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Para otros autores llamados Daniel Smith, ver la página de desambiguación.

45 Obras 972 Miembros 14 Reseñas

Series

Obras de Daniel Smith

How to Think Like Einstein (2013) 29 copias
How to Think Like da Vinci (2015) 22 copias
How to Think Like Churchill (2014) 18 copias
How to Think Like Mandela (2014) 9 copias
Peer and the Gangster (2020) 6 copias
Pensar como Sigmund Freud (2017) 4 copias
Sherlock Gibi Dusunmek (2013) 3 copias
How to Think Like Obama (2018) 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Fecha de nacimiento
1976
Género
male
Nacionalidad
UK
Lugares de residencia
London, Middlesex, England, UK

Miembros

Debates

Welcome :) en Book Therapy (marzo 2013)

Reseñas

479 / 14 - Μια απίστευτα δημιουργική προσωπικότητα , που παρόλες τις ι
Χαρακτηριστική φιγούρα που αγωνίστηκε ως τέλους για την ειρήνη πάνω στη Γη. και έκρουσε από νωρίς το κώδωνα για τη κακή χρήση της τεχνολογίας ( εις βάρος των ανθρώπων ) από τους πολιτικούς.
Δεν αποδέχτηκε την ιθαγένεια καμίας χώρας και η μοναδική που εμπιστεύτηκε τον πλήγωσε… (más)
 
Denunciada
Bella_Baxter | Mar 4, 2024 |
Yep, does what it says on the cover - it is indeed a book about 100 places I will never visit. (although I have been thinking about a visit to Chernobyl, as tourists are allowed to visit now and have been for a while). Okay! So 99 Places I will never visit and one I'm considering. And I've been inside Buckingham Palace at one of the Queen's garden parties, although admittedly not in the queen's bedroom... I digress.
This was somehow both a really interesting little coffee table style book, and also really dull and a bit repetitive and dragging. The ones in the UK were probably of most interest to me (the US and it's long, long list of assorted secret military bases were probably the least interesting to read about), though I found some of the more unusual things kept my attention. The majority of entries are of the sort the world knows about and are just not permitted in - The Pentagon, Cheyenne Mountain Complex, Area 51! and a few more where the location is unknown to everyone. There were a few I've heard about and been interested in before - obviously Chernobyl was one, and Centralia, the US ghost-town (now) whose coal mines are still burning underground decades after they began. I didn't learn anything about these from this book, because I previously read about everything that was mentioned here, but many of the entries were ones I knew nothing about, and a few of them I then went off to research further off my own back. Those were obviously the ones I enjoyed the most!
It didn't go into great depth on any one item, but that is probably for the best as it dragged a bit when reading the entries I didn't enjoy, and I imagine that favourites would vary from person to person. I could really imagine my son would enjoy this as he's 15 and so won't have heard of or know about many of these yet, but I'm sure he'd be fascinated to find out, and learn a little history of the world in the process. Without it appearing to be an 'educational book'!

Overall I'd say it would be a great book for some but your mileage may vary. I quite enjoyed it, and don't regret the few hours it took me to read. Pretty good stuff! 3.5 stars as I'm wavering between 3 or 4...
… (más)
 
Denunciada
clairefun | 2 reseñas más. | Oct 27, 2022 |
It’s actually a biography of da Vinci but certainly not a “how to” book which could have been shorter.
 
Denunciada
Milad_Gharebaghi | otra reseña | Jan 14, 2022 |
This book, expertly edited by Daniel Smith, takes us on a journey through royal love letters. Beginning with Edward II and Isabella of France in 1325, and ending with Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson in 1937, this is a fascinating look at how some of the most well known Kings and Queens communicated with each other.

Each section has a brief biography of the main players, followed by a selection of their letters. It's quite illuminating to bear witness to some of the most interesting matches in history, even if some of them were not exactly love matches. Indeed, upon the death of Mary I, her husband, Philip II of Spain, commented to his sister that he "felt a reasonable regret for her death". Well, if that's not true love then I don't know what is!

Of course, one of the most famous royal relationships was that of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. She never got over his premature death and it was very moving to read of her agonising cry of "Oh, My dear Darling!" as he passed away.

Perhaps the most intriguing for me were the letters between Edward and Mrs Simpson. History has her pegged as a wicked woman who stole our king but her letters perhaps show us a alternate viewpoint. Either way, I enjoyed reading their missives and the little quirks in the way they addressed and wrote to each other.

Love Letters of Kings and Queens is a real treat for any royalist and anyone who enjoys reading historical letters, and it's the ideal book to dip in and out of.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
nicx27 | Mar 4, 2021 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
45
Miembros
972
Popularidad
#26,498
Valoración
½ 3.3
Reseñas
14
ISBNs
196
Idiomas
15

Tablas y Gráficos