Monday, December 9, 2019

Denver Broncos Download

ISBN: 1469368889
Title: Denver Broncos Pdf 2020 12x12 Team Wall Calendar
Made for passionate football fans, this team wall calendar includes poster-sized action shots of your favorite players from the Denver Broncos every month! Each month also includes professional athlete bios and new graphics featuring Broncos team colors and logos. Made with exceptional quality, the 12x12 calendar also includes bonus pages that feature Sept. - Dec. 2019 and the past Super Bowl results!
  • 12-month format (January 2020 - December 2020)
  • Dimensions: 12"w x 24"h (opened)
  • Full-color, superstar action photos
  • Includes professional athlete bios
  • Bonus page featuring September - December 2017

Denver Broncos Trivia Quiz Book 2 pdf

Denver Broncos Trivia Quiz Book pdf

Football Fundamentals pdf

Green Bay Packers Trivia Quiz Book pdf

Quarterback pdf

The Great Book of Football pdf

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Saturday, December 7, 2019

NIrV, The Illustrated Holy Bible for Kids, Hardcover, Full Color, Comfort Print Download

ISBN: 031076579X
Title: NIrV, The Illustrated Holy Bible for Kids, Hardcover, Full Color, Comfort Print Pdf Over 750 Images
Author: Zondervan
Published Date: 2019-06-04
Page: 1552

NIrV, The Illustrated Holy Bible for Kids is a brand-new kind of Bible that allows kids ages 4–8 to read the full Bible without chapter and verse numbers and footnotes—study aids that are helpful for adults but can be very distracting for kids. This Bible presents the story of God’s people in a single column format with an extremely readable font. With nearly every turn of the page, children will encounter full-color illustrations and kid-friendly maps that illuminate the Bible story. For children who want to read on their own or with an adult nearby, this is the perfect first full-text Bible for kids who appreciate the power of story and of God’s Word.

Features of the NIrV, The Illustrated Holy Bible for Kids include:

  • Bonus full-color double-sided poster
  • Over 750 full-color illustrations throughout
  • Full-color, child-friendly maps
  • Single-column text
  • Easy-to-read Comfort Print® font
  • The complete text of the New International Readers’ Version (NIrV) of the Bible, created at a third-grade reading level just for developing readers
  • Vibrant and engaging cover

