13cjungle

Jungle 13C 13C itibaren Brakpan, Güney Afrika itibaren Brakpan, Güney Afrika

Okuyucu Jungle 13C 13C itibaren Brakpan, Güney Afrika

Jungle 13C 13C itibaren Brakpan, Güney Afrika

13cjungle

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13cjungle

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13cjungle

Sonunda bitti. Keşke 3 buçuk yıldız verebilseydim. Sadece Blink kadar ilgi çekici değildi.

13cjungle

İlk Okçum. ve bu beni hiç hayal kırıklığına uğratmadı. İyi hikaye arsa, birikimi harikaydı. Okumayı gerçekten çok seviyorum.

13cjungle

Bu diziyi gerçekten seviyorum ve üçüncü kitabı bekleyemiyorum! Dorina'yı seviyorum. O sert, popo tekme, akıllı ve zaman zaman biraz sinsi olan harika! Ayrıca Louis-Cesar ve Mircea'yı bu kitaplarda görmeyi çok seviyorum. Radu'nun daha fazlasını da gördüğüme sevindim. Radu, eksantrik amca olmasa bile eğlenceli! Babasıyla ilişkisinin gelişmesini umuyorum. Gerçekten serinin sonraki kitabını dört gözle bekliyorum.

13cjungle

I took this book, recommended by my daughter, with me as I waited to have a water pump replaced in my Echo. The wait was a long one, but enjoyable. As I sat reading,surrounded by others, I found myself often laughing out loud because of the antics of this pet animal. Christopher Hogwood, the main character of this memoir, lives with a loving couple, both writers, one who travels extensivley and is most knowledgeable about animals all over the world. Sy Montgomery and her husband love the pig they raise from a tiny runt to a 750 pound charmer. The community in which they live happily supplies "slops" for the feeding of Christopher, join in capturing him after his many excapes and simply visiting in order to watch him eat. I cannot say that I ever fancied myself as a pig lover, BUT this portrayal indicates that all living creatures are worth our love, devotion and care. For me this book was a great change of pace and an extrordinary glimpse into the life of two giving people and their pet. If you enjoy a good laugh and an expanding of your horizon, read this one.

13cjungle

this book introduced a new character to the Discworld canon, Moist Von Lipwick, and follows him as he attempts to get the postal service up and running again. Like all Discworld books, it's really about something else entirely, and is a good time all the way through. Not a book I would read to dive into the series, but a good one nonetheless.

13cjungle

The book starts off interestingly with a discussion of how the universe appears to be "fine-tuned" for the development and existence of life as we on Earth know it. This concept is often labelled the Anthropic Principle, and the fine-tuning actually does exist. Ross uses this fine-tuning to make a case for a creator God, and that is certainly a possibility. However, Ross far overstates the case for fine tuning and then begins to insist that all of modern physics is represented specificaly in passages in the Bible. In some cases, his attempts to shoehorn the laws of physics into biblical passages are just simply ludicrous when you read the actual passages. Ross then goes on to throw out the standard lie about evolution being "undirected," although he at least has the sense to avoid calling it random as so many creationists do. He also engages in the usual misleading langauge, as when he suggests that the Cambrian explosion of lifeforms occurred in a "geological instant," when that "instant" is known to be millions of years. Up until that point I was giving him credit for being relatively balanced in his presentation. After that the balance was gone, and he ends the book in full evangelical mode.