Sunday, April 17, 2011
Seriove Cislo Nerovision Express 3.1.0.25
Cat protesting against his main enemy As this is the last entry before the Great Day (to be exact, the release of Game of Thrones. That for us will be on Monday), play back a compilation readings. Well, that and because I am also reading a scary speed, but my cat is starting to complain about lack of attention and compliments on your cat person. Robert A. Heinlein. Starship Troopers. Digging on the shelf of a family member (or I'm contagious cats, or where there is trust, disgusting), I found several copies of a collection of classic science fiction, I did not hesitate to visit to have several well-known examples. One is the Starship Troopers, although he had a movie several years ago, is a rather free: the novel is much more simple, telling the story of a boy who enlists in the army, and with his progress in rank and military career, they count the characteristics of this futuristic society, which have served in the military is necessary condition for full citizenship, and how they came to this system due to the decline of the democracies of the twentieth century. Of battles space beyond explaining how to make an attack on a planet and have to fight with insectoid aliens, little more aware, he is such an enemy very diffuse and serves as a backdrop for the story. Beyond its ease of reading, has not convinced me much, and if I read fiction war to entertain me and amuse me, I'll stick with Sven Hassel, much more wild, absurd and anarchic. Clifford D. Simak. Transit Station. Another classic science fiction, which is actually very cortita a novel in which the argument (the aliens turn the farm of a man in a station for interstellar travel) is solved very quickly and without much drama. Although the story begins with the discovery of this situation by a scientist, this is a very minor plot and the book focuses on the loneliness of the protagonist and his attempts to avoid stop using the earth station. Larry Niven. Ringworld. Another science fiction of the seventies, and with a structure closer to the adventure novel: a group of disparate characters (two humans and two aliens) travel into space in search of an artificial world. From there, the situations are typical of the genre: hypervelocities weaknesses in the aisles, and some existentialism on the fate of the universe. It has a good dose of adventure but between the environment seventies (describing all sorts of silly hairstyles and fashions) and the characters just unbearable for a lot as ballast. I think for science fiction, I will continue staying with Day of the Triffids. Susan Towshend. The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole. I could read this book thanks to an initiative in a language school (leave a shelf of books freely available.) Therefore, references and Hewl about what he had liked the first in the series. Because that Adrian Mole is a set of books in diary form, recounts from his early teens to become adult, all with a critical eye and bad enough slime for adults around him. The character was born in England in the eighties, and a radio program, so I start to find more than a passing resemblance to Manolito Gafotas. The main difference is that Adrian Mole is a character somewhat larger and more acidic, more oriented toward an adult audience as for readers under the age of fifteen. Specifically, this second installment focuses on the arrival of her little sister, the problems of paternity in this, as well as his half brother. Adrian because the environment is anything but traditional, I would say the Family Forum. Quite surprised to read passages so riddled with divorce, marriage crisis, References to the Thatcher era and events of the time (the wedding of Lady Di, the alleged Hitler diaries and the Falklands War) knowing that what was written in Spain was not even half wild.
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