Almost a 5-star I am always looking for "the perfect Bible" to give to students in our 3rd grade Sunday School class. I like the NIRV translation for this age group and this Bible is certainly colorful and you don't have to turn more than 2 pages before you encounter a picture. The removable fold out map poster is something I will definitely use in the classroom.This Bible loses points from me because the font is too small for this age group. Just one more point size up would have made a huge difference. The lack of verse numbers is going to make it hard to look up a specific verse or to teach Bible citation with this book. There is no commentary to help the kids understand what they are reading if they are reading it on their own. Finally, the Bible Family Tree poster has an error; Boaz (Ruth) is shown as being between David and Solomon instead of between Judah and David.Will be sticking with the Zonderkidz NIRV Adventure Bible for Early Readers for the time being...Nice pictures Grandchild loved it!Adorable! But will your kids read it? Zondervan and The International Bible Society (aka Biblica) have just published The Illustrated NIrV Holy Bible for Kids. Created “for children who want to read on their own or with an adult nearby,” this latest daughter of the NIV is child-friendly in many ways (though not all). But its value for your family will depend on how it’s used.The NIrV first appeared in 1994 as a spin-off of the New International Version (NIV), the most popular modern translation of the Bible. Editors of the NIrV replaced longer words and phrases with simpler language at a 3rd-grade reading level. This style is called a thought-for-thought translation rather than word-for-word. Since 1994, Zondervan has updated and republished the NIrV in multiple formats, including a children’s version featuring The Berenstain Bears. So, what is different about this new edition?The adorable illustrations by Bible Story Map (contributing editor, Stephanie Holleman), are worth the $29.99 cover price alone. Holleman’s studio produces attractive and helpful Bible posters for sale online, some of which have been reproduced in this volume. They also designed new illustrations for the text, approximately one for every two-page spread. And a two-sided poster comes tucked into the back cover with the Holy Land on one side and a genealogy of Bible characters on the other.I also particularly liked the parenthetical chapter and verse references for quotes from another part of Scripture. However, the editors’ decision not to number each verse in the text greatly reduces their usefulness. These references and the division of chapters into smaller sections with added titles constitute the only extra-Biblical material. No other introductory or explanatory study notes are included because they “can be very distracting for kids.”Besides the lack of verse numbers, another problem for new readers and children (not to mention the over-50 crowd, like me) is the very small, 9-point font. Zondervan advertises an “easy-to-read” typeface for this edition, but only twenty-somethings are likely to find it so easy. I used to buy large-print Bibles for my early-reading children (12-point font or higher), and I still think that is preferable.When I was a fresh-faced, home-schooling mom, I naively believed my young children were going to read their Bibles. This new edition would be really nice for that purpose. In reality, my kids only used their Bibles to complete assignments at home and at church. If that is true for your young readers, then a Bible with larger print and verse numbers might be a better choice. How do you look up John 3:16 when there is no “16” in your book?And for reading to a child, I prefer Sally Lloyd-Jones’ The Jesus Storybook Bible, with its Christ-centered approach and full-page illustrations. I’m also looking forward to the Laugh and Learn Bible for Kids by Veggie Tales creator, Phil Vischer, due out Sept. 10th. Neither of these books contain the complete text of Scripture as does the The NIrV Illustrated Holy Bible for Kids, but let’s face it – you probably aren’t going to read much of Deuteronomy or Lamentations to your first-grader anyway.I think my children liked having their own Bibles, and the grown-ups around them liked it, too. It was the start of a good, life-long habit, even if it was a bit more symbolic than practical. Gift-buying grandparents will be attracted to this new edition, and the illustrations are probably your best hope that kids might open it up on their own. So, whether you want to purchase this new Bible depends largely on how you believe it will be used. I can honestly say it is the most attractive, complete children’s version of Scripture that I’ve seen. But, please, Zondervan! Put the verse numbers back!As a member of the Bible Gateway Blogger Grid, I was given a promotional copy of the book in exchange for a review.

Tyndale NLT Inspire Bible for Girls (Hardcover LeatherLike, Metallic Blue) pdf

Laugh and Learn Bible for Kids pdf

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ESV Holy Bible, My Creative Bible For Girls, Pink Faux Leather Hardcover Bible w/Ribbon Marker, Illustrated Coloring, Journaling and Devotional Bible, English Standard Version pdf

The Beginner's Bible Gift Edition pdf

It's a Wonderful Life Study Guide pdf

The Beginner's Bible First 100 Bible Words pdf

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Wednesday, December 4, 2019

The Art of LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Programming (Full Color) Download

ISBN: 1593275684
Title: The Art of LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Programming (Full Color) Pdf
Author: Terry Griffin
Published Date: 2014-10-01
Page: 276

Terry Griffin has been a software engineer for over 20 years and has spent most of that time creating software for controlling various types of machines. He works for Carl Zeiss SMT on the Orion Helium Ion Microscope, programming the user interface and high-level control software.

With its colorful, block-based interface, The LEGO® MINDSTORMS® EV3 programming language is designed to allow anyone to program intelligent robots, but its powerful features can be intimidating at first. The Art of LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Programming is a full-color, beginner-friendly guide designed to bridge that gap.

Inside, you’ll discover how to combine core EV3 elements like blocks, data wires, files, and variables to create sophisticated programs. You’ll also learn good programming practices, memory management, and helpful debugging strategies—general skills that will be relevant to programming in any language.

All of the book’s programs work with one general-purpose test robot that you’ll build early on. As you follow along, you’ll program your robot to:
–React to different environments and respond to commands
–Follow a wall to navigate a maze
–Display drawings that you input with dials, sensors, and data wires on the EV3 screen
–Play a Simon Says–style game that uses arrays to save your high score
–Follow a line using a PID-type controller like the ones in real industrial systems

The Art of LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Programming covers both the Home and Education Editions of the EV3 set, making it perfect for kids, parents, and teachers alike. Whether your robotics lab is the living room or the classroom, this is the complete guide to EV3 programming that you’ve been waiting for.

Requirements: One LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Home OR Education set (#31313 OR #45544).

