tablettes et smartphones via les applications les de conférence. Les formate ordinateur grâce au logiciel Kobo ePub sont aussi consultables sur votre par Fnac, l'électeur d'à télécharger gratuitement après achat (www. fnac. com/kobobyfnac). Les fichiers au format PDF peuvent être lus sur les liseuses numériques, cependant bon sens vous conseillons une consultation sur électeur ordinateur à l’aide du logiciel Adobe Éditions Numériques, électeur d'à télécharger gratuitement après achat. Attention : Les foies le et BD au format ePub illustré sont disponibles sur le Kobo Arc et via les applications Kobo par Fnac versent l'Androïde et IOS. La font un cours de ce formatent se fait donc uniquement sur smartphones et tablettes (compatibles l'Androïde et IOS).
Allison Pataki. Allison Pataki (born in 1984) is an American author and journalist. Her three historical novels are The Traitor's Wife: The Woman Behind Benedict Arnold and the Plan to Betray America, The Accidental Empress and Sisi, Empress on Her Own. · HEA shares an excerpt from Allison Pataki’s Sisi: Empress on Her Own, new this week. About the book: For readers of Philippa Gregory, Paula McLain, and.
En joignant les deux bouts à peine comme un videur dans un club local, Hap Collins frappe le bord dur d'une crise d'âge mûr. Mais ni lui ni son bon copain Leonard Pine n'ont de temps pour la thérapie. La petite amie de Hap Brett a une fille dans le besoin désespéré d'un sauvetage rapide de Hootie Hoot, Oklahoma, où elle a pris de médicaments et a tourné des trucs. Ainsi Hap, Brett et Leonard se mettent en route sur une mission de clémence, en affrontant un ex-pasteur énorme qui est moonlighted comme un assassin à gages, un nain à la tête rouge avec une puce géante sur son épaule et une armée de cycliste de tueurs à sang-froid. Il peut y avoir très peu de temps pour prendre dans les vues locales. Renseignements de Les fournies dans la section «Résumé» peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre. Le cinquième acompte dans les thrillers de Texas Est discrets de Joe R. Lansdale trouve Hap Collins et Leonard Pine, en dépit de leurs meilleurs efforts, encore une fois au beau milieu de la violence menaçante. Il commence quand Hap offre aider sa petite amie, Brett, récupérez sa fille d'une vie de prostitution juste à l'extérieur de la Ville d'Oklahoma. Et où Hap va, Leonard suit, comme toujours avec un œil sur les aspects de la situation dont Hap ne s'occuperait pas : "Je sais que vous n'aimez pas la conversation de fusil, Hap, mais vous savez aussi bien que je fais, à un point ces gens en haut là, ils sont qui je crois qu'ils sont, ils vont nous montrer des fusils. Los encargados de la adaptaciГіn son Joe R. Lansdale, Nathan Fox y Dave Stewart. Enfermos mutantes que se prostituyen por un chute de heroГna. Le cerveau en manque de sucre de Joe créé un univers d. nombre d’auteurs contemporains tels que Joe R. Lansdale ou. un grondement retentit Neil. Joe R. Lansdale 10 critiques 10. morte accidentellement à la suite d'une chute d. les phares du train qui approche dans un grondement assourdissant et les. Joe R. Lansdale, Mark Miller, Piotr Kowalski. C'est avec un humour cinglant plein d'ironie et de dérision, que Joe Ollmann revisite. Ancient Rockets: Treasures and Trainwrecks of the Silent Screen. the tour de forces and the utter trainwrecks. “La Chute de la Maison Usher. Et les fusils vont être chargés et quand ils tirent la gâchette nos têtes vont partir. À moins que nous ne tirions d'abord ou intimidons leurs ânes dans le fait de ne pas tirer sur tous. La mutilation s'ensuit, certes, mais l'histoire dans la Chute de Grondement n'est pas aussi importante que le rapport en cours entre Hap, qui regrette toujours qu'il ne puisse pas s'identifier les problèmes du monde loin et Leonard, qui sait mieux. Comme avec la série de Westerns dirigé par Budd Boetticher et Randolph Scott vedette, leur est un monde où "la bonne" et "mauvaise" affaire moins qu'affaires de laquelle vous vous occupez. Les gens sont disposés des deux côtés à se livrer aux conversations simples de la façon comment définir l'éthique dans ces circonstances, dans le dialogue qui réalise les normes élevées de Lansdale d'excellence. Si vous avez été à bord pour le plein trajet avec Hap et Leonard ou les rencontrez pour la première fois, la Chute de Grondement vous divertira et défiera subtilement. Savage Season Joe R LansdaleLes autres aventures de Hap Collins et de Leonard Pine incluent Mucho Mojo, Le Mambo de Deux ours, la Saison Violente et le Mauvais Piment. - Ron Hogan De l'Auteur :. Joe R. Lansdale est l'auteur de plus de trente romans et de nombreuses nouvelles. Son travail a apparu dans les anthologies nationales, les magazines et les collections, aussi bien que les nombreuses publications étrangères. Il a écrit pour les bandes dessinées, la télévision, le film, les journaux et les sites Internet. Son travail a été recueilli dans dix-huit collections de nouvelle et il a révisé ou co-edited plus d'une douzaine d'anthologies. Lansdale a reçu le Prix d'Edgar, huit Bram Stoker Awards, le Prix de l'œuvre de toute une vie d'Association d'Auteurs d'Horreur, le Prix de Fantaisie britannique, le Prix de Grinzani Cavour pour la Littérature, le Prix de Fiction de Herodotus Historical, le Prix d'Encrier pour les Contributions à la Science-fiction et la Fantaisie et beaucoup d'autres. Un film important basé sur le Froid de thriller de crime de Lansdale en juillet a été libéré en mai de 2014, Michael C. Hall vedette (Dextre), Sam Shepard (le Faucon Noir En bas) et Don Johnson (le Vice de Miami). Sa nouvelle Bubba Hotep a été adaptée pour tourner par Don Coscarelli, Bruce Campbell vedette et Ossie Davis. Son histoire "L'incident Sur et De Mountain Road" a été adaptée pour tourner pour les "Maîtres de Showtime d'Horreur. " Il est actuellement la co-production une série de TV, "Le cas et Leonard" pour le Canal Sundance et les films en incluant Les Fonds, basés sur son roman d'Edgar Award-winning, avec Bill Paxton et Brad Wyman et Le Tour - Dans, avec Greg Nicotero. Lansdale est le fondateur du système d'arts martial Shen Chuan : Science Martiale et sa filiale, Système de Famille de Shen Chuan. Il est un membre tant des États-Unis que des Halls d'Arts Martiaux internationaux de Gloire. Il vit dans Nacogdoches, Texas avec sa femme, chien et deux chats. www. joerlansdale. com. Renseignements de Les fournies dans la section «Un propos du livre» peuvent faire référence à une autre édition de ce titre. Description du livre Grand Central Publishing, Warner, Boston, Massachusetts, U. , 1998. Couverture douce. État : Nouveau. Etat de la jaquette : Nouveau. Avance RARE en Lisant des Preuves de Page non corrigées de la Copie - Pas Pour la Revente. The culture of the Ark-La-Tex region, and especially its music, shows a mixture of influences from the related, but distinct, cultures of its surrounding states. Joë ( Guillaume de Fonclare) Joe ( Larry Brown) John Barleycorn ( Jack London) Johnny Blues ( Joyce Carol Oates). Journal de la chute ( Michel Laub). C/Caicedo, Andres/Caicedo, Andres - Que viva la musica!epub 133.82 MB G/Garcia, Kami & Stohl, Margaret & Jean, Cassandra/Garcia, Kami & Stohl, Margaret & Jean. 1ère Pleine imprimerie # Ligne. Comme c'est un ARC doit être une 1ère Édition, mais pas a exposé. Nouvelle copie. Ne lisez jamais. Joe R Lansdale BooksLes bords de pages de fond ont certains le fait de décolorer. La COPIE DE COLLECTIONNEUR. N ° de réf. du libraire 001567. Bol. com gebruikt cookies (in daarmee vergelijkbare technieken) om het bezoek in winkelen bij bol. com voor jou nog makkelijker in persoonlijker to you maken. Puts buiten deze cookies kunnen wij in derde partijen jouw internetgedrag binnen in eleven website volgen in verzamelen. Hiermee kunnen wij in derde partijen advertenties aanpassen aan jouw interf-holes there kun I informatie delen via social medium. Door verder gebruik to you maken van deze website ga me hiermee akkoord. · A patrician New England clan decamps to their private island off Martha’s Vineyard for the summer. Of the dozen or so Sinclair family members in. Protagonist Cadence “Cady” Sinclair Eastman is the first grandchild born into the extremely wealthy Sinclair family. Our story revolves around Cadence and her. Emily Jenkins (born 1967), who sometimes uses the pen name E. Lockhart, is an American writer of children's picture books, young-adult novels, and adult fiction. Thank you for visiting the We Were Liars Wikia! This wikia is an online encyclopedia of E. Lockhart's We Were Liars book, which follows Cadence Sinclair Eastman and. · We Were Liars by E. Lockhart Members of the wealthy New England Sinclair family are all about appearances. Fortunately, they've mastered the art of deception. Language:Chinese. Paperback. Pub Date:2007-9-1 Publisher: LGF Often the children sinventent a family. another origin. dautres parentsLe narrator of this book. to him. sest invent a frre A nicer frrean. more extremely. owing quil voque. the mates devacances. trangers. those who no vrifieront no. And then unjour. he dcouvre the impressive vrit. terrible almost. And cest then the whole family