![]() ![]() She goes to a variety of mental health professionals and ‘healers’ in the hope of finding a solution for her lost sense of being and in most cases, she’s not ready to listen to what they say. Over the following chapters she fights her inner demons and mostly lets them win. The cure for boredom with Linda appears to be lust but as anyone who seeks a physical or pharmaceutical cure for their troubles finds out, cures are seldom simple or straightforward. She wants adventure, she wants variety, and the next thing you know she’s interviewing her childhood sweetheart who’s now a politician and she’s giving him a blow-job. She can’t cope with the idea of something so dire as just not feeling fulfilled so she decides she has depression. ![]() She arouses “desire in men and envy in other women”. Linda has everything any woman could want – down to a fabulous figure, a wardrobe full of expensive clothes. Her husband who’d happily give her anything she wanted, and they have two beautiful problem-free children. She’s successful in her journalism career, she has a fabulous marriage to a man with lots of inherited wealth and whom she loves. It’s a story where you’ll have to look quite hard to find anybody to like in amongst its cast of spoiled and over-privileged characters. Adultery by Paulo Coelho is a beautifully written tale of unpleasant people doing unpleasant things to each other in the name of love, lust, boredom or depression. ![]()
0 Comments
![]() ![]() Geoffrey Parker begins by defining the characteristics of Spain's strategic culture: the king's distinctive system of government, the "information overload" that threatened to engulf it, and the various strategic priorities and assumptions used to overcome the disparity between aims and means. The author investigates the strengths and weaknesses of Philip's strategic vision, the priorities that underlay his policies, the practices and prejudices that influenced his decision-making, and the external factors that affected the achievement of his goals. ![]() From 1556 until his death in 1598, Philip II of Spain ruled the first global empire in history, yet no one so far has analyzed precisely how he accomplished this feat. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() This series will possibly annoy you, but it will also provoke some thought that may sometimes temper your darker feeling over time. If you advocate justice killing, then you might be walking a dangerous line. If you advocate reform, this series will comply much of the time with a little related comedy to complement it. Some people advocate reform of terrorists. As such, stories sometimes advocate killing as an appropriate response to unjust efforts to kill or terrorism. The morality of killing is subject to one's ignorance of eternity and the implications they believe in. ![]() ![]() This volume dances on the edge of morality and manages to present a miracle one could believe sensible for its fantasy world. Death itself is not what hurts, but the lost contact with others or the discontinued living. I, as a person have not killed anyone and I don't advocate it, but I have had martial training, firearms training, faced deadly circumstances and have no issue with a necessary killing. Still, he's better than many heros from other stories. The "I don't kill people" attitude continues as evidence of Satou's weak moral character. Death March to the Parallel World Rhapsody Hiro Ainana Jul 2022 Death March to the Parallel World Rhapsody Vol 17 Sold by Yen Press LLC 4.8 star 72 reviews Ebook 272. The usual flaws still exist, but this one's pretty good! ![]() |