Excellent book. Highly recommended Excellent book. Highly recommended !Got a different book to learn about the EV3 in general but that book focused a little too much in trying to program the robot from the on-board screen/button, which is cumbersome and not practical.This book on the other hand is full of great little projects to help kids (or adults like me) learn how to program efficiently. I am 1/3 into the book, and really like it. My daughter is currently reading it and she also enjoys it. The little projects are specific enough that kids keep engaged while learning.We got the kindle edition and my only complaint is that on the really big programs the graphs are not crisp enough to read all the details, but with some effort is doable.Good Starter book for FLL teams with little programming experience I think this would be an excellent starting point for anybody that is doing FLL. I think the level of the descriptions and details would work out well with the FLL teams that do not have much experience with programming. The book covers some interesting things that I didn't know - saving data to files for example and then opening it up in EXCEL to get a good idea on what light level to use for line following.Excellent book for starting out with EV3 Mindstorms. This is by far the best beginner's book on Lego Mindstorms EV3 programming. Even if you do not believe yourself to be a beginner, this book will give you a very solid foundation on which to build your EV3 programming skils. It is based on the Home edition of Lego Mindstorms but is equally valid for the Training Version also. This book far surpasses the books that come with Lego Mindstorms Home Edition. It also surpasses most of the on-line EV3 tutorials that I have seen.

Learning Lego Mindstorms Ev3 pdf

Building Smart LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Robots pdf

The Kids' Book of Paper Love pdf

A is for Aviation pdf

The Kingdom of Christmas pdf

The Storytelling Game pdf

The Proto Project pdf

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Monday, December 2, 2019

Inside Out and Back Again Free Pdf

ISBN: 0061962791
Title: Inside Out and Back Again Pdf

“Open this book, read it slowly to savor the delicious language. This is a book that asks the reader to be careful, to pay attention, to sigh at the end.” (Kathi Appelt, bestselling author of Newbery Honor Book The Underneath)“Based in Lai’s personal experience, this first novel captures a child–refugee’s struggle with rare honesty. Written in accessible, short free–verse poems, Hà’s immediate narrative describes her mistakes―both humorous and heartbreaking; and readers will be moved by Hà’s sorrow as they recognize the anguish of being the outcast.” (Booklist (starred review))“The taut portrayal of Hà’s emotional life is especially poignant as she cycles from feeling smart in Vietnam to struggling in the States, and finally regains academic and social confidence. An incisive portrait of human resilience.” (Publishers Weekly (starred review))“An enlightening, poignant and unexpectedly funny novel in verse. In her not-to-be-missed debut, Lai evokes a distinct time and place and presents a complex, realistic heroine whom readers will recognize, even if they haven’t found themselves in a strange new country.” (Kirkus Reviews (starred review))“American and Vietnamese characters alike leap to life through the voice and eyes of a ten–year–old girl―a protagonist so strong, loving, and vivid I longed to hand her a wedge of freshly cut papaya.” (Mitali Perkins, author of Bamboo People)“Lai’s spare language captures the sensory disorientation of changing cultures as well as a refugee’s complex emotions and kaleidoscopic loyalties.” (The Horn Book)“Ha’s voice is full of humor and hope.” (School Library Journal (starred review))“In this free-verse narrative, Lai is sparing in her details, painting big pictures with few words and evoking abundant visuals.” (Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books)“Told in compelling free verse.” (Brightly) For all the ten years of her life, Ha has only known Saigon: the thrills of its markets, the joy of its traditions, the warmth of her friends close by, and the beauty of her very own papaya tree. But now the Vietnam War has reached her home. Ha and her family are forced to flee as Saigon falls, and they board a ship headed toward hope. This is the moving story of one girl's year of change, dreams, grief, and healing as she journeys from one country to another, one life to the next.

Inside Out and Back Again is a #1 New York Times bestseller, a Newbery Honor Book, and a winner of the National Book Award!

Inspired by the author's childhood experience as a refugee—fleeing Vietnam after the Fall of Saigon and immigrating to Alabama—this coming-of-age debut novel told in verse has been celebrated for its touching child's-eye view of family and immigration.

Hà has only ever known Saigon: the thrills of its markets, the joy of its traditions, and the warmth of her friends close by. But now the Vietnam War has reached her home. Hà and her family are forced to flee as Saigon falls, and they board a ship headed toward hope—toward America.