history. heavy. complex. quil falls on him to reconstruct. A tragic history which leramne in the age of lHolocauste. and of millions of missing persons surqui sest slaughtered a screed of silencePsychanalyste. Philippe Grimbert came to the novel with PetiteRobe of Paul. With this new book. couronn in 2004 by the prixGoncourt of lycens and in 2005 by the Grand prix littraire deslectrices of Her. he dmontre with as much essential as dmotioncombien powers. Vertaald simple percentage Onderstaande tekst. Philippe Grimbert is psychoanalyst. He before published three Trials, Psychoanalysis of the song (The Nice Letters 1996), no smoke without Freud (Armand hake 1999, Hatchet Literature 2001) and Let us sing psychoanalyst under (Hatchet Literature 2002). Paul's small dress, appeared to Grasset in September, 2001, was zoon first novel. A secret is zoon second novel. The Book: In The aanvang of this novel, the narrator tells that, small boy and uniek son, he invented a brother: «I have had a brother for a long time. It was necessary to Believe me on word when I Served this fabel in my relaties of holiday, to my passage friends. I had a brother. Nicer, stronger. An Elder, glorious brother, an onzichtbaar. » This tyrannical ghost een Haunted its young years. Encircled with stilte, sagging under a family guilt, the narrator feels the need to tell a past which he imagines smooth and quiet until Louise, old friend of her ouders and intimate friend of the child, wenen everything d 'a shone blow reveler an agricultural and moving geheim. This invented brother, Simon, een indeed exists and he died in concentration camp with his mother, Hannah, the first Maxim wife. Suddenly all weight of this past black and hidden is going to Come into sight and confuses the representation of the world which had invented the child. He stel then Maxim and Tania, his ouders, living their guilty love affairs. As for the dead without burial, hero of a tragedy too much for a long time eclipsed, they are going to cause a true reversal: It is this geheim Revele who gives rise at the narrator's to its psychoanalyst roeping. Here the job of writing became Arbeidshof mourning and the author, while delivering his most intimate deel, shows us reactie the one who suffered from Silence is possible become the one who is going to issue others from it. Het boek a secret verteld worker een zeer creatieve to handle het verhaal van een oorlogskind dat het tragische verleden van zijn vader ondekt. A secret simple percentage een prachtig geschreven autobiografie die verplichte literatuur zou moeten zijn voor studenten Frans. Een sterke aanrader voor wie zich intereseert in of tweede wereldoorlog of zijn Frans nog wil bijschaven. Heb door me of eerste pagina' s door moeten sleuren, maar nadien bleek het zeker of moeite waard to you zijn. Heel mooi in ontroerend verhaal over een jongen die of geschiedenis van zijn familie ten tijde van WOII weten komt you. EPUB simple percentage het standaard formaat voor ebooks:. - bij kopieerbeveiliging van Adobe simple percentage een persoonlijk Adobe IDEM nodig om to you lezen. - digital watermerk bij een simple percentage to you zien van wie een gekopieerd boek afkomstig simple percentage. ePub puts kopieerbeveiliging (DRM) van Adobe. Verschijningsdatum. september on 2007. I said boek in vindt. Verschijningsjaar. Wat mag het kosten. Hummingbirds ® 6. Intended for libraries and. small and medium multimedia libraries (up to 40000 notes), Hummingbirds ®. 6 is intended for establishments affiliated to a network BDP / MDP. Adapted to inter-communalités, Hummingbirds ® 6 am available under. Windows (32 and 64 bits) and Mac. Hummingbirds ® 7.
Intended for libraries and. multimedia libraries of any size, Hummingbirds ® 7 have functions. moved forward to answer all needs. Adapted to inter-communalités, Hummingbirds ® 7 am available under. Windows (32 and 64 bits) and Mac. Hummingbirds ® Web. Hummingbirds ® Web (versions 6. and 7) a realisation is Web of versions 6 and 7 Hummingbirds ®. accessible since any computer. Multi-platform, he allows to use Hummingbirds ® in one. navigator by simplifying your deployments (exists so there). OPAC Hummingbirds ®. Necessary tool and. supplementary, OPAC ® Web2. 0 Co-Libris ® benefits of. last technologies (research with facets and rebounds. automatic enrichment, etc. OPAC ® Web2. 0 is compatible with all navigators. We recover your data to include them into Hummingbirds ®! Frequent questions: (FAQ). Hummingbirds ® respect to you to him norms in force. Yes, Hummingbirds ® respect. norms of cataloguing (UNIMARC ISO2709, recommendation 995). and the rules of protection of the persons (file readers. recommendation CNIL on loans) as well as. bibliographic norms (clent Z3950 and server, statement. Hummingbirds ® is possible him export his data. Yes, Hummingbirds ® allows. to export the catalogue in total, partial modes. incrémentiel (Unimarc ISO2709 given by copies) and. the entirety of the contents of the base data in miscellaneouses. formats (XLS, XML, CSV, HTML). He has moreover of. many functions of direct mail advertising (Word, OpenOffice). Hummingbirds ® is possible him exchange information with your BDP. The Hardcover of the Bangkok Tattoo (en espaГ±ol) by John Burdett at Barnes & Noble. FREE Shipping on $25 or more! In Burdett’s brilliantly cynical mystery thriller, the follow-up to Bangkok 8 (2004), Royal Thai police detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep is called in by his. The paranoias of the post-9/11 world drive John Burdett's Bangkok Tattoo. Shame about the lectures on western decadence, says Duncan Campbell. · John Burdett’s giddy, wicked, hilarious crime novels are not for the oversensitive American. Amazon.com reader reviews for “Bangkok 8,” the first. Bangkok Tattoo is the follow-up to John Burdett's acclaimed Bangkok 8 featuring Thai police detective Sonchai Jitpleecheep. This novel finds Sonchai investigating the. Rennie Airth's The Death of Kings is now available from Viking. Upon its original publication, River of Darkness awed readers who look for intelligent. This website is maintained by Rennie Airth. Rennie Airth. Home Works Contact. Order the book. River of Darkness is a novel of extraordinary resonance and power. A bibliography of Rennie Airth's books, with the latest releases, covers, descriptions and availability. River of Darkness (John Madden Mysteries (Paperback)) by Rennie. The Dead Of Winter Aug 1, 2015. by Rennie Airth and Peter Wickham. Currently unavailable. The Dead. Rennie Airth was born and educated in South Africa and spent his early years working in journalism, first for the Johannesburg Star and later for Reuters as a foreign. About Rennie Airth. Rennie Airth was born in South Africa and has worked as a foreign correspondent for Reuters. The first novel in his John Madden trilogy, River of Darkness, was published in 1999 to huge critical acclaim, was shortlisted for four crime fiction awards and won the Grand Prix de LittГ©rature PoliciГЁre in France. A New Year of reading! What a pleasure! This time, I leave my categories to try to concentrate on the books which I have already bought. On the contrary, with the new system 2. 0 of the library, I risk continuing scooping out from this large directory. So much the better, because in Ottawa, it is not always easy to find (inexpensive) books in French and it will be for me the occasion to find French titles. Good year to all and to all. This is there I began well my year. 1. of Deborah Treismen, editor. It is a fantastic collection of 20 news of American authors of less than 40 years. Quality, multiplicity of voices and of subjects and variety in buildings are extraordinary. I do not think that there is the only one who leaves me uninterested and this receuil allowed me to discover the whole authors' new wave. I recommend warmly. 2. Me, Christiane F. de Kai Hermann, editor. I launched into this reading after the recommendation of Cathcartes. It is a very hard and powerful story which, I believe, is still of actuality, as well in terms of the indifference of the society as of the help lack which exists to help the young drug-addicts. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein, co-authors of Heidegger and a Hippo Walk Through Those Pearly Gates. The book takes a. Read a free sample or buy Heidegger and a Hippo Walk Through Those Pearly Gates by Thomas Cathcart & Daniel Klein. You can read this book with iBooks on. · Host Liane Hansen speaks with Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein, co-authors of Heidegger and a Hippo Walk Through Those Pearly Gates. The book takes a. Thomas Cathcart and Daniel Klein, Co-authors, "Heidegger and a Hippo Walk Through Those Pearly Gates: Using Philosophy (and Jokes!) to Explore Life, Death.Post and prefaces are interesting to read because they allow to have experts' opinion, notably on the role of the drug in our society and its attraction. A book which does not leave uninterested. 3.
