tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Nov 13 2007 | books
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 31 2007 | architecture, books
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 11 2007 | books
interesting, sad, and creepy all at the same time...i want to check out this book, to see how crazy people really were in Germany back in those days.
Quoted: At first glance, the letter carefully printed in a child's hand seems innocuous, nothing more than the expression of a young crush: "I love you so much. Write me — please. Many greetings. Your Gina."
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Oct 08 2007 | books
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 09 2007 | business, books, world, philanthropy, development
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 04 2007 | news, books, world, innovation
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Aug 04 2007 | books, international, africa
Quoted: Amazon.com: We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will be Killed With Our Families: Stories from Rwanda: Books: Philip Gourevitch by Philip Gourevitch
with increasing violence in North and North East Africa, thought it appropriate to dot this book. FANTASTIC
Journalist Philip Gourevitch returns to Rwanda two years after the genocide to view the aftermath and recount the horrors...it's a non-fiction book. What all happened in Rwanda and the lack of action from the US, Europe, etc. is not only uphauling, but simply, in my mind, unethical. You will cry, possibly even stay awake, but you NEED to read this book. One question for you all, when should the US and EU, NATO be a policing body in the international arena?

tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 27 2007 | news, books
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 25 2007 | books, religion
Quoted: Rowling's work is so familiar that we've forgotten how radical it really is. Look at her literary forebears. In The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien fused his ardent Catholicism with a deep, nostalgic love for the unspoiled English landscape. C.S. Lewis was a devout Anglican whose Chronicles of Narnia forms an extended argument for Christian faith. Now look at Rowling's books. What's missing? If you want to know who dies in Harry Potter, the answer is easy: God.
interesting reflection on religion in Harry Potter...but is leaving out the "sacred" and re-enforcing the idea of "love" necessarily a bad thing, especially considering the youth who are engaged by these novels? if Rowling did indeed leave out God, what about Sirius, Harry's Godfather?
tigerexotique | Shared With: Everyone - Jul 24 2007 | food, books, india
Quoted: ANY American cook who longs to plunge deeply into the cuisine of India is bound to grow impatient with the cookbooks offered by major United States publishers. Wonderful though many of those books are, their scope looks awfully limited stacked up against the riches now found in the innumerable grocery shops and restaurants that the Indian diaspora has brought here.
So true. I wish Indian-American restaurants would serve Bengali food...it's so delicious and very unique, especially if you love sea food. I want to check out these books.
Related Content from Around Faves
books
-
A collection of literary tattoo photos. Very nice! Personally, I'm a fan of the text tattoos since they honor the originals.
1 FaverViewed: 7 TimesQuoted: Adventures in middlebrow.
- shiwani - 5 days ago2 FaversViewed: 2 Times
- ketchup - 3 days ago1 FaverViewed: 2 Times






