Sunday 1 July 2012

50 Shades of Grey - A Review


There is a great chance that you might have heard about the book called 50 Shades Of Grey.
This book is authored by a British author E. L. James, and Set largely in Seattle, it is the first book out of the series which recounts the deepening relationship between a college graduate and a young businessman Christian Grey.
The Plot
In the book, Anastasia Steele is required to sign a contract that allowes Grey to have complete control of her life which included fulfilling any desires Grey had in the bedroom. Grey was in to BDSM, bondage and Sadism and for Steele, whom was still a virgin all this seemed very overwhelming at first.

Click this image to buy this book for the exclusive price of £3.86 ($6.06)


About 50 Shades of Grey
The first book of the series was released as an ebook and as a print-on-demand paperback and almost instantly gained huge popularity amongst women all over the world. Readers find this book highly captivating and the kinky nature of the novel has drawn in readers in millions world-wide.
The Telegraph wrote that the sexual politics in the 50 Shades Of Grey will be discussed amongst the female readers for years to come, it really is a must-read novel for what it's worth and it is not just a flash in the pan, the book really is that captivating and amazing to read.
There has also being a lot of positive reviews from readers with many saying that thanks to this book they were able to futher explore their sexuality with their partners and feel much more freedom to explore new things sexually and emotionally, with most readers commenting on their improved sex lifes. Some females have even mentioned that their huspbands and boyfriends are thanking this novel for their improved sex lifes which is another most noted point about this book.


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A life too Short by Ronald Reng - A Review

Great sportswriting, wrote the American journalist and broadcaster Dick Schaap, "tells us as much about life as about sport" and his verdict could not have a more apt beneficiary than Ronald Reng's A Life Too Short(Yellow Jersey Press, £16.99), the deserving winner of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year. In this intimate biography of his friend Robert Enke, the Hannover and Germany goalkeeper who took his own life in 2009, the author writes perceptively of a life bedevilled by insecurity, fear and depression.


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Reng pieces together Enke's life from the player's notebooks and the recollections of his family and interviews more than 40 people who knew him and were deeply affected by his death. "The interviews turned into conversations and we were sitting down for hours," Reng said. "Even with someone like Víctor Valdés at Barcelona – the press officer said half an hour and Victor said: 'No, no, he must have all the time he needs.'"
Reng uses the material with great sensitivity to offer a rare insight into the torments of depression but never lapses into sentimentality, employing a spare prose style to convey the facts he discovers about a friend who dedicated such ultimately debilitating concern to keeping them concealed. The translator, Shaun Whiteside, deserves credit for treating the understated spirit of the original German text so respectfully and with such skill.
Reng does not attempt to gloss a grim and troubling story with melodrama and simply chronicles Enke's life and the effects his illness had on his family and career. He builds a portrait of someone who felt trapped and provides a painful and poignant analysis of the psychological damage inflicted by the depression Enke left untreated for fear of exposing himself as weak.
"It would be too much to hope that the illness will be understood all of a sudden," writes Reng. "But perhaps this book will do something to help depressives find more sympathy and understanding." It is a tribute to Enke and the author that Reng succeeds so judiciously.

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