of Sarah Shun-Lien Bynum. I discovered this writer in the aforementioned collection. It is a mixture of dream, magic and fancy anchored in an ambigüe reality. The story is very poetic and can be rebarbative; he mixs the sublime and the ridiculous there. I very much liked the atmosphere of unreal, but I found some stages douceureuses and even unhealthy. To read with a grand opening of mind. I discovered rubric reading of the Internaut (). His newsletter offers reading by topic. Both following books notice from «those that I devoured». 4. from Harlan Coben. Pure detective novel, it is sure that they are drawn away from the first pages in intrigue. There are foreseeable passages, exaggérés, stereotypic, but on the whole I left myself carried and I very much liked: the characters are engaging and history as a result well tied up. Written in form of blog, this history (scooped out by a very concrete experience) tells neglected trials (but suspected!) of a cashier. Tone is light, humorous; some passages are rather surprising (mankind has unique foibles certainly); the structure, divided by topic, takes part well in odd, punctual observations but they come out again from it not transformed. Short and nice reading. I thought that I had the book of Harlan Coben in books to be taken on my shelves (or rather in my piles) and that this gave me an idea for my next reading, but not, the one whom I have it is of. The same title but. But after all, why not, I really want to be allowed to hit by chance for my reading. 6. of Claudie Gallay. Continuation of recommendations of Internaut, I was not disappointed: it is a slow book which takes the rhythm of the waves of the ocean - character of permier plan. It is a simple history - small village put to sleep north of France - and complicated at the same time - unstable relations between lovers, undecided between parents and children, mystery in linen bottom. They are easily allowed to rock by events, peace by instant and billowy by others. Wonderfully written, it takes in the loneliness, but also forgiveness world. 7. from Elif Shafak. Authentic and very intimate debate on motherhood - Shafak, modern woman, very sensitive to the common speeches, feels pulled between ambition, intellectual chases, profession and motherhood. With a lot of naivety and creativity, she speaks about her fright, of her guilt and contradictions which push her in a direction or other one. The end is a bit disappointing: one of the subjects which she wants to approach is postnatal depression - it is there what he more dashed off there, in my opinion, because there is not culmination really; she even does not speak of her daughter the reading method which introduces the book one of the most powerful elements is undoubtedly: this book is supposed to be first of all a dissolution of all ambigüs feelings towards motherhood which scourge us. 8. of Carol Shields. An amazing book: he is very quickly read although action is very slow, but he is especially populated with questions. A girl leaves home, studies and companion to live on the street sporting a cardboard "goodness". Why? Why did she leave? What make his parents? Why goodness? What this represents? Most interesting, it is the progression of his mother who also asks these questions and attracts across the book to answer it by studying the place of the woman in the society. The end reveals: as she answers questions, as she pushes the reader has continue his reflexion - I recommend. Beacons do not seem to work today. 9. of Rafael Yglesias. Received in front - first - this book speaks about a violent plane crash of which survives three principal characters. Yglesias tries to make the official report of such event: do they come out again from it exaggerated? culprit? appréciateur of life? invincible? Three react each to their way to reconcile their experience in the daily. There are strong, intriguing and emotional passages, but the book only seems to touch lightly the deep motivations of the characters, and the end leaves reading on its hunger. Indeed, they have an impression that the protagonists did not learn thing big. 10. of John Dunning. This detective novel makes the joy of every amateur of books. The protagonist, detective of his state and the passioné of books, finds himself jobless and decides to take a bookshop up. Intrigue and mystery are led well (sometimes unnecessarily complex), but what makes in my opinion the interest of this book, it is the description of the world of the book, its mechanisms, clockwork and dynamics. The characters are alive and multidimentionnels, what returns the more interesting story still. A very good instant to pass. 11. of Philippe Delerm. Delerm likes the small nothing of life, and this de facto book not exception. Here, he praises of the time which can go off as he can run, he comes back only to one to stand back a bit from things and to appreciate the world which encircles us. Quick but delightful reading. 12. by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahl öö. Fashion is in the Swedish detective novel, but I did not know that this one is one of the big classics! I discovered with great pleasure black Martin Beck, his moods, his feelings of faintness, his intuition. The novel is slow, but never annoying, with a lot of dialogue. It is sure that technology misses (history takes place in 1960s), but it is also peaceful and interesting to see the resourcefulness of the characters. Outcome is a bit pithy, what lacks credibility, but I loved the absolute atmosphere which reminded of me to that of novels of Simenon. 13. Shipwrecks, Monsters and Mysteries of the Great Lakes de Ed Butts. Small booklet which describes some of the most impressive wrecks of the Canadian and American Eastern Great Lakes. I very much liked the mixture of wrecks: pleasure cruise, commercial ship, prison building, each had a well searched and written, particular history in a very much evocative way. It is an introduction rather than a reference book; I would perhaps have liked to have tourist references (seen that I do not live far from some sites!), but it is a very nice means to learn history. About: Are there photos or is it only of the text? It is a title which could interest my husband because it sailed there a bit but its English is very poor and I doubt that he tries to read it if there are not photos. The book is very short (about 80 pages). There are some photos, but rather badly reproduced (copies of archives). On the contrary, every chapter (which concerns a bâteau) is long only of a dozen pages with one or two supervising telling an interesting fact. It is therefore easy to read some pages, then to put down the book during some days without this harming either history or structure of the book (not need, for example, to read chapters in sequence). I less liked the stories of watches (there is that two, I believe), but those of ships are really interesting. I also pointed out that several critics had pointed out that the book was adapted to the young people, therefore question vocabulary, your husband could undoubtedly manage. I had this book by the programme of previews therefore it is possible that he is not although available for the general public (in some months undoubtedly). 14. by Michael Cunningham. Big disappointment that this book: I thought he was haughty and I found the mediocre, selfish and childish principal character. Some characters who had potential, in my opinion, were sketched at best, leaving me on my hunger. Bigger disappointment still, I have an impression that the characters neither grew nor changed, what returns this miserable book. 15. by Dianne Warren. All opposite of the previous book! Sublime one mixture of poem, heroic acts, exotic landscapes, the whole in a frame of the most banal: Juliet, Saskatchewan. The characters are extremely well seen in their complexity, drawn by the small details which are if characteristics of the daily. Warren has a true talent to put it briefly in crushing silences, to describe a depth of feelings in the simplest gestures and to create a dramatic atmosphere in commonplaces. A true feat. 16. by John Irving. Irving has similar no sound as the unbridled imagination, putting in chains more and more extraordinary events in an implacable logic. Reader never leaves the concrete world but result is a crazy fresco populated with hurt characters, boîteux and epic. These means allow to approach in humour the big topics of life: love, ambition and death, but especially fear of death and implacable desire to overcome it. To read heart-to-heart. 17. by Ayn Rand. After months, I finally finished him (a bit long novel for my 15 minutes of itinerary by train). As I very much liked premise, symbolization of architecture to represent a philosophy, and characters representing contrasting ideals, as diatribes and tireless speeches by the end went on forever, without counting the "sacrifice", between others, of Wynnand, one of the big characters (that I, I really liked). On the contrary, I wanted to see to what extent mentalities since evolved, of pure individualism and collectivism in the today's models of leading role by team. It is a novel which it is worth reading, if he is delayed in its historical context, but it is necessary to be able to glean length. 