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Dillon Ramos Ramos itibaren Terulung, Manna, South Bengkulu Regency, Bengkulu, Endonezya itibaren Terulung, Manna, South Bengkulu Regency, Bengkulu, Endonezya

Okuyucu Dillon Ramos Ramos itibaren Terulung, Manna, South Bengkulu Regency, Bengkulu, Endonezya

Dillon Ramos Ramos itibaren Terulung, Manna, South Bengkulu Regency, Bengkulu, Endonezya

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Zavallı evlat ... her korkutucu günde hayatta kalmaya çalışırken ormanda onunla orada olduğunu hissettin.

atlaswork

Ben bu okumaya başladı, ama gerçekten çok uzakta alamadım gibi yarıya kadar (ki benim için kısa: D)

atlaswork

Selina tarafından tavsiye edilir! Hasta olduğumda aldım. Şimdiye kadar, şovun bir bölümünü okumak gibi!

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Sevimli olduğunu düşündüm, ama gerçekten çok etkileyici değil. Ama ben bir "kedi aşığı" değilim.

atlaswork

Read this book to daughters over the past year when we had a chance. Girls loved it. Long though, 466 pages. Second book coming out soon. Will get and read.

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It was a quick read for me, but not the story I was expecting. From reading the description on the back cover, I thought the story would be primarily about Amy and her disappearance, but it was predominately about Janine's life, with bits and pieces about Amy. I wonder if she needed to write down her own story as a sort of therapeutic release, but sold it as a story about Amy to catch readers' interest?

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I've noticed that a lot of Christopher Moore fans don't care for this book. Being the first CM book I've ever read, I enjoyed it. I love re-tellings of the life of Jesus, especially since the Bible leaves a lot to speculation. Making it a comedy does a lot to humanize Jesus, though he is "perfect" (in keeping with Biblical cannon) he is distinctly human. The best thing about this book is that it won't necessarily offend Christians. Of course, there are some people who take offense at everything and will loudly protect their faith from every perceivable threat; you know these people, they made a stink about Harry Potter, they're people who don't actually read the books that they claim glorify witchcraft and demons, so this review isn't really for them anyway. The majority of Christians, the non-fanatics, will not find anything in this book that satirizes their religion or any religion. I think it's very refreshing to read a book about religious icons by a secular author that doesn't hate on faith (I'm looking at you Mr. Dawkins.) Coming back to this being the only Moore book I've ever read, I think the reason is that I don't find Vampires all that interesting, though I'm sure I could if the book were ROFL-funny. I'm probably going to need something funny when I'm done with my Gothic Fiction binge. As of now, I'm taking suggestions.