This moving story of one girl's year of change, dreams, grief, and healing received four starred reviews, including one from Kirkus which proclaimed it "enlightening, poignant, and unexpectedly funny."

An author's note explains how and why Thanhha Lai translated her personal experiences into Hà's story. This paperback edition also includes an interview with the author, an activity you can do with your family, tips on writing poetry, and discussion questions.

Educational and enlightening This book is a part of my 8th grade language arts curriculum. In the classroom, it is supplemented with numerous non-fiction texts about the universal refugee experience.This book is a mostly non-fiction prose poetry account of the author's experience as a girl forced to flee Vietnam and resettle in America. The book begins on the Vietnamese New Year (Tet) 1975 and concludes one year later. There is enough historical data embedded in the poems to be educational and enough emotional personal experience to be enlightening. Additionally, there are interesting cultural references that introduce young reader to other cultures and religions.Young Ha's life is turned inside out when war causes her mother to pack up and take Ha and her older brothers to a refugee camp in Guam. They are sponsored by an American "cowboy" after they change their religion (on paper) to Christian and this "cowboy" discovers that Ha's older brother was studying engineering and might be useful repairing cars for his business.The second half of the book is an account of how Ha's life comes "back again" as she adapts to her new home and life in the states, facing bullies and wishing that the person who invented English would be bitten by a snake!Given the current refugee-related news, this story helped my students understand the difference between refugees and immigrants and have a better human understanding of the reasons people flee their homes and seek asylum elsewhere, as well as the struggles they face in their host countries.A quick read for an adult. An enlightening read for a child or tween who may have questions about the refugee condition.Rough Reading My daughter is 11 and she does enjoy poetry but the whole book is poetry and she was a little disappointed with that. I think we were both hoping for at least some story line to follow. There are also some words that I need to look up to figure out the meaning and context in the poem and how to pronounce them which makes reading this book frustrating due to the interruptions. I think for the right kid this book would be really interesting. Maybe a group of kids reading it together, doing the research together, and having others to discus the significance of the poetry could help make it more interesting and significant.Vietnamese culture, refugee story, beautiful writing Her favorite things are papayas, a dog-eared doll, and her mother. Her name is Ha and as the story opens, she is ten years old, living in Saigon in 1975. When the story ends, she is eleven years old, living in Alabama.Although I don't ordinarily read children's literature, I loved this book. I read it in connection with a graduate level course in Writing Literature for Children.The characters, historical moment, and narrative arc of Inside Out and Back Again fit comfortably yet originally within familiar literary archetypes. Her beloved father is away fighting in the war, and the mother and children are increasingly vulnerable and impoverished, a theme that brings to mind Little Women by Louisa May Alcott. Each day they must choose between staying and fleeing: should they live another day under the harsh conditions of war and the oppression of an autocratic dictatorship, or abandon their duty to their country, community and family? Siblings disagree; loyalties shift. Mother is torn between her duty and desire to wait for her husband, her fear that he may be dead, and her hope for a better life for her children. Ultimately the family climbs aboard a Navy ship in search of safety and winds up with a completely new way of life.Thus begins the voyage, fraught with danger from the very beginning; they begin to second-guess their decision to leave and continue to do so through each hardship they face, and to grieve what they left behind. Ha notes that "No one would ever believe me but at times I would choose wartime in Saigon over peacetime in Alabama". At some time or another, every immigrant story I've read expresses the frustration of adjusting to a new culture, the demoralization of "having to begin again at the lowest level of the social scale" and for the refugee, "the shame of abandoning our own country and begging toward the unknown". Any child who has moved, or changed schools, or even given up a team to move to a higher level or pursue another interest knows these feelings.Ha struggles, as any person would in a new situation, with making her new location a home, and finding her place in her new school and neighborhood. The welcome she receives is often well-meaning but awkward, as when her teacher introduces the class to Vietnam by showing iconic photos of the war, rather than the papaya trees, distinctive foods and humid weather that define Vietnam for Ha. At times, though, her new community greets her with racism and xenophobia; after a brick "shatters the front window...along with a note" which "Brother Quang refuses to translate", they go door to door with their sponsor to meet neighbors who refuse to open their doors to them. To survive, she learns quickly who to trust, without necessarily knowing what trust is or how she knows. In the case of her family's sponsor, she has no choice but to trust him. In other cases, she watches others to evaluate their trustworthiness, as when two children join her for lunch with giggles that become smiles rather than "explode into