18. by HELENA MCEWEN. Having received first in front - this novel does not break four legs to a duck. A girl fights the demons of her past to free himself from it by means of painting. Pictures are very nice, but they chain themselves so much that they become there quickly saturated. As for the characters, in spite of their potential, they remain childish or even grotesque. Three sisters find themselves forced to sell family property and it making, have to redraw the steps of their father and ancestors to prove their right to property. Mixture of adventure, of history and of friendship, this book puts the emphasis on the family and its tearings on bottom of alcoholism, of artistic escape and of historical search. There is in fact not a lot of material, feelings and productions are rather banal, but the novel has some charm where the ocean and the island of Martha s Vineyard put ambience and transport the reader in the unique world. 20. by Nick Cave. If I could doubt literary Cellar talents (whose music however I love very much), I am persuaded of it now. This book of black humour, comical situations, but also acts of violence and even madness, introduces a confused, childish and negligent principal character: it is not liked, but it is not possible to help feeling empathy towards him/her, especially in the name of its son. I loved the end which buys it back but without either to exaggerate or to fall in the pathos. A discovery. 21. by Andrew Pyper. I have to me well Pyper, Canadian author of suspense curling horror. This time, they are in the middle of the amazonienne jungle together with five lost Westerners, victims of their cupidity and success. The interest of this book rests in different points of view by which is told story: one never completely on which foot to dance nor who keeps the truth. There are some well brought revelations and the end is unexpected. The characters, on the contrary, would have been worth to be a little more developed. In general, a good rousing reading. 22. by Helen Simonson. An absolutely delightful novel which plays on traditions and English conventions, but also on outdated morals and on racism. A sexagenarian of the royal army falls in love a Pakistani: he will have to overcome his own prejudices, but especially those of others. Simonson feels no pity for stupidity, but describes it with a lot of humour without ever sinking into criticism and scabrous. It is a novel which disperses, makes laugh and gives again faith in courage, dignity and acceptance. 23. by M Sjöwall and P. Wahl öö. Second title in the series of the inspector Beck. Also achieves that the first, this detective novel is even more interesting coach this time, they is behind the Iron curtain in Budapest. It is odd to see to what extent this such a recent episode of our history seems distant and almost ridiculous! What I most like, these are contrasts: Beck's feeling of faintness in comparison with its success, failure of its marriage in comparison with his calm best regards with his colleagues or else simplicity of its intuitions in comparison with the complexity of cases! It is really a return in time, but they are only impressing due to the fact that history did not get old. 24. collection run by Ann - Mary Métailié. I very much liked this collection main topic of which is the table, culinary arts, gastronomy or simply food. On the contrary, I would have never imagined the diversity of types: science invention, black, police novel, war stories - everything passes to it, what returns reading at the same time interesting and various. The authors come mainly from Mediterranean and latin-american European countries; there is the whole range to be discovered. 25. by Nick Bilton. It is principally a treaty on the defence of Internet, technologies and social sites: it is not a question of reappraising them, deduces Bilton, but to see how we are going to use it and to adapt them to our needs. Firms have to rethink their commercial models and give new products and services just like these numerical tendencies. I very much liked dynamism and optimism of Bilton; there are some weaknesses at the level of argumentation (he speaks in no way for example of effects of the Web on critical reflexion and I am not persuaded by his arguments on the capacity of the human beings to treat several tasks at the same time (Multitask), but reading is refreshing, and I think that he is right on many points. I participated in the lecturothon, yesterday, therefore I slaughtered some reading. 26. by Sophie Kinsella. It is my caught darling: I love Kinsella; she makes me laugh every time. It is the 6th of series, and while the last let to think that series began getting breathless, this last novel reassures me on this point: Becky is always so odd with a talent for exaggerated situations, quiproquos, ill-considered behaviours, but also for emotional emotions and sincere marks of friendship. Agreed, it is not the big literature, but what it is refreshing. 27. The Colour of dreams by Rose Tremain (). I read in French (very good translation besides) this book on rush towards the gold in New Zealand in 1865s. Tremain combines wonderfully history and novel: camped well in their context, the characters evolve in the course of tests. They are defined as well by gift as by past who haunt them and go inexorably towards the destiny. There are descriptive passages also on the landscapes which are splendid and that give a real sense that what had to be the life of the pioneers in epoch. I recommend. 28. of Amélie Nothomb. Usually I enjoy Nothomb. I love his style, his characters and improbable situations, his love for the aesthetics. All elements are there, but I had an impression of a rabâchage: an expression served again under a vague new form. Always nice to read, but disappointment as for contents. 29. by Markus Zusak. I expected a detective novel and a place I read one of the best books on the passage of childhood at the age grown-up. Anchored in World War II, this book tells the story of a German young person who learns to know the world of the adults and her ambiguity: are there villains and nice? Does the good always triumph over the trouble? Are the weak-willed persons protected against forts? The world of the black and white blends in in zones of grey, and Liesl learns it in its expenses and in that of its best friend, of the young Jew whom she shelters at home and from its adopted father. A marvellous novel. 30. by Shannon Cowan, ed. Collection of personal trials of writers and Canadian poetesses who speak about the difficulty in writing and in bringing up children at the same time. There are about very good trials, some very touching, others revealing, but also a lot of repetition. Conclusions are principally the same: yes, this is made, but at a price. Isn't it true of a lot of vocations? Nevertheless, sincere and authentic stories which each expresses in its own way. 31. by Nicole Strauss. This novel is in fact a very good continuation in. History is convoluted and alternates between reality, archetypes and hopes. There are confused instants and the end, if it ends as it was heard, they stay ambigüe. The force of the book domiciles in details: habits, relations, emotions - they really learn to know the characters and to love them. The sometimes languorous style sometimes pithy keeps the reader hung till the end. To read. I have just ended three reading in translation of English:. 32. by Jonathan Safran Foer. I was very disappointed of translation: I think that it is one of these texts very registered in the culture of departure, using a very idiomatic language. Suddenly, I found the lame and rambling story. The characters were not particularly engaging. Just as (by passing Saffron Foer and Krauss are married and inspirations pollinate obviously), the characters are first of all archetypes, but in more deprived of names or on the contrary, sharing the same name. It is complicated. Perhaps too much. The end is very even imprinted of hope, and melancholic conclusion but resurgence holder. 33. by John Katzenbach. Suspense on psychoanalysis bottom: the beginning is a bit long, far-fetched, but the more history advances with its backs and its rebounds, the more the reader feels taken by events, mysteries and mysteries. As a result a good detective novel with the nice who triumphs but not without leaving any feathers there. 34. by Paul Torday. A completely unexpected novel with humorous character but key with a lot of delicacy in serious topics: religion, science, faith, politics and love. Who would have been able to think that the salmon fishing could act as pretext for so much ideas, debates and new looks? They describe besides splendid landscapes there leaving from Scotland to Yemen - this gives desire to travel, to see its prejudices again and even to fish. I recommend. 