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The Marble Collector by Cecelia Ahern - book review

The Marble Collector by Cecelia Ahern - book review

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The Collector by John Fowles



  Rain at last. September 15, I realized today that I have been using your Book Collector software for nearly ten years now, since I switched from a physical book collection to ebooks. So the cover and title say it all, just not straightforward. Write a Review. This book would be awesome if Anna was a brother instead.  


- Book review of The Soul Collector - Readers' Favorite: Book Reviews and Award Contest



 

And, at age 66, it might be a little late to start. The attraction for specific editions with beautiful dust jackets is turning me into a book collector.

I sense that the desire to buy books in fine condition with dust jackets по этому сообщению equal condition is the beginning of an addiction. Many people think book collecting is about buying rare first editions as an investment. However, book collecting is about buying books to satisfy a collecting goal. You may seek to buy every book collector book review free your favorite author, or collect all the books from a specific publisher, or collect all the books with dust jackets from a favorite artist.

Collecting goals are collector book review free. Having limitations makes the game more fun. I keep telling myself that gateway drugs lead to harder stuff. Collector book review free to collect are endless. Reasons not to collect are just as varied. The most important reason not to collect books is to save money. Book collecting leads to geeking out on a продолжить realm of esoteric knowledge about book publishing.

You will also become obsessive-compulsive about old books in pristine shape. You will become a hater of people who mistreat books.

You /30542.txt start spending more and more money to horde books and protect them. You will become a Gollum and books will be your precious. And more than likely, when you die, your spouse will haul your collection down to Goodwill or Friends of the Library and give them away. The fun way to collect books is by haunting used bookstores, garage sales, estate sales, friends of the library collector book review free, charity shops, book fairs, conventions, and so on.

Serendipity is your only friend. The faster way is to use ABEBooks. Thousands of used book dealers input their catalog into their database. If you are looking for a specific edition, ABEBooks.

The key to online book-buying happiness is collector book review free how the books are described and which book dealers are more reputable than others. There are many book dealers that have no respect for books. They stick barcodes взято отсюда to the book, often on the spine, or even worse, the dust jacket. These barcodes are difficult to remove and removing them often damages the book or jacket. Just look how annoying they are too:.

It was the first anthology of science fiction published in The little paperback was in remarkably good shape. But some dumbass slapped a barcode right on the front. I collector book review free removing it, but it damaged the book. What I love is when the book dealer sends me a paperback in a plastic bag or a hardback in a Brodart protector. Some dealers ship their books like they were wrapping a Ming dynasty vase. Others use vacuum-packed plastic shipping bags. The other collector book review free to learn the hard way is how book collector book review free describe their books.

Here are the guidelines dealers are supposed to us. I love when the second happens, but it bums me out when the first occurs. This is where you begin to hate previous book owners.

With every tear, bent-over page, smudge of chocolate, crusty old booger, yellow highlighting, or scrawled note, you feel pain in your gut. I bought a brand-new book from Amazon the other day just for the cover, and it came in with a tiny gunk of glue that left the tiniest smudge when I rubbed it off. That left me with a disappointed sinking feeling all day. So just remember, you can mistreat your books all you want.

You bought them. But someday in the future, a book collector will be cursing you. Do you really want to be either person? Today In Books Newsletter. Sign up to Today In Books to receive daily news and miscellany from the world of books.

   

 

Collector book review free



   

Especially because Grandma Jeannie has some strange rules. Soon though, Josie manages to make friends with the most popular girl in the sixth grade, Vanessa. When Vanessa eventually invites Josie back to her house to hang out, Josie doesn't question it. Not even when Vanessa takes her into the woods, and down an old dirt road, toward the very house Grandma Jeannie had warned her about.

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Page actions Review Discussion More Tools. Personal tools Log in. Categories Fiction Non-fiction Children's books Authors. We Buy Books. The Marble Collector by Cecelia Ahern.

Category: General Fiction. List, Images or Card View for your book lists. Different templates for the book details panel. Light, Dark and System skins for all screens. Select the book that you own. Click the Add button. Our Core online book database will then automatically provide The main book details like author, title, publisher, publication date, etc.. Other information like number of pages, genres and subjects, dimensions, etc.. Front cover images, author images, author wiki-page links.

