“Why are you here?” I asked, draping his jacket over an island chair. He looked around the place, his shoulders tense. I knew the code to Ace’s alarm system-not because he trusted me with it, but because I’d secretly watched him type it in once.Īllister stepped inside behind me and shut the door. He drove me to Nico’s home in the Bronx in silence and then followed me to the back door. Maybe I was losing my mind, but I studied his form the entire walk to the car as I trailed behind him, barefoot. I’d never noticed just how built the man was until now. His white long-sleeve shirt molded his broad shoulders and arms. I realized it was the first time I’d ever seen him without a suit jacket. He’d taken those bullets for me, and I was going to nurse him back to health, whether he liked it or not.Īllister ran his tongue across his teeth as though agitated, but he moved to speak with one of the dozens of agents nearby. He’d been losing a lot of blood from the two bullet wounds he’d received, one in the side and one in the arm. “Ace won’t be there for a while.”Īn ambulance had taken him to the hospital despite his protests. Health Insurance for Students in Australia: Detailed DiscussionĪ muscle in his jaw tightened, and something bitter passed through his eyes.
0 Comments
Asking is scary though, so if you need a script, here’s what I usually say: ‘Are there any trigger warnings that I should be aware of?’ Boom. If you’re not comfortable with asking for warnings about a specific content (and thus disclosing your triggers), you can opt to ask in a more general manner. Sometimes you just can’t find info about a book you want to read, whether because it’s new or because it’s obscure. They also have a blog with thoughtful analyses of depictions of sexual violence. Hovering on the red or yellow dots will give you a brief run-down of specific triggers, while comments provide further details should you need them. This resource focuses on sexual violence, and utilises a green-light system, making it easy for you to make quick decisions if you need to. Unconsenting Media only compiles triggers for TV and film, but it’s still a nice tool to have on hand for book-to-screen adaptations. However, I’ve found Goodreads reviewers to pretty consistently offer warnings for triggers and spoilers, making it easier for readers to keep themselves safe while dodging spoilers. You probably already read reviews to help decide what books to read, but not every reviewer lists trigger warnings. Goodreads is great for keeping track of all your bookish endeavours, like reviews, book club discussions and reading challenges. He is also defending suburban living and its architecture against the familiar charge that it is fundamentally about escapism and materialism. In tracing the history of the suburb, built by the real-estate developers Louis Bayer, Mark Taper and Ben Weingart in part to house returning GIs, many of them employees of the nearby Douglas Aircraft plant in Long Beach, Waldie aims to explore the appeal of a way of life that became increasingly commonplace by the 1950s and 1960s across the American landscape. ‘I live where a majority of Americans live: a tract house on a block of other tract houses in a neighborhood of even more,’ he writes. In 316 brief, numbered entries, some just a sentence or two long, some written in the first person and others in third, Waldie relates the history of Lakewood’s first major post-war suburban housing development, and of his own family’s history there, in the modest house where his father died and where Waldie still lives.įrom the beginning, Waldie makes an evident effort to give his story an element of the generic, even the universal. Waldie’s book, published in 1996, is unlike any other book in our series - and, for that matter, unlike any ever written on the architectural and civic makeup of Southern California. Written and edited by recognized international specialists in the field, this book brings Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching together to present current scholarship on their history and interpretation. Lao-tzu and the Tao-te-ching presents a coherent collection of materials on the ancient Chinese classic and its author, describing traditional and modern Western interpretations. Recovering the Tao-te-ching's Original Meaning: Some Remarks on Historical HermeneuticsĪppendix: Index to Citations from Tao-te-ching Chapters Situating the Language of the Lao-tzu: The Probable Date of the Tao-te-chingġ1. Naturalness (Tzu-jan), the Core Value in Taoism: Its Ancient Meaning and Its Significance Todayġ0. Influential Western Interpretations of the Tao-te-chingĩ. Later Commentaries: Textual Polysemy and Syncretistic Interpretationsħ. A Tale of Two Commentaries: Ho-shang-kung and Wang Pi on the Lao-tzuĥ. Lao-tzu in Six Dynasties Taoist SculptureĤ. The final solution while very long was interesting. The other supporting performances ranged from acceptable to very good, Christopher Ecceleston giving the most impressive supporting contribution, but they weren't as good as Suchet, who was by far the best thing of the adaptation. David Suchet gives yet another impeccable performance as Poirot, and he is perfectly matched by Hugh Fraser, Phillip Jackson and Pauline Moran. The music was so haunting, and scenes like the beginning and when Sainsbury Seale's foot is seen poking out from the hamper gave me nightmares when I first saw it, and still does. As usual, the look of the adaptation is superb, beautifully shot with splendid period detail. And I wasn't sure what the scenes in India had to do with the original story then again it has been a year and a half ago since I read the book. After Poirot pays a routine visit to his dentist, the doctor apparently shoots himself to death a short time later. It is absolutely true, the plot is very convoluted and the character of Jane Olivera was underused. One, Two Buckle My Shoe was a solid adaptation of a very complicated book. One, Two, Buckle my Shoe: A Hercule Poirot Mystery (Hercule Poirot series Book 22) Kindle Edition.
