Posts Tagged ‘optical’
What people think about Microsoft Notebook Wireless Optical
I wasn’t sure if this mouse was as good as the reviews. I tried some others and found the lacking. This one tracks flawlessly on most surfaces and has a quality feel. You won’t be sorry if you buy one!
Microsoft Wireless Notebook Optical
Happy on BTM Compact Optical 11
Water For Elephants follows Jacob Jankowski who is either 90 or 93, he can’t remember, as he reminisces about his days during the most trying time in his life. He was about to graduate from Cornell with his degree in veterinary medicine when he gets word that both of his parents have died. Not only that, but he finds out that because of the economy (during the great depression) his father’s veterinary business was so far under that their house is taken and the business is gone. He has nothing left but to take his final exam and somehow start a new life completely on his own. In the middle of his exam he breaks down, runs away and hops a train out of town… but it’s not just any train, it ends up being a circus train for the Benzini Bros circus and they don’t like stowaways. This begins a roller coaster ride that will last 3 1/2 months with a crash course in taking care of large animals, understanding business, befriending a grouchy midget and learning what love truly is.
Passion, hatred, murder and even a wild animal stampede add to the delight I found in this book. We see glimpses of the 93 yr old Jacob living in a nursing home feeling helpless followed by wonderful tales of his life on the circus train with Rosie, Walter and the lovely Marlena. I found it to be extremely well written and it flowed nicely always making you want to read on and see what will happen. Sara Gruen did a great job of switching back and forth between young and old Jacob and keeping the story just as interesting while in either time. I was just as attached to and invested in 93 yr old Jacob as I was in the young handsome veterinarian with morals and principles from Benzini Bros Circus of 1931.
I definitely recommend this book and will probably read it again once I make it through my summer TBR list.
BTM 11 Compact Optical
Say hi to Wireless Optical Internet Keyboard
Unless you’ve been locked in a coffin for the past four years, you already know that Twilight is the story of the romance between out-of-place teenager Bella and ageless vampire Edward. The novel was initially marketed at Young Adult readers, but Stephanie Meyer’s first novel quickly proved that it had the ability to cross age barriers and has become a publishing tsunami.
Stephanie Meyer is either a genius, naive, or perverted. I’m not sure which. What an ingenious feat she has accomplished. The concept of an 100-year old vampire obsessed with a 16-year old girl is more disturbing than anything Anne Rice has written (even in her sado-sexual fantasy novels), and Meyer has brilliantly disguised all this perversion in the guise of a sappy romance … and the general public has swallowed it completely! Lolita could not find an American publisher for years, but Meyer’s books are proudly displayed on the shelves of Wal-Mart and school libraries across America!
The story is told in first person from the perspective of Bella, who is shy and lacking in confidence; her sarcastic inner voice narrates the story for the reader. Meyer keeps Bella’s narrative simple and yet full of beautiful passages.
The romance between Edward and Bella is both touching and creepy. There is a melancholic feel to their impossible love, yet at the same time they both are unwilling to give up hope that their relationship is not doomed. The book reaches a fever pitch of excitement as the romance between Bella and Edward turns into a frantic race to stay alive. But again, Edwar is 100 years old, and Bella is sixteen.
I admire any writer who goes against convention; most of us have become bored by the glut of cookie-cutter vampire books that flooded the market in the post 1980s success of Anne Rice. Meyer uses the vampire device as an interesting way to explore a very cliqued story: young teenage forbidden love, and pulls it off with a disturbing touch of dark romanticism. Bravo!