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Sharing the tipping books I read lately and if it is worth adding to your collection.
Hi friends! How are you? I hope you have a wonderful morning. We had tons of rain in Tucson here, and it was positive. Looking forward to walking in the refrigerator in the afternoon!
For today’s post I wanted to share the rekap books I read lately. Tbh, reading is still at the end of my priority list right now. I’m not that much time to read this year, because we’re still trying to find our household slot, work and holding it while the pilot travels. Me and I go through and pass IHP3 and Peptides for practitioners House. Usually when I’m solo parenting, by the time I bring the kids to bed and laundry, it crashes to bed pretty.
So I need to say, it was a little slower at the front of reading, but lately I still managed to read some amazing books!
Here’s a rekap of what I read lately and if I recommend you add them to your list!
I’ve always been a big fan of Elvis and had the biggest sympathy on him when I was in high school. (Elvis from his examples, okay, so I intrigued his life and family, and when I wrote his daughter Lisa Marie. Includes recorded clips from Lisa Marie, and also narrated Julia Roberts and Elvis’s grandchildren, Riley Keogh.
The book lasts outstanding is an outstanding life of Lisa Marie as the only child Elvis Presley. It explores the glory, identity, dependence, heart and deep sorrow of the loss of the son. Through Riley’s reflection and discovery of recorded tapes of his mother, memoir is an example of resilience and love letters of mother and daughter. I highly recommend audio version – 9/10
From Amazon:
A month later Lisa Marie was dead, and the world would never know his story in his words, they never know a passionate, joyful, caring and complicated woman, who liked Riley and now grieved.
Riley got tapes that her mother was filmed for a book, laying Lisa Marie golf strollers together in the courtyards of Graceland, about her father’s courtyards, that she feels from her father, only the two of her. About pulling screaming from the bathroom as she ran toward her body on the floor. About Life in Los Angeles with her mother, sending to school after school, always kicked out, always in trouble. About her unique, lifelong relationship with Dann Keugh, about being married to Michael Jackson, what they had in common. About motherhood. About deep addiction. O ever present sadness. Riley knew she had to meet his mother’s desire to discover these memories, burned and painful, world.
That her mother be famous.
This extraordinary book was written in Lisa Marie and Rilei’s voices, Mother and Daughter communicate – from this world to that outside – as they try to heal each other. Deeply moves and deeply revealing, From here to the great unknown is a book as not the last words of the only child of the American icon.
Paris architect is a beautifully written, suspensive story set in Nazi Paris. The Lucien Bernard follows the talented architect that is hired to design the secret places of hiding for Jewish families – a job that could cost him his life if he discovered. What starts as a job for extra money quickly becomes something much deeper as Lucien’s courage and conscience grow with every risk project. It’s a story about courage, redemption and how ordinary people can do extraordinary things when choosing compassion of fear. This was an amazing story – I also loved architectural details in the whole – and I loved the end. 9/10
From Amazon:
1942, Paris. Architect Lucien Bernard accepts the Commission to bring him a huge wealth – and maybe the death penalty. He must design the secrets of a hiding place for a rich Jewish man, space so invisible that even the most harder than Nazi soldiers will not reveal. When one of Lucien’s designs does not cover the problem of hiding Jews, it becomes personal, and can no longer deny the massiveness of its project. What does he owe his neighbor man and how far will he go to make things?
When the breath becomes air Paul Kalanithi is a deeply shifted memoir about gifted neurosurgen, which is in the middle of building life and career diagnosed with terminal lung cancer. He grabs with what it means to live and die – switching from doctors to the patient – and investigates how life is meaningful in the face of mortality. This book gave me so much to think and somehow remained comfortable and easy despite what the topic is so hard. 10/10
From Amazon:
With thirty-six, at the edge of completing the decade of value in training as Neurosurgeon, Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with cancer and IV lung lungs. One day he was a doctor who treats die, and the next was a patient who was fighting to live. And just like that, the future he and his wife imagined were evaporated. When the breath becomes an air chronicle of the tiny transformation of the naive medical student, given that all organisms are dying, the most critical place for human identity and finally in their honesty and at the end of the patient and a new father.
What makes life worth living in the face of death? What do you do when the future, no longer a ladder towards your goals in life, growing in a permanent gift? What does it mean to have a child, nurturing a new life like another fade? These are some of the issues that are in this deep moving, excellently observed memoir.
Paul Kalananihi died in March 2015. years, while working on this book, but his words live as a guide and a gift to all of us. “I started realizing that he came face to face with my mortality, in a certain sense, has not changed anything and everything,” he wrote. “Seven words Samuel Beckett began to repeat in my head:” I can’t go further. I will continue. “When the breath becomes an unforgettable, life reflection on the challenge of dealing with death and about the doctor’s relationship, from great writers who became both.
Ok friends: What are you reading lately? Anything that would recommend?
I just started two new books … My goal is to finish them before the holiday 😉
Komidža
Gina