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Afef Ansi Ansi itibaren Emu-Uno, Nijerya itibaren Emu-Uno, Nijerya

Okuyucu Afef Ansi Ansi itibaren Emu-Uno, Nijerya

Afef Ansi Ansi itibaren Emu-Uno, Nijerya

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IMHO, you will be wasting your time readint his book.

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Having grown up in Tulsa, I enjoyed reading about familiar places. I also like how Cherokee legends were woven into this "vampyre" story. This is a fun, but light and fluffy, teen book series.

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** spoiler alert ** This book is not for the faint of heart, or the easily upset. Because it is the true story told by Elie Wiesel, there is not much left out. He tells all that happened to him, and most of the time he does not do things by half. He does not make things lighter and happier; he tells you how it is.

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Amazing book. An unusual style and way of phrasing things, but the starkness of the writing and the severity of the story/time period fit each other so perfectly that I had to keep reading.

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A classic sci-fi book that was very interesting. Recently read so I can say that I enjoyed it a lot. I'm a fan of science-fiction anything so this was my first enjoyable distopian-future book I've read. The characters were broad and eccentric and really were brought to life by their faults, which is the best way to relate and bring anyone down to earth (in books or real life). The ending was abrupt but I enjoyed it despite. The future is completely oblivious to feeling, empathy or love in any shape or form and is obvious by the lack of marriage. People have sex with anyone they please and any type of self-discipline really isn't present. Giant corporations control people and clone and create them as well. Birth is no longer necessary and any relation to anything paternal or maternal is extremely frowned upon, and often includes punishment. A lone man breaks free from the confines and begins to think for himself and eventually gets involved with humans who've decided to stay on Earth as it was, living in futuristic-squalor (in other words, modern day humanity). Huts and primal rituals surround the rebels who live wild and free. Visitors look at it much like a museum. I like the fact that useless rituals and being able to decide if you want to hunt food or die trying makes us human. There are obvious evils in this book that don't need explaining (corporations over self-governing) and it's a great book to either enjoy plain or open you up to deeper ideas on conventions and the route of the future. It's very consistent in how modern life is today and may be headed towards. Heed the warnings man of all time periods gives!