laughter thrown at me". She calls this diary entry "Most Relieved Day."In this new environment, she has to learn how to solve some of her problems on her own, since her mother doesn't understand the language or culture. She trades her innocence for competence and self-respect by struggling through situations as they arise, standing up for her mother, and receiving help graciously. Ha is growing up.Ha's character emerges authentically and robustly through her own voice. The story is written as Ha's diary, in verse. Allowing Ha to speak for herself puts the reader on a ten-year old level. The diary format frees the author from filling in every detail, thereby focusing on what matters to Ha. Like most people, Ha doesn't write in her diary every day, and she only records significant matters, such as the progress of the first papaya ripening on the papaya tree she planted from a seed. Her birthday wishes, confessed confidentially to her diary, chronicle her disappointments: "I wish...I could do what boys do and let the sun darken my skin and scars grid my knees...I could stay calm no matter what my brothers say...I had a sister...Father would come home" . My copy of the book includes an interview with Lai, in which she admits that she "struggled for fifteen years to tell Ha's story in a voice that would be authentic". After attempting many different styles, she "started jotting down exactly what Ha would be feeling, lonely and angry on the playground. The words came out in quick, sharp phrases that captured her feelings in crisp images", which she wrote in verse form, as entries in a diary. The terse sentence structure evokes the simple thought pattern of a child and the brusque sound of the Vietnamese language being spoken.Ha captures the distinct personalities of her brothers, her classmates, and her neighbors through incisive observation in her diary, zooming in on discrete behaviors of each character to demonstrate their personalities while simultaneously establishing each as a metaphor. Brother Khoi represents Buddhist compassion; when it's his turn to eat the egg their hen lays four times a week, he "refuses to eat his, putting each under a lamp in hopes of a chick." Brother Quang, the oldest, views the world politically, expressing the moral outrage that a grateful refugee feels but can't afford and the cynicism of one who is dependent on a government who bears a great deal of responsibility for their dilemma. For example, "Mother is...amazed by the generosity of the American government until Brother Quang says it's to ease the guilt of losing the war." Because he's the only one who knows English, he serves as a liaison with their new community, highlighting the vulnerability of the family when he refuses to translate or is not around. Brother Vu embraces American culture and, by giving martial arts lessons in the front yard, is the first in the family to assimilate. Lai chose Ha's observations carefully, portraying each person as an individual and as an archetypal character yet exposing them solely within the context of their relationship with Ha.In some ways, the story calls to mind The Diary of Anne Frank: a young girl, recording in her diary her most personal thoughts and her careful observations about her life at a time of extraordinary political upheaval. Like Anne's, Ha's voice is simple and unfiltered, unhindered by intellectual interpretation, the need to justify herself or her story, or exhausting description. After all, a diary is written for the writer, not for an audience. She tells what happened, how she felt about it and what she did about it, then skips to the next matter of interest to her. Inside Out and Back Again is not technically an autobiography and is not a contemporaneous diary, but forty-something year old Lai seems to have invoked her own inner ten year old, letting her tell the story in her own words, affirming the significance of herself as sufficient context, never mind the sweep of history in which she exists. In doing so, Lai gives the reader a rare gift: the opportunity to experience the historic, cultural, social and psychological richness of a great humanitarian tragedy through the eyes of a child.Ha experiences the world primarily as a member of the family; she is always the smallest and youngest of four children, and the only girl in a family of three boys. Readers in these positions in a family will relate easily to Ha's experiences. At different times, she and her siblings find ways to irritate each other but also to comfort and even rescue each other. Ha particularly loves her mother, and many of her diary entries detail the qualities of her mother that matter the most, for example the love, sorrow, and tenderness conveyed when her mother says, "You deserve to grow up where you don't worry about saving half a bite of sweet potato" Her mother's beautiful eyes, as well as her modesty, sensitivity, and compassion come up frequently. We sense her father's memory slipping away when the image of a helpful uncle comes to mind more readily than the appearance of the father she knows only through photographs. The family relationships are characterized by love, loyalty and trust. There is enough drama outside this family to keep the story rich without introducing family dysfunction as well.The use of verse tightens the writing; there is no excess. The whole book can be read in less time than it takes to read a dense article in the Sunday New York Times. Her diary records her fantasies, disappointments, and experiences honestly and authentically in the staccato sentences of a smart young girl. The lyrical structure makes room for imagery that might interrupt an organized prose and frees Lai to use incomplete sentences for emphasis: “No more migration. No more letters. No more family”. Animals are at work in ordinary