Book Collector can also catalog your e-book files. Just let it scan your computer for e-book files, then link the files to the book entries in your database. After that, the e-books can be opened right from your book details panel. Use the free CLZ Cloud service to: always have an online backup of your book database. Read more reviews from customers. This subscription fee includes: the ability to use the software on one PC or Mac access to our frequent software updates with new features and improvements access to our Core online database for adding new items access to our CLZ Cloud service for online backups, for syncing to mobile app and for online sharing access to the Find Cover Online service customer support by email, 7 days a week A Book Collector subscription can be used on ONE PC or Mac.

CLZ Books mobile app for your phone or tablet. Book Connect web-based software for your computer. Anyways the only thing I can come up with is that since the book was published in the s there wasn't as much about sadistic killers or people doing crimes like these out there so it appealed to them and Fowles does such a good job capturing a certain kind of personality in Fredrick that people really identified with it.

It also gave them a good model of how to escalate to the point of doing things like kidnapping and murdering because really in the book Fredrick just starts off by dreaming about it and it goes from there. That's all I've got because view spoiler [ Fredrick never really hurts Miranda or forces her to do anything especially at first, he kind of just likes having her hide spoiler ] so I'm not sure why that would inspire Leonard Lake to want a slave that he can use for sex and to take care of the house?

The author in interviews said that the book is about social class and money and I do see that much more clearly in the book than any message about how its a good idea to kidnap women.

I'm not sure how much I agree with the social commentary though probably because it has been decades since the book has been written. I do understand the point that money and idle time given to people can lead to them doing things they might not have otherwise but I don't think the class or money is the problem so much as the person themselves.

View all 16 comments. Nov 30, Paul Bryant rated it really liked it Shelves: novels. This is one of those boy meets girl, chloroforms her, throws her in the back of the van and stuffs her in his basement type stories.

Fred is the sweetest psycho ever! The kindest and most attentive! No slurping and grunting at all! This is a brilliant stroke by John Fowles and really messes with your mind. As does the whole book. After that things just go badly. View all 11 comments. Aug 09, Dana Ilie rated it it was amazing Shelves: classic-literature.

I definitely think Book Readers should have this book on their shelf. View all 17 comments. It's been hard for me to focus lately — gee, I wonder why? Over the past month, I've begun several books, lost interest, shelved them. Instead, I find myself studying grim news items and statistics, scrolling through memes on social media, staring blankly out my window onto empty streets and watching old black and white movies or TV shows I've missed over the past decade.

All while trying to work from home while I still have a job. Then I came across this book. I knew vaguely what it was about, having long ago seen the acclaimed movie adaptation starring Terence Stamp and Samantha Eggar.

About 50 pages in, I realized it was the perfect book to read in semi quarantine. Ferdinand, a. Frederick, Clegg is a nondescript something clerk in London who collects butterflies and has one other obsession: Miranda, a young, attractive art student he's seen and stalked. When he wins the pools the UK equivalent of the lottery , he decides to abduct Miranda and keep her in the house he's bought in the country, complete with highly secure cellar, which he's outfitted for the newest item in his collection.

That's essentially the story. Miranda tries to escape, of course, and Ferdinand tries to stop her. She requests items from town, including some things that could perhaps hint that she's that missing girl from the art college.

Above all, she tries to find out what Ferdinand wants from her. What's so fascinating about John Fowles's first novel is that it has the outline of a thriller but it's really so much more.

While the first part of the book is told from Ferdinand's POV — Fowles is very good at getting inside the twisted mind of what we might call an "incel" today — the second switches to Miranda's POV, and it's here that the book gets really interesting.

Miranda keeps a secret diary, and through her accounts of her time in the cellar we see different takes on scenes we've already witnessed.

Plus, she's got obsessions of her own, including a much older semi-famous artist. While it's easy to have sympathy for her in the first part — she's clearly a victim — things get more complicated when we read her thoughts about class, education, physical beauty and art in the second.

What makes this such an effective quarantine novel is how isolated and trapped Miranda feels, removed from her friends, her family, her home. She longs to breathe fresh air, look up into the sky.

She misses even the simplest, most banal activities. Through her diary, you can also see how her entrapment has changed her feelings about life, art and freedom. There are lots of literary references — to The Tempest , of course, with Miranda referring to Clegg as her Caliban — and Emma , but also to more contemporary books about other anti-social characters like The Catcher in the Rye and Saturday Night and Sunday Morning.