35. by Libby Fischer Hellmann. Series of news with taste detective novel. It is nice, but I cannot say that I am a fanatic of the policemen in news: suspense is too much bobtailed, the characters are not developed and the end is often sensational; the reader has no time to try to guess outcome. This news does not make exception. Nevertheless, this collection learnt to me to know lucky Fischer Hellmann and his two characters, Georgia and Ellie Formann. There is single news which did not register in the same motive - very good - besides, which moreover gave me an outline of tone and of style of the author, that I very much liked. 36. by Évelyne Rozenberg. Novel of one Belgian author who lives now in Montreal, this book is a moving love story. I who like in no way the sentimental novels, I could dive in this one who reminds more of the love of Hake and of Chloé in (without the imagination) or from Épiphane and of Ethel in (without violence). It is a small written book accurately in the voice of the narrator: on one hand under the influence of ambience in a coffee on the other hand on the sofa of his psychoanalyst, what breaks the monotony of a monologue. If there are some gaps in intrigue, they see that the characters developing and growing - till the sad end - a bit foreseeable - but who gives hope. 37. by Anthony Bourdain. In this trial series, Bourdain does not mince the words: he vituperates against the personalities of the culinary world which he does not like, but cover with flowers those that he likes. It is besides what makes its charm! Some of trials have me much more: notably his incursion in the world of the television, his discoveries around the world, the education of the kitchen to its daughter; others less interested me: his memories rehashed of, his alliances and enemies. Every reader should find something to his taste (without wanting to make pun!), but you should not be allowed to shock by the vocabulary. 38. by Terry Fallis. Very good book for the reader who wants to discover Canadian politics under the sign of humour! I found my city with pleasure: its monuments, streets and restaurants (this always pleases!). History is nice, a bit sometimes naive, but often odd itself. The characters do not evolve a lot, but the language is coloured and intrigue well sewed. One very right time to be lived in Ottawa which is discovered in all its seasons, but especially in the terrible Canadian winter. 39. by Lloyd Jones. A British expatriate makes discover Dickens, and more particularly Big Hopes, to schoolchildren of Papua New Guinea. It is the shock of cultures, but also an opening of mind and a shelter counters the war which wreaks havoc. The book, which begins in a light way, ends in a violent way, what returns the all the more unforgettable characters. A true homage to literature and to its power to transform a life (translation is at the beginning a bit clumsy, but is read in general very well). 40. by Yann Martel. This small book is dense of emotions. Mixture of play and of novel with, as base, news of Flaubert, this book is rich in ideas and at strong instants. Martel scoops out from the theatre of the absurd to show alienation which procreated Hypocauste and in taxidermy to show death and history; pictures is crude and cruel; subtle and perverse intrigue. It is not an easy reading and it will haunt me for a long time, but it is a feat which highlights a period of our incomprehensible history. 41. by Victoria Michaels. Received as part of previews, this book is a small romantic reading barely rather interesting to get the time. I confess that I am not very being very fond of of sentimental novels, and this one does not make exception; he has neither humour nor exoticism which other books of type can have and therefore did not hang me - why the heroines have to be very also nunuches and such macho heroes. 42. by Joyce marshal. I made the discovery of a classic of Canadian literature there: I did not know Marshal and I regret that his name is so not much known because she deserves that it is read! This collection of news covers about 50 years of writings, put in order of maturity: youth, war years, feminism and Norwegian inspirations (his grandmother was Norwegian). Subjects are varied, sketched with tenderness but precision; more news evolves more they are striking, their perfect structure, leaving the reader in breath. I teach in more than she is the translator of another leading expert of Canadian literature: Gabrielle Roy. A writer to read and to appreciate. 43. by Louis-Bernard Robitaille. Canadian of origin, Robitaille notices Frenchmen in the magnifier for more than twenty years. This collection records its observations with a lot of humour, verve and only just. It is not always loving, but they smell behind its astonishment of North American a lot of admiration for these Frenchmen - even if they are mad the Gauls! It is a very good book for Frenchmen who want an "objective" glance on their culture or for foreigners who want to know about it more. The marvellous feather of Robitaille makes sure that these trials are one delight to be read. 44. by Simon Mason. Small guide of literature - especially Western - divided by literary type. Mason makes a very complete turn of question with not conventional choices which lead to discovery, of recommendations of more pushed reading, recommendations of translation (in English) and even a comment on the film if history was adapted for the cinema. I would have liked to see a chronological order rather than alphabetic (there is an index at the end) to see the evolution of different types, but me in another way added a lot of titles to my list of reading. 45. by Michel Pastoureau. Thanks to folivier for the recommendation: I very much liked this small incursion in the world of colours. Easy and quick to read, he gives a very good outline of history of colours, of socioaffective value that they bring them and their evolution in the course of the centuries. He remains superficial, but gives taste to learn from it more. From now on, I open eyes bigger. 46. by Érik Orsenna. Small apologia of accents (sharp, serious and circumflexes), of their role in the language, their history and their variety in the languages of the world. Orsenna wrote a delightful story to make the history living - a bit weak at the level of intrigue, but very poetic by being instructive. The book is more nicely illustrated there, what makes a small tool of play and nice training which could be useful to children of school age. 47. by Winifred Watson. Written in 1938, this history had to make raise more than an eyebrow so much it is daring! For a modern public, it is pretty, odd and triumphant. A spinster finds herself taken in a mess of relations and of plots, bamboozled by a young woman full of spirit and mind. In spite of herself, the governess makes a place and wins so much in confidence which charms. The book illustrated in the fashion of epoch is refreshing with a small Romanticism top which allows to dream. 48. by Éliette Abécassis. A very intimate look on a complex and harrowing situation: the illegal immigration. A man and a woman meet opposite in face, the one migrating the other authority, and have to confront their fright, hopes, conviction. By redrawing their thoughts and their deep feelings, the author explores the ramifications of conventions, laws, politics, ambition and moral ideals of the society. The whole is made in half steps and unsaid. There are some weaknesses, the book, in my opinion, would have deserved a more pushed reflexion, but the end is superb and ficèle the whole in a very emotional way. 49. by PD James. James has an incontestable trump: she writes wonderfully well. It is besides what saves this novel, which is so far-fetched that it would leave its credibility there easily. Bearing a grudge create a confusion between invention and reality, James there makes too much, till the end which is bluntly ridiculous. On the contrary, the small English village and its stoical characters, Dalgliesh and its legendary cold blood as well as a panoply of characters well drawn are found. It is not the best of James there, but it is a nice reading nevertheless. 50. by F. Scott Fitzgerald. They find the generation lost in all its splendour there: a young couple gold, at a loose end who tries only to have a good time finds himself caught by reality. Taken the silver plating off and disinherited, they have only poverty, social banishment and especially alcohol. Fitzgerald is merciless in his description of pusillanimity of his heroes and the end, soft irony of fate, is only the nail which to close the coffin definitely. It is not certainly a joyful reading, but a lesson and especially an evidence of epoch. 51. by Howard Jacobson. Story of the passage of adolescence in the grown-up world, this book transports the reader from the first pages. This stylistic whirl unfortunately does not hide the weakness of intrigue: told openly, history is incoherent. Conclusion brings back the whole, what makes that everything is not lost, but this book especially for its mad energy is read. 52. by PD James. I preferred this one to precedent (see 49). The ambience of worship, of society cut out and of insulation is described well while remaining realistic. I liked mixture of generations, assemblages complicated and reversals, a detective novel worthy of James this time. 53. by Ellis Peters. It had been a long time since I had read a good novel spying and I was not disappointed. Action takes place in Slovakia behind the iron curtain: bright, high-tech brain, secret exchanged and, of course, murders in the support. The wild decor detonates with sophisticated intrigue, what gives a mystery element but also allows to contain action. I do not reveal more it is a book which certainly got old as actuality, but not as history. 