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  • J. Fuchs "jax76" - Stellar if not quite as wonderful as Wolf HallBring Up the Bodies can easily be read as a stand-alone novel without the reader first having read Wolf Hall, although the experience will certainly be enriched by reading Wolf Hall first.

    Hilary Mantel is the rare writer who can make another time period come alive without ever making you feel like you're being given a history lesson, but rather that you are observing real people with complex motivations and attitudes.

    Whereas in Wolf Hall the focus was on Thomas Cromwell and Henry VIII, in this novel the focus shifts largely to Anne Boleyn, and though the POV is still Cromwell's, its Anne Boleyn's story. All the characters you'd expect to encounter in a tale about the last year of Boleyn's life are there: Henry VIII, Catherine of Aragon, the Seymours, the other Boleyns, Chapuys, etc. Mantel does a great job of making the characters in the book into neither heroes nor villains, and the evocation of the time and place is done seamlessly.

    The second half gets a little too poetic and symbolic for my tastes, plus the book suffers from the strange grammatical device Mantel employed in Wolf Hall of using the word "he" without a clear antecedent, but in trying to make the story less ambiguous Mantel actually makes it worse by saying"he, Cromwell", which just points out how bizarre it is; at a certain point you just wish she'd say "Cromwell" without the "he" and get on with it. It's a small quibble, however, once you get used to the construction, but if you didn't like Wolf Hall because of it, you probably won't like this book.

    If you were a fan of Wolf Hall, however, you'll probably like this book, as will anyone interested in the Tudors or the beginning of the English Renaissance.
  • stacy - Dermatend WorksI went to a dermatologist to get some moles checked out and some were scheduled for surgical removal, even though they weren't at a high risk of being cancerous. I actually cancelled surgery because I didn't want the doctor to remove this one mole on my lower tummy. It is perfect to me and has not changed, ever. I looked into natural mole removal and came across Dermatend. There were some good reviews and some not so good reviews. I decided to try the product, since there was a 60-day money-back guarantee. I followed the instructions exactly how they were and removed moles. I even documented two of my larger moles on my forehead, as posted on Facebook. Type in: Dermatend - Review - Removes Moles, Warts, and Skin Tags. The moles have not grown back, thank goodness! The product claimed to remove up to 15 moles but I removed 26 throughout my body. There was no pain and no scarring. People do not even know I had moles where they used to be. If I had to point to the exact spots where the moles were, I would not be successful. This one mole on my nose was removed and grew back about one week later. I re-applied Dermatend and the second time it worked. I have not had any other problems with this wonderful product. I used the Quick Healing Balm, as well as 100% Pure Vitamin E oil to speed up the healing and prevent any scarring. Once the first tube of Dermatend was used up, I purchased a second one, with the balm. I had a lot of moles and now I am nearly mole-less. Oh, and that beautiful little birth mark mole I refused to have removed by the doctor is still with me.
  • Book Lover - This Diet is Amazing!!For years, I carried an extra ten pounds that, despite not overeating, I couldn't lose, even though I was eating almost exclusively "healthy" foods -- lots of fruit and vegetables, not too much dairy or meat, plenty of fresh fish. A few months ago, a friend in the book publishing business gave me an early copy of THE PLAN because she knew how frustrated I was and felt that Lyn-Genet's program might hold the key to what wasn't working for me. It turns out that she was right. I was eating three foods on an almost daily basis to which I was having an inflammatory reaction that kept me from losing weight. I replaced them with three foods that were not reactive for me, lost the 10 pounds within 3 weeks, another 4 pounds in the next two weeks, and that's where I've been ever since. I've tried many diets, so it's especially gratifying to finally find one that's so obviously right for me.
  • StoryGirl NY - straightforward and helpfulThis book is just what it says it is: it describes majors at the front, and then tells the colleges that offer those majors. For people like my son (who is a junior, so trying to pick a college), it is helpful at least for knowing what he DOESN'T want to do. There was definitely a need for this book.
  • I. P. Frehley "Nightoddity" - Simply awesome...I actually haven't read this book. I just think it's simply awesome that someone chose to write an expose about the telecom industry! Seriously, I mean it costs mere pennies to transmit a message from Earth to Mars, yet AT&T (for example) charges $.20 to send a text message on Earth!

    In an article on extremetech dot com, they say that "...Verizon Wireless and AT&T will both charge $0.20 per text message if you don't buy a texting plan from them. Even at a more conservative pricing of five cents per message, that means the carriers are charging around $383,000 per gigabyte. By comparison, the total cost for the Mars Global Surveyor to send a gigabyte back to Earth, is only $284,000. This includes the $200 million cost of launching the satellite, and nine years of operational costs incurred by its NASA crew. That's right -- it costs US tax payers $99,000 less to send a gigabyte of data from Mars than it does for cellphone users to send a gigabyte worth of 160 character text messages.

    Rick Falkvinge's math shows that it would take 7.67 million text messages to make up a gigabyte. That may sound like a lot, but consider that in the US alone we have over 300 million cellphones in use as of this past June. Worldwide, we have over six billion mobile phones in operation. That's a lot of potential text messages. After doing some rough calculations about what it actually costs telcos to transfer data, Falkvinge comes up with a shocking 15,000,000,000% markup on text messages. That's a tough pill to swallow even at a tiny fraction of the current markup."

    The information above just comes from a website, I'll bet this book has a lot more interesting information. I'll have to read it when I have time!

    Super interesting stuff... if this book even comes close to that degree of expose', it's no wonder paid consultants for the Telecoms are giving this book poor reviews!