human endeavors and her emotions are expressed in physical terms. As Ha's mother sews the small backpacks that will hold everything they take with them when they leave Saigon, "the stitches appear in slow motion, the needle a worm laying tiny eggs that sink into brown cloth". When she gives the bully at her new school in Alabama his come-uppance, he looks "like a caged puppy." Righteous indignation is "an old, angry knot expanded in my throat”, happiness is when "Mother's lips curl upward", and anxiety is when "dragonflies do somersaults in my stomach" When she screams in anger, "a lion's paw rips up my throat" and when she can scream no more and is in the arms of a loving adult, she continues to "thrash about like a captured lizard"Lai resists the temptation to lay out the grand narrative of Vietnam, since Ha clearly doesn't have the bigger picture. Instead she interjects key historical facts here and there as Ha hears about them in a more personal context. For example, on her birthday, Ha wishes for her mother to tell her stories of her childhood in North Vietnam, and her escape to the South just as "the country divided in half...North and South closed their borders. No more migration. No more letters. No more family". As the family weighs their options, Mother explains life under communism: "Suddenly Quang will be asked to leave college. Ha will come home chanting the slogans of Ho Chi Minh, and Khoi will be rewarded for reporting to his teacher everything we say in the house". Thus the reader is given a child-size introduction to the themes of civil war, oppression, and communism without compromising Ha’s naïve perspective.Ha is not preoccupied with the war or politics, but it comes up as “in the distance bombs explode like thunder…distant yet within ears…not that far away after all”, and when the weekly current events time at school is cancelled because the war is the only news. Ha introduces other aspects of Vietnamese life: Vietnamese food, the heat and humidity on a particular day, and her papaya tree. She details how she celebrates Tet, lists the special foods and clothes she enjoys during the festivities, and expresses her smug excitement that although Tet is technically everyone's birthday, she, as the youngest child and only daughter, is allowed to celebrate the anniversary of the actual day she was born.Suspense kept the pages turning even as I wanted to relish the vivid imagery. I found myself biting my nails, wondering: Is Father alive, and will they be reunited? Will the war reach them before they escape? Will they survive the journey? Why does her brother stink? Will their cowboy sponsor in Alabama exploit them? Will the bully clobber her? Will she ever fit in? And ultimately, will they be okay?This story helps the reader empathize with the life of refugees and immigrants, a theme as relevant now as it ever was. I cried, holding the book to my chest, when she sacrificed the only item she brought with her from Saigon by choice in a show of unity with her brother, when she listed what they left behind in Saigon, when South Vietnam ceased to exist, when she ate her lunch in the bathroom at school, when some of the Alabama neighbors refuse to be neighborly, when the bully chased her, when her mother lost her wedding ring, and when they decided to give up hope that her father was alive. I felt completely helpless witnessing her vulnerability as a child, as a defector, as a daughter, as a baby sister, as a refugee, as a speaker of "second hand" English, as a small person for her age. I held my breath as she courageously faced each challenge, as some of those who could have hurt her, didn't, and as those who hurt her experienced consequences. I felt her frustration but laughed at her sweetness as she complained, "whoever invented English should have learned how to spell".Is this children's literature? It deals with mature themes, but Lai maintains the integrity of the voice by allowing Ha to record in her diary things that she saw or overheard but didn't understand, and giving them a personal context since a child her age would likely not care about the political significance. When Ha quotes her university-age brother saying, "One cannot justify war unless each side flaunts its own blind conviction” and follows up with her own thought that "Since starting college, he shows off even more with tangled words," Lai doesn't have to interpret. She trusts the reader to understand that Ha admires her brother, recognizes the importance of what he's saying, wants to be a part of the conversation, and bristles at the limitations of her ability to understand.Supposedly, anything can be written more concisely. In Inside Out and Back Again, Lai wrung out every excess word. “It’s over; Saigon is gone”. Supposedly, writing should “Show, Don’t Tell.” Lai tells just enough. We know it’s hot, humid and crowded as Ha’s family boards the boat to leave Saigon because “our family sticks together like wet pages” We know they have become poor because “Mother measures rice grains left in the bin. Not enough to last till payday” Each short diary entry is complete in itself yet serves to hold the narrative.In this quick read, there is enough tension to shred the reader’s nails, enough vulnerability to soften the reader’s heart, and enough humor to dry the reader’s eyes. There is no magic in this novel, no fairy godmother, no imaginary friend. Every situation is no doubt being played out around the world millions of times every day.I loved this book so much that I started reading her most recent book, Listen Slowly. The main character in that book was annoying, which is not unusual in children's literature, but she stayed annoying for too many pages. I felt like she could have been redeemed a bit earlier, and I didn't finish the book to find out when and if she was.

