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Hagar Ovadia Ovadia itibaren Texas itibaren Texas

Okuyucu Hagar Ovadia Ovadia itibaren Texas

Hagar Ovadia Ovadia itibaren Texas

hagar_o

hiç kimse bunu okudu mu? her zaman başlarım ama asla ilgimi çekmiyor. Bu, konuştuğum herkes için geçerli gibi görünüyor. Ben her şeyi okudum kanıtlayabilir herkes için 5 $ ödeyecek.

hagar_o

Sanırım bu, okuduğum ilk kitaptı sanki mideme yumruklanmış gibi hissettirdi. Onun güzelliği ve en çok hatırladığım karakterlerdi. Kitabın ilk yarısı uçuyor ve ikincisi biraz daha uzun sürüyor, ama ivme kaybediyormuş gibi hissetseniz bile yarıdan vazgeçmeyin. İnsanlara, sömürgeciliğe, dine dair gözlemleri sert ve şefkatlidir, karakterlerinin güçlü sesleri ve yoğun etkileşimleri vardır.

hagar_o

Faulkner!

hagar_o

Night is Nobel Prize winner Elie Wiesel’s memoir of his experiences in Auschwitz and in Buchenwald. In it, he describes how, as a teen, he was separated from his mother and siblings and how he and his father were taken in an overcrowded cattle car to Auschwitz. And while there is much in the book on the physical sufferings he experienced during this time—the extreme thirst, hunger, cold, lack of sleep, along with the brutalities of his Nazi keepers—Wiesel’s focus is on his spiritual sufferings, and in particular on how life in the concentration camp, in the presence of evil and death, challenged his faith in God. It is bad enough that books such as this had to have been written; worse, though, that it appears that the message of books such as Wiesel’s have yet to penetrate some regions of the world, such that now we should not be surprised if we see similar survivor memoirs emerging from areas such as East Timor, Bosnia, Rwanda, Sudan...