Ella Lyytik Lyytik itibaren Łoje, Polonya
Kore’nin kurucusu ve ünlü okçusu Koh Chu-Mong, kaplanından ve modern Amerika’da Kevin’ın yatak odasına düştüğü zaman, matematik, mantık ve tarih test edildi Bu sürükleyici zaman içinde, eğlenceli bir hikaye. • Potansiyel Kullanım: Saf eğlence; Tarih ve matematik ile iyi bir müfredat. • Çocuk Temyiz: Tarihsel figür canlanır; yarı fantastik, heyecan verici; matematik ve mantık bulmacaları; ve tabii ki okçuluk!
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The first review I wrote consisted almost entirely of incoherent gushing. This one is pretty much like that, but I did manage to include some useful info. Don’t expect much, though. I can’t remember the last time I felt this way about a book. As a dedicated reader, I don't think I've ever connected to a story quite this much. There are so many books that are close to my heart for some reason or other, but there was never one so achingly familiar and mine. And it wasn’t just one character that I felt close to, but parts of every character and every situation. I recognized some of myself in Julie’s dedication to her studies, in Celeste’s quirks, in Matt’s courage and hidden vulnerability, in Erin’s absentness and denial. It was nice to be able to read a story and really understand. I’m making it sound like a sad book, aren’t I? Well, it’s not. This is a book you want to read when you're feeling a little nostalgic and disconnected from the world. It will pull you right out. Flat-Out Love is surprisingly witty. During the first 80%, I thought I could describe it as my favorite summer read. However, the last 20% showed me that it’s so much more than that. Every emotional reaction the story evoked was very strong: when I laughed, I laughed so loudly that I woke the neighbors; when I cried, I sobbed like I was facing the end of the world, and in the end, I melted into a huge puddle of goo. After moving to Boston to start attending college, Julie found herself living with her mother’s former best friend Erin and her seemingly perfect family of intellectuals. She soon became emotionally attached to every member of the Watkins family, especially the oldest brother Finn, whom she never met in person, but communicated with regularly via email. ”Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way.” (Leo Tolstoy) I think there are two types of dysfunctional families: the ones that yell and the ones that are quiet – the latter being so much harder to portray. Character development is what Jessica Park should really be proud of. Her characters came alive for me, they became living, breathing people with problems, quirks and a sense of humor. Who could resist Celeste, a scarily intelligent 13-year-old who won’t leave the house without Flat Finn, a cardboard cutout of her oldest brother? Or Matt, a math geek with horrible T-shirts and a sense of humor that’s right up my alley? Flat-Out Love completely changed my mind about self published books.I hope all of you will read it soon so we can gush about it together.