Kanae minato biography of donald

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  • This was really good. inom read it in one morning. Kanae Minato has an fantastisk ability to keep you hooked to the end of every chapter to find out the twist. At the expense of sounding crude, this was a fun read. The audience fryst vatten not one you would normally associate murder with, and, the continuing themes are also something interesting to apply to the murder thriller genre.

    A 4 year old girl fryst vatten killed at a mittpunkt school and her mother, a teacher, knows that this was no accident. She knows who killed her daughter and the entire book is a slow reveal of how her extracts her revenge. So, we find out very early who murdered the girl and we get 6 perspectives that detail what led up to the death and what occurred after. It sounds complex but reads smoothly. It’s almost like reading statements from victims at a crime. You already know who killed and how, it’s just a matter of why.

    Through the novel, Minato manages to touch on a few themes. One in on how we treat people who are af

  • kanae minato biography of donald
  • I discovered ‘Confessions‘ by Kanae Minato by accident. The plot was very appealing and so I picked it up.

    The main character in the story is a teacher in middle school. One day her young daughter is found dead in the swimming pool behind the school. The verdict of the police is that she had drowned. But the teacher discovers that two of the students killed her daughter. She plans her revenge. What happens after that forms the rest of the story.

    When I started reading the book, I thought it would be a revenge thriller. I love a good old-fashioned revenge thriller, in which the good character plans a long, deep revenge on the bad guys and pulls it off. Who doesn’t love this kind of revenge thriller? But after I read the first part of the book, which stretches to around 50 pages, I realized that the story was mostly done and dusted. I wondered what the author was going to do in the next 200 pages. There was only so much you can do, when things are mostly done

    It's the last day of August, and I'm just in time for my monthly review! Today's picks are a fat-positive memoir that I almost decided not to write about because it hit too close to home, and a Japanese thriller/mystery novel that I found at a Book Warehouse in Kentucky. Let's get to it!

    Unashamed: Musings of a Fat, Black Muslim by Leah Vernon

    I mentioned in my last reviewthat I read certain books for very personal reasons and don't review them on the blog, and this memoir was going to be one of them. But then, I enjoyed it so much that I felt compelled to tell y'all about it! I can't remember how I heard about Leah Vernon; maybe it was from one of the body image/fat liberation books that I've read within the past year, or a fat-positive social media count I follow. Truly, I wish I remembered. In any case, once I looked up Leah Vernon, saw that she was from Detroit, and realized that she'd written a book about her life? As in, I'd get to read a book written by a Detroiter