Apparently:
""The Murder on the Links," the abbreviation "M." is used as an honorific for Monsieur, a French title of respect for men, similar to Mr. in English. It is a common practice in French-speaking regions to use "M." before a man's name as a sign of respect.
More info in the Literary significance and reception section of the The Murder on the Links Wikipedia article.
In "The Murder on the Links," the abbreviation "M." is used as an honorific for Monsieur, a French title of respect for men, similar to Mr. in English. It is a common practice in French-speaking regions to use "M." before a man's name as a sign of respect."
But "Monsieur" is still used in other parts...
Oh well.
The Mysterious Affair at Styles is a detective novel by British writer Agatha Christie. It …
Nice to meet you, Mr Poirot.
3 stars
This was my first Agatha Christie ever, and the only comparison I have to make is to the Sherlock Holmes stories.
I enjoyed it. I think I was getting used to Doyle's writing by the end of the Holmes stories, because I could pick up on a lot of the clues by then, but with this I didn't clue on to much at all. I wonder if that will change as I read more of Christie's work?
What I will say, though, is that Hastings is a bit whiny and petulant compared to Watson...
One Hundred Years of Solitude (Spanish: Cien años de soledad, American Spanish: [sjen ˈaɲos ðe …
The worst book I've ever read.
1 star
This is, without exception, the single worst book I've ever read in my entire life. And now that I've seen there's a movie adaptation coming I feel like I need to scream my thoughts into the digital void.
This book gets hailed as one of the masterpieces; one of the greatest novels ever, but in actuality it's terrible, and it's terrible from the start.
I stuck with this awful story right through to the end, because I thought, "If SO MANY people rave about this book, there must be a reason, right?" Wrong. And I felt ripped off that I DID commit to its ending, when the ending is really only the ultimate climax of its awfulness and depravity. The best I can imagine as to why people like it is that perhaps this might be a lot of people's first experience at magic realism, and maybe THAT'S why they …
This is, without exception, the single worst book I've ever read in my entire life. And now that I've seen there's a movie adaptation coming I feel like I need to scream my thoughts into the digital void.
This book gets hailed as one of the masterpieces; one of the greatest novels ever, but in actuality it's terrible, and it's terrible from the start.
I stuck with this awful story right through to the end, because I thought, "If SO MANY people rave about this book, there must be a reason, right?" Wrong. And I felt ripped off that I DID commit to its ending, when the ending is really only the ultimate climax of its awfulness and depravity. The best I can imagine as to why people like it is that perhaps this might be a lot of people's first experience at magic realism, and maybe THAT'S why they like it? But it's not even good magic realism.
The entire story is depressing with zero redemption; it's full of death, rape, incest, suicide, and infanticide (which is particularly awful). It is also bleedingly obvious that it was written by a man, as evidenced by all these macho men borderline ****ing their way through the story (and not always consensually) and all the women fawning over any of the aforementioned men whenever they're near them.
This book, as I've said, has zero redemptive features. At all. Let me be clear, it's not that this book didn't live up to the hype I had built up for it; it didn't live up to any measure of "good". It smashed through the floor of my lowest respect, and then kept plummeting right up until the last page. I hated this book so much and thought that it was so bad that once I finished it I didn't donate it or pass it on; I actually threw it in the bin.
This book is truly awful, and I fail to see how anyone can LIKE it, let alone love it enough to recommend.
This special and important photography book presents, for the first time, the very best contact …
I've wanted this book for so long.
It's utterly fascinating to see what other shots came before and after some of the most iconic and famous photographs of the last eighty years, and to hear some of the backstories that go along with them.