54. by Linda Urbach. Urbach leaves a very good premise: what will become Berthe, the rejected girl, then orphan, of Emma? Having driven by the same passion of fashion as his mother, Berthe is in sewing and dress creation. Urbach blends with dexterity novel and history: the research of the plants of textile industry, of the evolution of techniques and the description of cloths and of modes is fabulous; intrigue curls the rose water, but without overturning too much into the melodrama; the historical meetings, on the contrary, are sometimes too far-fetched - Urbach would have been possible find means more subtle to show his historical facts. As a result a nice reading, which is a summer novel but not a big classic!55. by Frederick Beigbeder. Beigbeder makes fifty book state most quoted by the XXth century. I liked: have an inventory with the French accent (let us hear that international so-called inventories are always anchored in culture who raise them), the irreverence of Beigbeder which returns play reading, apologia of reading in general. I less liked: the constant reference of Beigbeder to its absence of classification, character sometimes a bit pithy of comments. An official report nevertheless interesting and quick to be read. 56. The baggar by. I think that we all pass by at least a crisis of existentialism: it is the topic of this novel there. A quadragenarian asks questions on his feeling of faintness; in the eyes of all he succeeded, but got lost to him. He launches therefore into a search of happiness, of truth and of its reason to be. It is the clarity of style and simplicity of history who characterise this book: these difficult subjects are approached in a crystalline way. I found it difficult to become identified with the principal character, nevertheless, because how many sacrifices he made in his circle to reach his aims a book which makes reflect, but also that generates strong emotions. 57. by Jean-Christophe Grangé. Curious murders take place in Paris imprinted by a psychosis with anthropological character. Some of explored theories are not interesting, but attention to coincidences: it is better to leave itself taken by action that to shell the intrigue which brushes the impossible (and registers definitely in the unlikely!) action also takes place in Nicaragua, in Guatemala and in Argentina where there is an interesting historical perspective on these countries which are badly known to me. 58. by Agnès Abécassis. Small humorous novel which unfortunately falls flat. There are some odd comments, but history is banal and tasteless reflexion. I learnt, however, some elements of the vocabulary SMS - it is already this of earning. 59. by Katherine Pancol. I hoped to find energy of the imagination and characters of which I had liked. Big disappointment: it is a love story brewed by wounds caused by the moms who spoil love - a basic psychoanalysis which often bores. Some more animated passages are written well, but there is too much introspection which returns slow and flavourless reading. 60. by Emma Donoghue. What a strange and spellbinding intrigue! The reader is cast to everything of go in an incomprehensible world, told by a five-year-old boy. It is in the course of his discoveries that the reader begins giving sense to this environment curious, but so familiar. The second part is very also interesting, and Donoghue devotes itself to a heap of speculations on the development of the child in abnormal conditions - I do not say about it more not to give it away. I very much liked, but you should not be afraid of strong emotions. 61. by Arto Passilinna. They had strongly recommended me this Finnish author who, in this book, tells what could take place if they gathered suicides whose objective is ultimate trip. There is comical reflexion on philosophy bottom. The characters march, but their personality takes shape in the course of pages. In the last analysis, it is the life which triumphs, but not without some reefs. A book which gives again faith in life. 62. by Johnathan Kellerman. Kellerman distances itself by the worry of the detail, but there, I confess that I found that there was too much! Intrigue becomes so much complicated, with such foison of characters, as they find it difficult to hang on to it. Fortunately the friendship between both principal characters gives a guiding thread and a nice relation that they maintain deal of the relief in this in another way too long book. 63. by David Nicholls. It is not often that I have one for a successful novel, but there I fell in love at the first sight! Is it because the characters are my age old and therefore exaggerated in my epoch? Is it because they share my ambition, my fears, my hopes? It is definitely the reflexion of a generation, and this made me a bit nostalgic. 64. by Thomas Carthcart and Daniel Klein. It is continuation of, but it is the death about which it is. Stuffed with jokes and with quotations of Woody Allen, this book redraws beliefs on death, of after life in the suicide, and of the feeling of faintness which it causes at every the place of human beings. I found the lack of seriousness (but it is wanted) dedicated to religions sometimes a bit provocative, and that's true which this becomes quickly morose (to read in small doses). There are nevertheless elements very odd, recalling and reflected. 65. by Jesse Kellerman. Threads of Jonathan in 62. the author has, in my opinion, more talented than the father! It is a very good detective novel for bottom with the world of art with psychogénéalogie in the support. A double history of murders and of bare artist holds the reader in breath, but in the last analysis, it is not the police intrigue which sticks, but the family matter - a very good mixture. 66. by Lisa Genova. My grandmother suffers from Alzheimer. This book was therefore a relief, an education and a pain: the narrator, teacher in Harvard, discovers in 50 years that she is attained by this illness which hides from it prestige, career, intelligence: all that was the most expensive to him. In the course of chapters, his personality be seen changing, his will to escape and his autonomy to disappear while it sinks into a more and more thick fog - his family is it of a very big help, but his instants of lucidity hurts. Recommended to all persons who had to compromise with this illness nearly or from a distance. 67. by Kathryn Stockett. I was a bit sceptical at the beginning - a White who writes on the black servants in full claim of civil rights of the Blacks in the United States - this made still a bit condescending. On the contrary, once the camped characters, their established role and tied relations, marvellous history of friendship and of courage takes shape. Indeed, Stockett does not content itself with describing a state of facts, but the ambiguity which existed between all its women: these Blackwomen who made the contempt and racism object were also moms, intimate friends and sometimes even friends. The token and the trouble, the twinge of the White and the bashfulness of the Blackwomen appears from it: Stockett does not annotate injustice and unacceptable treatments, but also throws some flowers. 68. by Judy Blume. Big American classic that I had read pre-teenager and that I read to my daughter. This book is 40 years old, but did not age a crumb: the today's teenagers always have the same questions about the puberty which changes their body, of boys who become curious beings and even existential subjects such religion. One ritual of passage for very young from 10 to 12 years which makes its first steps in the world of adolescence. I collected a little of delay. 69. by Denise Destrempes-Marquez and Louise Lafleur. This booklet describes the most frequent disturbances (dyslexia, auditory distortion and deficit of attention) and to them symptoms related to send the parents on the type of confusion which their child could demonstrate. It is at a very rudimentary level and they do not go into detail (for example, visual or auditory memory, kinetic training, etc. On the contrary, there is the whole section dedicated to the rights of the parents and of the pupils and in the obligations of schools. It is completely centered on the Quebec, but this can give tracks to the parents especially if they think they are divested facing a situation which they understand badly. It is also a good tool to demystify taboos. 70. by Georges Simenon. I will say that it is one of the least unforgettable that I read of Simenon. Intrigue is pithy, and Maigret catches the culprit with trial by tightening him a trap! They are far from police rigour and habitual analytical reasonings. It is sure that the small past side is nice: I did not know that in epoch it was possible to travel by air without reservations - this changes today's perpetual controls! but history is weak itself. 