Posts Tagged ‘music’
Music True Salim Nourallah low class
What can I say. The Wii is a revolutionary gaming console that my 6 year-old loves. We have owned this for over a year, and it is going strong. Hopefully a new updated one will be out soon, as some of the initial quirks need to be worked out, such as the buzzing noise from the disc turning even if games are paused. The buzzing didn’t exist initially, but started after a few months. The remote sensor bar also doesn’t allow enough of a range, and doesn’t recognize the remotes if you are more than about 10 feet away. These are minor issues compared to the positives, so it still is a 5 star product without a doubt. I think that for kids under 10, the Wii is the best console on the market, but older kids may be more attracted to the PS3. Cheers.
True Music Salim Nourallah
Take care of Reading in Adventures Music
The friction mount does exactly what it is supposed to do–it holds the GPS steady on the dashboard without slipping or leaving a mark on the windshield.
Adventures in Music Reading
I love Spotlight on Grade Music
Sorry to be so long in getting this review done….out of town a lot.
Anyway…very happy with the service we received on getting Microsoft Office Home and Student 2007. Product is in excellent condition and being used all the time.
Many thanks…and would use this seller again.
Spotlight on Music Grade
Music Johnny Cash in answer
This product is great. Worked better than anticipated. The dogs coat looks shiny and healthy.
Johnny Cash Music in
Review about Brainy Music Baby
Borrowed from the library and now we’re buying it!! My 19mo old and 4 yr old love this video. The music is great and its educational.
Brainy Baby Music
Classic Videos Essential Music for good
This is one of the most extrodinary books that I have read in a long time. I am in the “dementia” business, and the read on the character’s life are right on the button. Too bad that my clients cannot be absorbed by their past worlds as is this character.
Essential Music Videos Classic
Wow! Drugs Music Cocaine on
With over 1,700 reviews logged in here, I’ll add my two cents worth.
If you’re reading this as “newest first”, let me warn you that most reviews contain spoilers about which you are not always warned.
This book was recommended by a friend and I found it to be an easy and enjoyable reading experience. That being said, I suggest that anyone, as an individual reader, will take from it what they will. I gave it 4 stars because it just doesn’t reach my standard of a great piece of literature or really in-depth study of something. From an enjoyment/entertainment perspective it is 4.5 or more, just not 5.0.
A lot depends on the mood you’re in when you read this book. Also, your expectations can help or hurt your appraisal of the work.
This book is part romance, part mystery, part documentary and part sociological treatise. It recaps an aging man’s life, mostly focusing on his young adult experience against the seedy backdrop of a traveling circus during the Great Depression.
Growing old is mandatory, but growing up is optional! If you have fought growing up, and if you ever had a romanticized vision of running away with the circus, you may understand this book. You may not like it, but you will come to some thought or understanding of what the author was trying to say. You may lose some illusions, though, which you might have wished you could have maintained.
Many of the negative reviews here criticize the language and sexually graphic descriptions of some scenes. The particular scenes probably accurately reflect the circumstances of the times. So what else is new?
These instances are almost glossed over. While not appropriate for children, the treatment fits into the docu-drama which debunks any romanticized vision of circus life.
As a novel, I didn’t know where the story was ultimately going. One confrontational segment, given much emphasis, seemed unexplained or unresolved. There was a twist at the end which is thought provoking.
Maybe you’re never
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