Saturday, February 20, 2010

Remove Aluminum Oxide



My father told me that when he was young, went to see the work twice: once to understand the plot of the story, and a time to enjoy the music.
I think I'll do the same with food , given that I started last night after dinner, and I literally devoured as I was going for a while 'time, the book is rich and deserves to be appreciated in detail, and smoothness of the story leads to go forward even when one should stop to better capture all the nuances.
The book is divided into three parts, almost three stories, of which the first two represent the beginning of a long history of six thousand (or eight) years, and the last represents the epilogue.
The first two are the best, because they contain the most successful characters, or those that Uriel appears most attached, and that D'hu and Emera (and to a lesser extent Amira): If you've read Dune or, better yet, the first three books of the Foundation (Chronicles of the Galaxy, The Collapse of the central galaxy, the other side of the spiral), we find the same galactic epic, the same feeling of a story that unfolds long millennia.
The book has some non-beveled edge: from silly layout, which is run as a comma from the word which was to remain stuck at some point where there is some repetition too.
But in the end if we do, after reading the words of Emer:
Namaiti When chased the thought of being in
right, but the error inherent in morality was lurking.
When hunting despise someone because, you know very
well want to get rid of that thing. What we did not know
was what we would have lost. We knew we
Namaah hunted, the goddess prostitute and her boyfriend
mortal Kushiel 's Murderess. We did not know that
what would have failed after the twelve tribes
had driven the thirteenth. As I got to understand,
passed away 's love.