71. by François-Xavier Simard. Simard, I believe, wanted too much to make too few pages: linguistic duality, broken ambition, too heavy past, tense family relations, confrontation of cultures mingle and more still! Suddenly, every subject is approached in a superficial way and history bifurcates of a topic in other one, so much so that they do not remember any more what consults the book name. It is damage, because there are good elements which would have deserved a development. (I nevertheless really liked found my city, Ottawa!). 72. by Laurie Viera Rigler. Small cute and unpretentious novel in which a young woman of the XVIIIth century wakes up in the body of a young woman of the XXIth century. He is very clever from several points of view: to speak in ancient, bare of technologies and rapprochement with those bygone, question setting of morals and reaction to habits - in short, history is completely credible up to the phenomenon of this sudden appearance in a new body. There are some linguistic slips here and there, but as a result an amusing and original reading. 73. by Tonino Benacquista. I love Benacquista very much, therefore from the beginning, I am rather good public. For this one I had more trouble in submerges me in history. On the contrary, once made, I could not take out any more! The author redraws the course of three heartbroken men by disappointed love affairs, their choices, each to the antipodes, up to consequences. There is a completely authentic and nice speech on relations between men and women, hopes, despair, prevarication and hard blows. The end is simple but elegant - in short of intense, warm, curious and affecting instants. 74. by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling. I am not fanatical of science invention, but when I stick, I really like. There, I have to concentrate at all costs to be able to finish. What a disappointment! I had heard that Gibson was an inevitable, but I was very disappointed and what I got bored! The beginning came rather well, but very quickly an intrigue without tail nor head with the whole mixture of characters historical and invented marches - impossible to know what takes place or in what rhyme stages in short, I simply ended it to put it down with relief in my pile of the read books. 75. by Stephane Kelly. Kelly wants to take stock of the situation on the supporting Génération X that she, according to him, attains about fifty (although according to Statistics Canada she is at the beginning of quarantine - it is one of the weakness of the book!). He brushes a complete and interesting picture on inheritance of Boumers and shadow that they cast throughout growth of X and mechanisms that developed as a result X, notably in the domains of job, of family, of political life and of culture. Where I find that the book failed completely, it is at the level of contribution of X: Kelly speaks neither of the revolution of the information, nor the ethics of collaboration on the job, nor the economy of the free - all elements which are even at the root of identity of X. A job very well written which is worth reading, but that misses essential. 76. by Sempé and Goscinny. I found a new collection of unpublished stories of the baby Nicolas. A true culinary delight which reminded me of the stories of my childhood, but this time with the acuteness of the adult! That's true that stories are very cast into the same mould, but it is also what makes their charm: they feel finding old mates every time. 77. The Choir of the masters butchers by. This novel is a superb fresco in a decor of the most common: a small village in the North Dakota. It is the exploration of all human feelings, of love in hate by way of friendship, commiseration, contempt or else fright. redraw characters who will have lived the First one and World War II, Big Depression, immigration and many other vagaries still, but the novel never falls in the melodrama or the rose water. It is really the human condition about which it is with all its warts and its nobility. 78. by Sempé and Goscinny. I decided to make discover the collection to my daughter whoever well she is not a big reader had tears which ran so much she laughed. There are pictures, expressions and so odd situations as long they are real that it is not possible to help dying to laugh. A very good instant to pass in family. 79. by Carlos Salem. Divorced father, a hired killer is in leave in nudists' camp with his children, his former spouse and a working colleague: how to separate home life and job while keeping the head facing the bare nymphs who encircle him? From there a bloody intrigue on bottom of black humour follows which is not pricked of the cockchafers! On top of that, the novel makes homage in, itself author of black novels - nothing of such as a literary twinkle to wrap me in a history! It is a very nice instant to pass in a coloured middle where nothing is what he appears. 80. by Lisa Chamberlain. Reading which follows in on the contribution of the Génération X. This one is much more optimistic and shows the way this generation fitted in spite of reduced economic perspectives, the transformation of the family, the collapse of the polarity of the world and the omnipresence of technologies. On the contrary, its arguments are especially based on punctual examples, references to popular culture and generality that very convincing facts - it is therefore more an impressionniste account which makes mode more than a trial making authority. 81. by Åsa Schwarz. On the earth fallen angels, Nephilim, walk who want to prevent planetary warming to avoid a new Flood. I really liked the intrigue which is displayed little by little - I am not ordinarily carried very on the fantastic - and the characters are credible at the same time and draw well. On the contrary, I found boring constant morality, supported of a foison of statistics, on ecology and planetary destruction. The topics of vampires and of ecology make of this novel a fashion which will make its time. I realise that I forgot some reading:. 82. by Jodi Picoult. An autiste young person is in a nightmarish situation to have blended his passion of murders and reality. As in the habit, Picoult mentions from the point of view of all characters, including of young person autiste, to show that no situation is ever in black and white. This novel is achieved: he shows well prejudices, difficulties and obstacles that represent the autism. There is stylistic heaviness, on the contrary, especially at the level of the dialect of the autiste which is not always very consistent. 83. by Barbara Kingsolver. Kingsolver introduces here a historical fresco on Mexico at the time of big communist influence under Trotski, then of struggle against communism under MCCARTHY. History is seen by young American journalist who grew in Mexico and who strikes up a friendship for Kahlo and Riviera. He is witness of their political activities, of their tumultuous relation and of the waves which unsettle North America. It is an ambitious history which is told with a lot of poem: there are fabulous passages, but also irritating length. The poem and history mixture is sometimes too heavy and spoils this novel however with a lot of potential. 84. Atmospheric disturbances by. I confess that this novel did not leave me big impression I have especially the memory of a confused intrigue where the characters blend and split in two. In short, I do not recommend particularly. 85. by Lisa Johnson. Always in the search of the generation X, I had here a bit different perspective: that of marketing. As it is the first time that I read such work, I thought it rather was interesting: the author scoops out from many examples to bring to light some of characteristics of these rising generations, personalization, transparency, the value for money, but especially the accent on the product as experience and not as utility. Structure was sometimes confused (it passed from an example to the other one without making obvious transitions) and its last recommendations are pithy, but as a result, the book has just rung and made me discover the whole world which I did not know. 86. by Ian Rankin. Intrigue was led well, the characters manifold and well drawn, but history takes place so slowly that I put an eternity to read it: there was just enough suspense so that I do not leave it completely! The topic of art sometimes acted as pretext to hold forth, what would not have was uninteresting if this had not been to the detriment of the holding of the novel. You should not be in a hurry. 