The discussions about art are thoughtful and engaging. This novel must have made a huge splash when it appeared in the s, decades before such fiction became a subgenre. Based on this, I'm definitely going to seek out — and perhaps, um, collect — some of his other novels. View all 33 comments. Impotent sociopath kidnaps beautiful art student. Told partly from the sociopath's perspective. That's my jam! I should have loved this book! But something left me cold. I suppose it may have been all the bitching and complaining the beautiful art student did in her stupid diary.

What a helpless twit! Not to imply that I'd be brave and cunning or anything In fact, I'm pretty sure I'd be a helpless twit as well. But I'll be goddamned if I'd expect anyone to enjoy readi Impotent sociopath kidnaps beautiful art student. But I'll be goddamned if I'd expect anyone to enjoy reading the daily chronicles of what a helpless twit I'd been.

The ending really made me smile, though. The creepy ending made it all worthwhile. Crazy fucker. View all 25 comments. Jan 25, Fabian rated it really liked it. This novel is over fifty years old!

Though its semi predictable, the end is nonetheless terribly terrific. That there are two strands of narrative is sometimes a revelation, sometimes an encumbrance like living through a terrible ordeal not once but twice!

Both psych This novel is over fifty years old! View 2 comments. So much for starting the year with a literary bang. This novel made me feel like a dud firework.

I didn't find it chilling or claustrophobic. Not once was I creeped out. It did however leave me feeling rather sad, after the glum ending. What I could really do without right now. As soon as the narrative went from the perspective of the possessive kidnapper to the diary entries of the young woman held captive, I was starting to lose interest. Alright, to start off with anyway, I liked reading of h So much for starting the year with a literary bang.

Alright, to start off with anyway, I liked reading of her attempts to outwit him and get away, but it just wore off eventually. It may be a case of a decent book that I just happened to read at the wrong time, I don't know.

I could think of only a few scenes between Sarah Woodruff and Charles Smithson in The French Lieutenant's Woman that did more for me than the whole of this novel did. I was going for three stars, but considering I really struggled to finish it, it's more likely somewhere around two I'm afraid. As a first novel the writing was pretty good, and that is about all the positives I can give it. I felt nothing for Frederick.

Didn't feel pity for him. Of course I felt sorrow for Miranda. Poor girl. So, not a great reading experience at all for me. I can't say that I'm that interested in butterflies, but I would rather this had actually been about some nice lovely butterflies, and not feeling locked up. I've had enough of that already! View all 20 comments.

Shelves: full-of-wonderful , owned-ebook , eek-the-creepies. He wants me living-but-dead. He makes preparations by buying a house out in the country, purchasing assorted objects and things he knows she will need, convinced that if he can only capture her and keep her that she will slowly grow to love him. The first part of the novel was told from Frederick's point of view and it was rather alarming at his thought process.

In his mind, there is nothing morally wrong with what he intends to do and what he actually ends up doing. She writes about G.

To Miranda, G. At first I had a hard time determining the relevancy of these recollections, but it essentially just became another disturbing piece of the story to see how influential G. Always sneering at him, jabbing him, hating him and showing it. But linked destiny. Like being shipwrecked on an island—a raft—together.

In every way not wanting to be together. But together. Suffice it to say, it gave me goosebumps. It was not the ending I had anticipated, but I still felt that the author was successful in creating the everlasting effect I believe he intended.

View all 48 comments. Thought by some to be the first psychological thriller, this book left me slightly wanting. The Collector is broken into three parts. The first part is from Clegg's point of view. Clegg is a man obsessed with a young woman and decides to "collect" her, much as he collects butterflies. The second part is from the woman's point of view, once she's been "collected".

This was the part that I found unsatisfying. There were some observations in this section about class, money and society wh 3. There were some observations in this section about class, money and society which probably were more pertinent in the 60's, which is when this book was written , than they are now. I found this portion slowed down the pacing considerably. The third part goes back to Clegg's point of view. They give me the load of total creep and nightmare. Even though I couldn't help but kept reading when it is about them, yeah you can say I want to face my fear?

Well my answer is it has something more then just my fear. My alarm clock started blaring. I reached over to turn it off. My hand bump Oh Sweet Jesus Christ!!! My hand bumped into something. Slowly, I opened my eyes, tried to make my vision adjust. There was a doll on my nightstand. A doll that looked an awful lot like Beryl. So that's how there grandma warned them. The story immediately go straight to the point and from the first chapter it just hooked me up and I just couldn't put it down.