Alison then reveals that Bruce killed himself while she was in college, and though he lived through most of her childhood, she and the rest of the family felt his absence long before he was physically gone.Īlison then delves into the details surrounding Bruce’s death-though there’s no concrete proof that he killed himself, the circumstances preceding the incident (like Alison coming out as a lesbian a few months earlier as well as Helen, Alison’s mother, filing for a divorce just two weeks before his death) make Alison relatively certain his death was a suicide. Alison details Bruce’s obsession with restoring the family’s old Gothic Revival house, which Alison believes was largely motivated by his desire to keep up the appearance of being a good Christian family man even as he was also secretly sleeping with some of his male teenage students. The memoir starts with Alison as a young girl, playing with her father, who she compares to both Daedalus, the genius inventor of Greek myth, and Icarus, Daedulus’s son who flew too close to the sun on wings designed by his father and plummeted to his death. Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic is a graphic memoir by Alison Bechdel tracing her journey from young girl to young adult as she comes to grips with her own lesbian sexuality, her father Bruce’s (most likely) suicide, and his secret homosexuality or bisexuality that he kept hidden throughout his life while having affairs with underage boys. If I let them, they'll shut down my impulses ('No, you can't do that') and perhaps turn off the spigots of creativity altogether. "There are mighty demons, but they're hardly unique to me. Once executed, the idea will never be as good as it is in my mind. When I feel that sense of dread, I try to make it as specific as possible. No one starts a creative endeavor without a certain amount of fear the key is to learn how to keep free-floating fears from paralyzing you before you've begun. They're the habitual demons that invade the launch of any project. The last two - distractions and fears - are the dangerous ones. Whatever I am going to create will be a reflection of how these have shaped my life, and how I've learned to channel my experiences into them. These ten items are at the heart of who I am. “When I walk into I am alone, but I am alone with my body, ambition, ideas, passions, needs, memories, goals, prejudices, distractions, fears. Though in The Lingering we probably get more evidence of it than we did back then! It does feel isolated though, almost other-worldly, from the start as Jack and Ali pass through “the bleak but beautiful landscape” to find the house and are met by the sound of choral singing from the other residents. The setting of Rosalind House, a former asylum, is sufficiently isolated that it becomes the stuff of gossip and legend in the nearby village, and thus transforms itself into that “scary house” from my childhood the place that I’m sure lots of us know of, that either caused us to cross over the road when passing it, or heard stories about it being haunted. I knew it was going to be good not only because I’d heard so much about it on Twitter, but also because it’s published by Orenda - a sure sign of a terrific read if ever there was one. The problem with reviewing books is twofold: firstly it makes me spend too much money, but, more importantly, it means that some of the books that I really want to read get pushed out of the way by others The Lingering is such a book. Louis Post-Dispatch), and “an extraordinary collection, thrillingly merciless, and a career high point” ( The “page-turner” ( The New York Times) “as gripping as his epic novels” ( St. Like Different Seasons and Four Past Midnight, which generated such enduring hit films as The Shawshank Redemption and Stand by Me, King’s Full Dark, No Stars is a In “A Good Marriage,” the trust forged by more than twenty years of matrimony is irrevocably shattered when a woman makes a chance discovery leading to the horrifying implications of just who her In “Fair Extension,” making a deal with the devil not only saves a man from terminal illness but also provides rich recompense for a lifetime of resentment. In “Big Driver”, a mystery writer is brutally assaulted by a stranger along a Massachusetts back road and plots a revenge that will bring her face-to-face with another stranger: the one inside In “1922,” a violence awakens inside a man when his wife proposes selling off the family homestead, setting in motion a grisly train of murder and madness. “The pages practically turn themselves” ( USA TODAY) in Full Dark, No Stars, an unforgettable collection centered around the theme of retribution. From the #1 New York Times bestselling author Stephen King, four “disturbing, fascinating” ( The Washington Post) novellas-including the story “1922,” a Netflix original film-that |