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Showing posts from April, 2011

Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen

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In a nutshell It may seem like a love story, but it’s actually not (covers can be deceiving!), which is why I decided to read it. This story, set around the depression era, is about Jacob who almost graduates from an Ivy League school with a degree in veterinary sciences. Upon finding out his parents’ death and his dad’s debts, he wandered off from home and jumped onto a train, only to find out later that it was a circus train. When the owner of circus, Uncle Al, found out he has a degree in veterinary science, he was hired to be the animal doctor and was put in charge of caring for the circus menagerie. He ended up spending most of his life there until he had his own family. What I liked The story flowed very well, moving from one scene to another very beautifully. What added to its quality for me also is the author’s ability to give the story a very strong sense of place. I could feel like I was in every part of the story – from moving in the train car with Jacob to looking desperate

Uncensored version of 'The Picture of Dorian Gray' published!!

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Over 120 years after it was condemned as 'vulgar' and 'unclean', an uncensored version of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray is published by Harvard University Press. Revised after it was condemned in the British press over 130 years ago as "vulgar", "unclean", "poisonous" and "discreditable", an uncensored version of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray has finally been published. Seems that Frankel, associate professor of English at Virginia Commonwealth University said "the time is ripe for the publication of Wilde's novel in its uncensored form … It is the version of the novel that Wilde, I believe, would want us to be reading in the 21st century … I'm bringing it out of the closet a little more." To read the whole article, click here . If not, you can read some of the interesting parts here ;) These were some of the editing done to make the book "acceptable to the most fastidious taste

Meet & Greet Shamini, Author of Inspector Singh Investigates Series!

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Why, oh why on a weekday...? *sob* Anyway,...if you're nearby, remember to meet up with Shamini Flint! Shamini writes children’s books with cultural and environmental themes including Jungle Blues and Turtle takes a Trip as well as the ‘Sasha’ series of children’s books. She also writes crime fiction, the first two books are Inspector Singh Investigates - A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder and Inspector Singh Investigates: A Bali Conspiracy Most Foul published by Little, Brown, UK in 2009. The third title in the series published in 2010 is Inspector Singh Investigates: The Singapore School of Villainy to be followed by Singh's adventures in Cambodia and India. Check out her website here .

Author of Three Cups of Tea, fabricated his memoir?

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Read this on themalaysianinsider.com, and started googling. These are what I found: 1) The author's charity organization has taken credit for schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan that don't exist . 2) The porters who accompanied him say he was never lost , and went back to the village a year after his first trip. 3) Mortenson also claims to have been kidnapped by the Taliban, but all the men in a photo from the supposed kidnapping are not actually Taliban, and say they never harmed Mortenson . 4) One of the men, according to CBS, is the director of an influential think tank whose scholarly essays have been published in the U.S. Mortenson's side of the story: 'I stand by the information conveyed in my book, and by the value of CAI's work in empowering local communities to build and operate schools that have educated more than 60,000 students.' Mortenson said the account of his experiences in Korphe 'was a compressed version of events' that took place in

Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami

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Title/Author: Norwegian Wood/Haruki Murakami (Translated by Jay Rubin) Publisher: Vintage Books USA Pages: 400 ISBN 13: 9780099554561 Expect no flying elephants, man-eating cats, or any of those surrealist eccentricities that you’d normally find in a Murakami novel. Norwegian Wood is a rather straight forward, coming of age novel of nostalgia. What stayed though is its quiet, still and melancholy tone (which I love). I don’t know why but I always find it hard to summarise and/or review Murakami’s novels. This would be my very first attempt. So here goes. In a nutshell Norwegian Wood is about Toru Watanabe and his love affair with beautiful, damsel-in-distress Naoko, whom he’s known since school, and who used to go out with his best friend Kizuki, until he committed suicide. Their relationship deepens when they spent more time with each other after Kizuki’s death, and it somehow affected Naoko who realises she has psychological problems that need to be addressed. So she left for

Blogspot Error?

Hmmmm not sure what's wrong with blogspot, cuz I can't seem to make my content break into proper paragraphs even after setting it in 'edit html'. DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT BLOGGER.COM!