This book to me was so addictive that I had to finish it in just one seating as if I got no choice. The truth is I didn't want to out the book down until I dinish it Josie didn't like her new school as no one wants to be friend with her but Venessa.

That weird girl seems very nice to her and soon they became best friend. Venessa has her aunt to make her tiffin for her school but nobody else. As Josie's little sister Anna too made friendship with a girl named Carol, Carol who got a weird characteristics about her too.

So when the Venessa invites Anna and Josie both they surpeised at the propose. But eventually they went with her and it was in the back yard of their grandma's house in to deep woods. It was creepy and unnatural environment in Venessa's house and the most frightening thing was when Venessa gift a creepy looking doll to Anna. Well the game just started from there at the very spot and who was Beryl actually?

The name that mentioned by their granma but Josie's mom told them it's all bogus story. But there's more to that story not believe it's fake. Terrible truth is waiting for them to reveal and Josie's sister in danger too. So, what should Josie do to keep Anna ok or alive? Full Sep 23, Autumn rated it really liked it Shelves: I saw this book at my kid's book fair and the cover just called to me. This is a good book for the middle grader maybe from 5th on up. The plot wasn't very long and it was straight to the point.

Josie and her sister have to move in and help their mom out with their grandma. Though it seems their grandmother is sick and swears that something is out in the woods. There are rules to follow and you better follow them for Beryl will get you. Also, what do dolls have to do with this story? You gotta r I saw this book at my kid's book fair and the cover just called to me. You gotta read it to find out. Josie, of course, wants to go back home that is until she makes a friend named Vanessa.

Vanessa, it seems though seems very mysterious and it isn't until towards the end we find out why she is the way she is. It will take a simple task to the break the curse that is within the woods and at the house of Beryl. I will say I was curious on the writing that was left on Josie's locker but I do have a feeling that it might be from a certain character that couldn't speak out in fear of Beryl.

When you read the book you will understand. I am not sure if my son would like the book because it has to do with dolls but I may try it out on him. It isn't scary but it does have a creepy factor to it. View 2 comments. Nov 13, Kim Friant rated it really liked it. I was seriously creeped out during the whole thing! And I was very impressed with the unique story, I felt like I was reading something new. Beryl is a terrifying villain! I could totally see her in my head and she scared me.

I did feel like some loose ends were left and that keeps me from giving it 5 stars. Then again, any future children of mine will be weird enough to start out with scary books so what do I know! I think this is a great read for anyone who likes creepy stories! Oct 26, Robbie Myles rated it really liked it.

Young Josie moves away from her hometown of Chicago and into the home of her Grandma Jeannie with mom and sister, Anna. What they thought would be a quaint place to start fresh turns into their own personal nightmare. One full of evil dolls, and an ancient spirit living deep in the woods that is trying to claw her way back to the surface of life and regain the power she once had. This book was such a pleasant surprise and had scenes that seriously creeped me to my core. I'll always have a soft s Young Josie moves away from her hometown of Chicago and into the home of her Grandma Jeannie with mom and sister, Anna.

I'll always have a soft spot for doll horror, and K. Alexander did a phenomenal job of not only creeping me out, but creating the scares for a middle grade audience!

Strong recommend and 4 stars from me! Jun 05, Landa rated it liked it. I liked the plot, it was unique, ish. But when I reached the end it was obviously quite rushed by the author to finish it. It was getting cheesier and cheesier.

I finally finished it, but the author could have done a much better ending Sep 17, Dawn Meyer rated it really liked it. This book, although aimed for younger readers, kept me intrigued. Even though I did see some things coming, I was still invested to see what was going to be done. Very satisfying. Nov 17, Jayden rated it it was amazing. It was creepy but i liked it. This was a very quick read, with some of the chapters being only 1 page long which made it easy to get hooked.

The story is simple just follow the rules and you will be fine, you know the 3 simple rules. Simple right?! Welllllllllll, where would the story if not one or more of these rules were broken! Nowhere that is where! Josie and Anna are being made to move from Chicago right into the sticks of nowh This was a very quick read, with some of the chapters being only 1 page long which made it easy to get hooked.

Josie and Anna are being made to move from Chicago right into the sticks of nowhere. When Vanessa comes along it is like sunshine for Josie, she can have a real friend here, even though something feels slightly off with the most popular girl in the school. However, when she goes home at night, she can hear something in the woods!



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