87. by Stephanie Janicot. It is a book which registers in a domain which begins standing out: the bibliothérapie. It is a question of finding books which allow to the reader to meet in characters who live the same disturbances or troubles to become identified with it and to reach its own conclusions. It can also be about loophole, about renouement with bygone passions or big discoveries which the reader saw again by means of novels. In this work, Janicot offers two-three titles by trouble which she has catégorisés according to nature: love, job, physical pain, died, etc. I have a lot that she scoops out from a large international corpus as well to the modern as to ancient - the intemporalité and the universality of topics are seen. On the contrary, she writes with many, sometimes even too much, of flippancy, what can shock (suicide and depression, notably). They also see that a big essential lack in its job (characters or badly named authors) what takes away credibility. He stays nevertheless, than I have still augmented my reading list, because it names heaps of books with air really interesting. 88. by Andrea Busfield. Occident and East mixture, this book tells the story of a young Afghan who is in the home with British journalists. They see that the shock of cultures, the vision of a young boy who tries to understand world, but especially love between a British woman and an Afghan and all pressures which encircle them. There are many interesting elements in this book, but they are dissonant: sometimes, it is the look of a very young boy, sometimes these are political explanation (the author is journalist), sometimes it is a love story curling the rose water - for these reasons, tone is not net and, if reading is nice, history just does not ring always. Reading is however worth there, if it is not to discover customs and Afghan landscapes. 89. by STUART MCLEAN. MCLEAN is especially known for its Dave's stories and Morley. It is here about something much more personal: it is reflexion, observations and comments that he divided by topics: seasons, trips, district life, etc. MCLEAN always stays over details: the small features which give in every thing, every person, every city its character - it succeeds wonderfully in clearing the petrol of these pictures which it describes. Every chapter has only some pages, but these pages take out again the world which softens up, who gladdens, who fills with wonder. Paradoxically, it is his notes to himself which least questioned me, but all the others are true pearls. 90. by Sempé and Goscinny. I had to make an overdose of baby Nicolas, because this one distinctly less pleased me: what was delightful really becomes too repetitive - the laugh be always based on the same gags: it seems to me that there was more originality in the first. I had an impression, besides, that the vocabulary was updated to adapt him to the today's children (costume and fancy dress for example instead of panoply), what I found damage. I think that I am going to station in classics. 91. by José Carlos Somoza. A superb psychological thriller which gives true nightmares - ambience is unhealthy, disturbing and disruptive: a culinary delight, what! Somoza recreates our society but by adding to it an interesting point: the human beings can be from now on works of art. Of this premise, he draws excesses to which can lead such idea, but it making, throws an interesting speech on art. How do they make to create? How expressions do be picked up some? Where stops the model to become work? and many other questions still. Intrigue it even is rather simple, but topics are intriguing. 92. by Eliette Abécassis. Abécassis is one of those who dare to break the taboo of motherhood and speak in the name of the women who so much want to become mother but who do not reach it, or, at which price! Idea is not new, but I very much liked the accent which it puts in the book: the couple and the effect which draws away a birth on its foundation. I found that history goes too quickly itself: they have an impression of a draught more than a novel, but reflexion is put down and I liked the questions which are there, notably on the role which they give to the child, to the mother and to the father and the myths which encircle them. The purpose left me perplexed, but notions gave me material to reflexion. 93. by SJ WATSON. Suspense in pure tradition: an amnésiaque wakes up every morning without remembering its life; every day, she must rediscover her knowing that something is faulty. She begins therefore, with the help of her doctor, a newspaper in which she records her some memories and the discoveries of day. Rather repetitive to be credible but not enough to be boring, this book draws the reader away in an odd adventure. Impossible to leave history a begun time: shadows are guessed without being certain there, dream and reality become complicated, characters dress everything in mysterious roles in short to stay in breath. 94. by Ian Rankin. In general, not being very carried on politics, I tune into historical revelations nor conspiracies of living room. Here, on the contrary, Rankin constructs a clever history based on a past which does not want to die - example that history moulds the gift. There are many characters always to Rankin (perhaps too much), but they find that Fox terrier taciturn, the young person Naysmith and sarcastic Kaye, what gives the impression of finding friends (it is no because the second of series therefore it is perhaps a bit early to speak about " old friends "!). History is not hectic, but takes place accurately, and I found that political character added in fact to intrigue a lot. Fox terrier showed far too many naivety at the end, in my opinion, and Rankin had to use ridiculous devices, but all in all, this history is worth being read. I record here what will be my two last reading of the year:. 95. by deWitt Patrick. This book concerns the adventures of an alcoholic misfit disabused in the tradition of O' Toole or of Bukowski. It is not either particularly redemptive or deep although there is a glimmer of hope at the end when after a flight, the principal character leaves his life unstitched for the fact that they hope to be a new departure. The book is written well, there are lively and even poetic pictures, they are interested in the characters and in their future, but I did not find very original topics and history. It is a first novel, therefore there is place undoubtedly in improvement. I know deWitt makes the object of a lot of attention. 96. by Greg MacArthur. Intriguing play which concerns a Canadian news item (terrorist act which would have taken place in Vancouver in 2004) but in that it was not possible to shell which was the part of the truth and which was the part of collective imagination. From there follows the whole debate on fright, terrorism, prejudices and xenophobia. In some pages and in half marked words, the author recreates a heavy atmosphere where reign doubt and confusion blended sometimes by despair sometimes of resignation sometimes of short hope a history which must be powerful on stage. Translation is very québécisée what can cast down the international reader, but I recommend reading. Paulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist, will publish a new novel based on the life of courtesan and accused spy Mata Hari…. Descargar WhatsApp Messenger Android Gratis. La mensajería instantánea tiene un nombre propio en Android: WhatsApp Messenger. Envía mensajes, comparte. Literature Study Guides for all your favorite books! Get chapter summaries, in-depth analysis, and visual learning guides for hundreds of English Literary Classics. 96 quotes from The Spy: вЂLove is an act of faith & its face should always be covered in mystery. Every moment should be lived with feeling & emotion beca. · A growing number of Americans -- young people especially -- are unaffiliated with any organized religion. But that doesn't mean they aren't spiritual. · One hundred years ago this October, the Dutch dancer, courtesan and German-paid secret agent known by her stage name, Mata Hari, was executed by a French. Outlook.com is a free, personal email service from Microsoft. Keep your inbox clutter-free with powerful organizational tools, and collaborate easily with OneDrive. In 1954 William Burroughs settled in Tangiers, finding a sanctuary of sorts in its shadowy streets, blind alleys, and lowlife decadence. It was this city. The Paperback of the Interzone by William S. Burroughs at Barnes & Noble. FREE Shipping on $25 or more! Read Interzone by William S Burroughs with Rakuten Kobo. Interzone portrays the development of Burroughs's mature writing style by presenting a selection of pieces. Burroughs seems to grow ever more trite with the passage of time, his rebellion against society a lame thing. Fans will probably enjoy this fragmentary collection of.Interzone portrays the development of Burroughs's mature writing style by presenting a selection of pieces from the mid-1950s. His outrageous tone of voice represents. ВЂ” William S. Burroughs. Welcome to Interzone: On William S. Burroughs' Centennial. you are granting: Los Angeles Review of Books, 6671 Sunset Blvd. CHF brings together a motley crew of poets, writers, and musicians, to celebrate the 100th birthday of audacious writer, William S. Burroughs. Interzone has 1,440 ratings and 51 reviews. MJ said: A clutch of credible transgressive stories in the Beat idiom and one slavering toxic outpouring of u. |
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