Histoire très courte et intéressante, mais avec un certain manque de finition et de "poli".
Reviews and Comments
Retired linguist/law/IT. Avid reader in all languages (see polyglot.city/@FrankauLux/ ), both paper and ebooks. Mostly fictions these days.
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François finished reading Silence by Edgar Allan Poe
François finished reading The Fall of the House of Usher by Edgar Allan Poe
François finished reading Quatre Bêtes en Une by Edgar Poe
Unde de ces petites histoires de Poe qui pour moi sont loin d'être les meilleures. A oublier vite fait (heureusement elle est courte)
François finished reading Mis Paginas Mejores. By Julio Camba. 1956 Edition by Camba, Julio
Yo creo que el titulo le dice todo :-) Siempre me ha gustado a Cambas, y este libro no es una excepcion, sino que confirme la excellente impresion que yo tenia. Es un poco viejo, claro, hay cosas que cambiaron, pero otras no, y la sicologia de las distintas naciones que estudie 5alemana, USA, Inglaterra, Francia) sigue siende ejemplar y muy divertido. Muy aconsejado
François finished reading La Disparition de Stephanie Mailer by Joël Dicker
François finished reading Bullshit Jobs by David Graeber
Excellent book and quite well researched. It started a bit slow - very verbose and going around in circle (to me anyway), and then it took off. Despite the title, this is not light reading. There are some real questions about our society (or rather the anglo-saxon one as many things apply mostly to US/UK, but the rest of the world is concerned by several aspects as well). Definitely recommended
François finished reading L'Anomalie by Hervé Le Tellier
François finished reading Heaven's reach (The Uplift Saga, book 6) by David Brin
François finished reading Sale Gosse by Stephen King
François finished reading Infinity's Shore (The Uplift Saga, Book 5) by David Brin
Disappointing. The story is still quite inventive, but for some reasons, there are dozen of repetitions, as if the author was paid by the line. I have seen this before, but that was i 19th centuries stories where the book started its life as a series in a newspaper or a magazine, hence the need to remind the reader of what had happened. Here is seems the author is paid by the line, because there is no reason to remind me what happened 5 pages ago by inserting a reminder/repetition that doesn't add anything to the story. The constant reminders are useless. They use loads of pages for nothing, as if I needed to be reminded of what happened in the previous chapter, or if the author was paid by the line. Or maybe the word ? By there are loads of repetitions. And they are boring, because they add …
Disappointing. The story is still quite inventive, but for some reasons, there are dozen of repetitions, as if the author was paid by the line. I have seen this before, but that was i 19th centuries stories where the book started its life as a series in a newspaper or a magazine, hence the need to remind the reader of what had happened. Here is seems the author is paid by the line, because there is no reason to remind me what happened 5 pages ago by inserting a reminder/repetition that doesn't add anything to the story. The constant reminders are useless. They use loads of pages for nothing, as if I needed to be reminded of what happened in the previous chapter, or if the author was paid by the line. Or maybe the word ? By there are loads of repetitions. And they are boring, because they add nothing to the plot. They just waste place. and paper, and space, and my patience. Almost as if the author got paid more for repeating what he already said. Otherwise not a bad book. Did I mention the repetitions ? Tiring.
François finished reading Brightness Reef (The Uplift Saga, Book 4) by David Brin
Totally different from the previous ones, even if there are recurring themes. It is only at the end that the link is made with vol2/3 of the original uplift. Conceived from the start as a saga spanning on several books, don't read this if you don't have the following volume handy :-)