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Sunday, December 1, 2019

Magic User Download

ISBN: B07Y8XG9C4
Title: Magic User Pdf Reborn in Another World as a Max Level Wizard (Light Novel) Vol. 1
DUNGEONS & DAEMONS!

A hardworking salaryman by day immerses himself on weekends in the pen-and-paper roleplaying game Dungeons & Braves, where he plays his favorite character: a max level wizard. When his real life abruptly ends, he is given a second chance as Geo Margilus, his magic user from the game. The powers, wealth, and enchanted loot that he gathered across endless hours of imaginary adventures are now made real. The catch? He's transported to the world of Sedia, a fantasy realm where evil abounds, and ravenous daemons threaten mankind.

Entertaining isekai with enough of a twist As most isekai the story starts with a man dying and being transported to another world. He is a 40-year office worker though whose gaming experience is mostly with old (red box) D&D in his youth. He is placed in s&s world more akin to modern computer rpgs with the powers of a 36th level magic-user - his old character from his college days. Escaping from bandits is one thing, dealing with people in another culture and the mind and experience of an office worker is a lot harder.The main thing I like about the story is the MC, he acts as a kind 40-year office worker with people experience would without being dramatic about it. The well thought put clash between mana based sorcery and the fire-and-forget magic of D&D feels well thought. The author clearly knows the game. He even has the MC point out differences as home rules from his old group. Prior knowledge is not required, but it made it a bit more entertaining for me. The world building is also good. It takes a relative serious approach to a somewhat silly concept, which I like, but might not be for everybody.Now if only there were a few less light novel tropes in regards to characters (even though I have seen much worse is other novels). The potential harem part being the biggest one even though the MC wants nothing to do with it and sees the 14th year old as a daughter and not a potential love interest. No fan service though or weird awkward moments except maybe near the end with the dark elves.All in all, a good book and I am curious about the next part.Best of the latest batch of light novels Highly readable wish fulfillment tale about an old school western tabletop nerd in a world based on new school Japanese RPG games. Instead of surrounding the MC with a boring all-female harem, author has the good sense to include male friends/companions, which is refreshing.Some other reviewer complained about the long-winded spells? Lmao so you have to read a full sentence of a spell that he's doing, what a silly reason to give it one-star. Great read, highly recommended to isekai fans.Great isekai. Buy it. Being an unabashed fan of isekai light novels, manga, and anime I will always enjoy a story that is not risque and looks for a slight twist on the genre and this book is no exception. I was a fan of Table Top Role Playing Games (not sure the author or translator ever spell out the abbreviation) in my youth which was Gary Gygax’s AD&D. The idea that you have spell slots based on level, read a spell book every morning to memorize spells, and mana doesn’t have any quantification, that’s all from that era. This is a fun story that respects the old school and makes it a part of the story as the magic system in the world he’s in is a modern, quantified mana system. That’s the twist here that we have two systems of magic in collision and that the mc’s powers, while happily OP, also come with the major setback of 10 second casting time, an eternity in melee. There’s also a bit of detective story going on, as the typical hidden conspiracy is partially revealed in this book, but is far from solved leading naturally to the next book. My only gripe is that there’s no preorder for the next book available yet so this means weeks or months of checking the listings. If you like isekai and fantasy genres, this is for you.

