book review
Books reviews on workplace, corporate, and business driven books.
The Awakening The Waves Virginia Woolf and Uncle Tom's Cabin Book Review
Book reviews "The Awakening" is a novel written by Kate Chopin. It was first published in 1899. Set on the Gulf of Louisiana in New Orleans in the late 19th century, the novel deals with a struggle.
By Mehedi Hasan Shawon4 years ago in Journal
Madame Bovary Mrs. Dalloway Ulysses and The Road To Wigan Pier Book Reviews
Book review Madame Bovary is a world-famous novel written by the world-renowned French writer Gustave Flaubert. This novel occupies a particularly important place not only in French literature but also in Western literature as a whole.
By Mehedi Hasan Shawon4 years ago in Journal
The Portrait Of A Lady and History of Tom Jones Book Reviews
The novel "The Portrait of a Lady" was written by the famous author Henry James. The novel was published as a series in The Atlantic Monthly Magazine and Macmillan Magazine from 1880 to 1881. It is one of the most popular novels by James. Literary critics regarded it as one of James's best novels.
By Mehedi Hasan Shawon4 years ago in Journal
3 Great Books To Read About Healthcare Policy In 2022
A health policy is a set of actions and decisions that are undertaken to achieve a specific healthcare goal within a society. According to the WHO, an explicit health policy can help people make informed decisions and develop a vision for the future. It can also build consensus and inform people. If you want to know more about healthcare policy, especially in the United States, you’re best starting off with a good book. Here are a few great books to check out on healthcare policy.
By Reynaldo Perez D.C.4 years ago in Journal
11 Books Every Data Scientist Must Read In 2022
One particularly useful attribute is being business-minded, as proven in our article “5 Most In-Demand Skills for Data Scientists .” Now, you may be asking how you can acquire such a broad skill set? And that’s why we’ve prepared a list of resources to help you on your way.
By lupu alexandra4 years ago in Journal
The Remains of The Day The Ivanhoe and The Art Of War Book Reviews
Book Review The Remains of the Day is a novel by British author Kazuo Ishiguro. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1989. The main protagonist of the book is Stevens. He has a house near Oxford, England. In 1956, he traveled the streets to meet a former colleague.
By Mehedi Hasan Shawon4 years ago in Journal
The Big Sleep Standfast The Far Pavilions How To Win Friends And Influence People Book Reviews
Book reviews "The Big Sleep" is a hardboiled crime novel by the famous American-British author Raymond Chandler. Philip Marlowe, among whom the detective traits have been revealed Twice in 1946 and 1978 a total of movies have been made about it. The story revolves around Los Angeles. The story unfolds with complexity throughout the novel.
By Mehedi Hasan Shawon4 years ago in Journal
“No, Eat! No, Grow! Shout!
From “salad days” to “meat walls”, M.T. Anderson serves up a four-course meal that is rich with savory and simply irresistible consumerism and corporate power with a dash of data mining and environmental decay. Feed is set in a near-futuristic dystopian society that is completely immersed in the internet and consumer activities controlled by the Corporations. This four-part novel concludes with the expected bittersweet decadent dessert of death, dying that turns sour upon receipt of the check. Who or what is the “Feed”? An analysis of a singular passage found in part three of this scrumptious novel will answer this question and the questions of who is feeding whom, why, and at what cost?
By Rebecca A Hyde Gonzales4 years ago in Journal
The Light and Dark of Truth
The fairy tale genre has often been associated with childhood and bedtime rituals; with magical images leaping off the page and into the dreams of the sleeping child. "Once Upon a Time" is one of the most famous phrases found in the fairy tale genre and these words uttered aloud conjure up a myriad of images for children and adults alike. Every adult can reflect back on their lives and come up with at least one fairy story in literature or film that was a part of their childhood. Some of these reflections result in fond memories; bringing to life the desire to relive the magic and fantasy found in these beloved tales. Many of these fairy stories began as orated folklore during town or village gatherings, with imagery not well suited to the child. Oscar Wilde, patterned his fairy tales after folklore and that of Hans Christian Anderson; infusing dark imagery and the failings of humankind, as depicted in his publication, The Happy Prince and Other Tales. Contemporary fairy tales specifically written for children, such as The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien, and The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis, contain many of the elements found in traditional fairy tales; adding magic and mystery as well as moral and religious themes. The conscientious literary scholar; contemplating this genre, may conclude that even the modern versions of the fairy tale and contemporary renderings still may be directed to the adult audience. Well-known tellers of fairy stories, such as Tolkien, Lewis, and Wilde have stated in some form or fashion that the fairy story is truly intended for the adult audience; and their reasons are connected and varying at the same time.
By Rebecca A Hyde Gonzales4 years ago in Journal
Noughts and Crosses, Home Fire, The Road Novel Summary
Book Review A famous novel is "Noughts and Crosses,''. The novel was published in 1986. This is a crime novel. The first Inspector Rebus novel. Rankin wrote the novel while a graduate student at the University of Edinburgh.
By Mehedi Hasan Shawon4 years ago in Journal



