ivanhoeark

Ivan Milojevic Milojevic من عند نيويورك من عند نيويورك

قارئ Ivan Milojevic Milojevic من عند نيويورك

Ivan Milojevic Milojevic من عند نيويورك

ivanhoeark

the book starts slowly, and at first I thought it was going to be merely a thick description of life in the Dutch trading port of Nagasaki circa 1800. Although I can't decide if this is praise or mild criticism, I will admit that Mitchell has a penchant for writing 'beautiful', even quasi-poetic prose. In this he is attempting to evoke the otherness of the Closed Empire and the feelings of his characters through poetic phrasing. Some of this was effective, but I found it wore a bit as the book progressed. But aside from this cavil, I highly recommend the book. Indeed, after a somewhat slow start, things started happening about 150 pages into it and what had seemed to be a placid 'descriptive' novel grew into a complex story about relationships, desire, loss, and contemplations about duty. A love story emerges, juxtaposed with plot elements involving intrigue, cultural difference, and even a little action. I'm very glad I kept at this book, for it turned into one of the best I've read in a while. If I could give 4.5 stars, I would.

ivanhoeark

Hanan is a famous Christian Palestinian who presents her side of the conflict with Israel. What an eye-opener! The info presented to Americans (and maybe even Canadians) is completely skewed and biased. Check out ifamericansknew.org to see the distortions.

ivanhoeark

This book deals with a mother's relationship with her son, as well as her ex-husband. Very interesting to see the same events discussed from different points of view.