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Never Die pdf

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The Final Stand pdf

You Need A Bigger Sword pdf

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Friday, November 29, 2019

Acid for the Children Pdf

ISBN: B07H7TJCK9
Title: Acid for the Children Pdf A Memoir

Iconic bassist and co-founder of the immortal Red Hot Chili Peppers finally tells his fascinating life story, complete with all the dizzying highs and the gutter lows you'd expect from an LA street rat turned world-famous rock star. 

PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.  

Amazing Just like all those drugs flea use to takes, this book let us crave for more once we finish it.Just like his bass lines, this book rhythm is fast.Just like flea’s music, once you start reading that book everything around you stop and your mind is hypnotized by the story.Amazing memoir by a great and peaceful manHumble and Inspiring This book surprised me. I’ve always liked Flea and this book inspired a huge respect for him. I’ve read AK’s autobiography which I also loved but this is more of a vulnerable book rather than a historical account. It’s a book of love, of centering, a book of grace and a deep introspection.LOVED ! Flea has a way with words. I found the book to be raw and honest. LOVED IT ! I hope this is just the beginning of his literature career. WRITE on and ROCK on brother ! AND I wish I went to Fairfax High School.

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Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Atlas Obscura Download

ISBN: 0761169083
Title: Atlas Obscura Pdf An Explorer's Guide to the World's Hidden Wonders
Author: Joshua Foer
Published Date: 2016-09-20
Page: 480
It's time to get off the beaten path. Inspiring equal parts wonder and wanderlust, Atlas Obscura celebrates over 700 of the strangest and most curious places in the world.

Talk about a bucket list: here are natural wonders—the dazzling glowworm caves in New Zealand, or a baobob tree in South Africa that's so large it has a pub inside where 15 people can drink comfortably. Architectural marvels, including the M.C. Escher-like stepwells in India. Mind-boggling events, like the Baby Jumping Festival in Spain, where men dressed as devils literally vault over rows of squirming infants. Not to mention the Great Stalacpipe Organ in Virginia, Turkmenistan's 40-year hole of fire called the Gates of Hell, a graveyard for decommissioned ships on the coast of Bangladesh, eccentric bone museums in Italy, or a weather-forecasting invention that was powered by leeches, still on display in Devon, England.

Created by Joshua Foer, Dylan Thuras and Ella Morton, ATLAS OBSCURA revels in the weird, the unexpected, the overlooked, the hidden and the mysterious. Every page expands our sense of how strange and marvelous the world really is. And with its compelling descriptions, hundreds of photographs, surprising charts, maps for every region of the world, it is a book to enter anywhere, and will be as appealing to the armchair traveler as the die-hard adventurer.

Anyone can be a tourist. ATLAS OBSCURA is for the explorer.

Smart, lively, remarkable! This is unlike any travel guide I've ever seen, full of surprising locations both near and far. The entire experience of reading Atlas Obscura is like having dinner with your smartest, friendliest acquaintance, who also happens to be a bit of a weirdo (in the best way). Overall, it is a fantastic, lively book, perfect for curious real-world and armchair travelers.One part Ripley's Believe It or not, One part National Geographic Magazine, and Entirely Enjoyable The world is still filled with interesting, exotic, and improbable places. In the twenty-first century, when you can wash down your KFC chicken with a Starbucks vente frappucino in Beijing, it is refreshing to re-discover the awe and mystery of travel. This is a perfect book for a two minute break whenever your spirit needs boosting. Whether you find Jeremy Bentham's mummified corpse at University College London; the Beer Bottle Temple in Sisaket, Thailand; or the Canadian Potato Museum in D'Leary, PEI, you can return to your drab, dreary existence with the assurance that the World is "not only queerer than we suppose, but queerer than we can suppose". Buy this book! Revel in the places that you've seen! Revel in the places that you'd like to see! You won't be disappointed.Appropriately named book jam packed with esoterica! Ok, one of the best gifts I have ever bought my husband. He loves the quirky and esoteric. I think he poured over every word in this book. It sat by his bed and he read at least one entry each night until he finished, often laughing out loud and sharing tidbits that were always odd and sometimes even (to me) grotesque. He loved it so much! I cannot even believe the authors could uncover such arcane facts and places. The monicker “obscura” is definitely apropos!

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