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This story if full of suspence, thrill, and life. The story's events started at the 19th century and ended up on the 20th century. Jamie was a very ambitious young man who was looking forward to be very rich and powerful person. He left to Africa like the others digging for the Gold and the Diamonds. He came across a horrible experience by meeting one the well known business men whome jamie seeked his assisttant and help. He ended up screwed and cheated and about to be killed by this man, but sooner Jamie recovered and took his revenge and became very rich ....(read more to see how...its a thrilling events)..
Kate was Jamie's only child who survived as her elder brother been killed and that been followed by her Dad's death. She lived with her mother and got married to her dad's best friend David. Kate inhereted all the wealth plus her dad's determination and stubborn. Her Company grew larger, cause kate used to have that great passion for the company and the Business world.
Tony, Kate's child, since his child-hood had that great passion for painting and wished that one day he would be a great painter. That was against Kate's plan for her only child who suppose to take over the company from her, so she decided to destroy his dream.... (this part is realy great.. reflect Kate's determination and well plan).
Tony got married and had twins. Eive and Alexandra, two adorable girls with extra ordinary beauty, but opposit characters. Eive was an evile person whome tried several times to kill her sister Alexandra who was sharing her everything and she hated that. Both of them ended up marrying doctores, but read the story to see the total different life they had lead...
On Kate's 90th Birthday.. she was still worried who is going to take over the dynasty she had made...is it going to be her Grand son Roberts (Alexandra's child)??
All the momories was flashing back at her..and still she was worried....
It's too bad that this dedication to and admiration for his subject couldn't save such a lame story, though. The dialog between all of the characters is dull and contrived, and there are a lot of relationship twists that get introduced and never resolved. For instance the crush that older, cranky detective George Wilson has for Becky Neff is mildly interesting, largely unbelievable (a 20 year age difference, a surface level disdain for one another), and completely useless. So is the confusion Becky feels for her husband Dick, who is mired in a police investigation for being on the take in order to fund his dad's nursing home bills. There are feuds and mistrust among the officers, medical examiner, and researchers as well, that seem to serve no other purpose than to create strife, and to make Becky and George's seem like mavericks in their pursuit of the werewolves that only they believe in (with a minimum of proof, I might add).
To swallow the premise of this story, you pretty much need to believe that werewolves have been among us forever, including in our metropolitan areas, yet are intelligent enough to avoid human detection despite eating the weak among us (hobos, drunks, the blind, etc.). In fact, the Wolfen of the story would still be undiscovered were it not for an uncharacteristic errant attack on two police officers at the beginning of the story, and a series of absurd coincidences that eventually lead them into Becky and George's hands. The ending doesn't really solve much, either, and tries to pass off noncommittal as mysteriously vague.
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This futuristic war novel by L. Ron Hubbard was first published in 1940 (serialized in 3 parts), in the pulp magazine Astounding Science Fiction. Nonetheless, the book could still be describing a post WW-III society.
This book reads quickly and is hard to put down for long.
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It's hard not to give away the plot, because the plot is only revealed in the end. It's basically a few huge extremely strange events in one book.
Even though the imagery is very good for this short, Hubbard's language is a little terse and antiquated to make it a quick read. Though overall pretty interesting, I would not recommend this, as I wouldn't know what to classify it as.
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"The Stars Shine Down" is definitely a five-star!
(i lost the copy i bought, and read, several years ago. so i bought another copy. it's a good book to own.)
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I was confused, however, when the plot was wrapped up two thirds of the way through the book. The story was over. What could possibly take up another 200 pages?
The story wasn't over. It really, really, really should have been, though. Really. Everything that happened after that was ridiculous, extraneous, and rather goofy.
New characters--nay, species of alien!--are introduced. A whole new plotline starts.
In fact, the book does this several times. It should have ended about 4 different times. The absolute worst, however, was the brand new, totally overwhelmingly important plotline that is introduced about 50 pages before the end of the book. Everything is tidily resolved in a whirlwind of implausible events that quite frankly insult the reader.
It almost seems like someone else finished the book for him.
It is also in the last parts of the book that L. Ron's anti-psychology views come out. The psychological stuff in the book is extreme beyond belief, totally evil, and really quite stupid. In fact, everything after page 600 was stupid.
The movie, well.... the movie was terrible, having nothing much at all to do with what was in the book. I had wondered how they would be able to make a movie out of such a book, and the answer was they didn't - they junked all but the most basic premise and a couple of characters, and fluffed in the rest - and did a terrible job with it. About all the movie was good for was the special effects. (A note about the movie - John Travolta, he got slammed a lot for his portrayal of Terl, but I actually thought he did OK. Terl, as Hubbard created him in the book, was a half-crazed, paranoid egomaniac, which is how Travolta played the role in the movie... I thought he pulled it off alright myself)
The "Psychlos" are bumbling alien psychotics, so intent on guile and treachery they can't even grab a goo-food stick without provoking a knock down, drag out fight. Through sheer luck, they've stumbled upon technologies which empower them to rule most of the know universes (all 16 of them). The ponderous, overwhelming Psychlo bureaucracy, replete with the cruelest and pettiest, middle level paper pushers imaginable, sets up the perfect "evil empire" that Johnny Good Boy Tyler defeats at every turn, overcoming incredible odds and triumphing over treachery with intelligence, bravery, and unbelievable luck. The almost stereo-typical conflicts in the book are a basis for it's humor and entertainment value, given the author's talent for creating conflicts of epic, even galactic, proportions.
Although I normally read more intellectualy structured fiction, Hubbard somehow has the knack of creating an entertaining story that is fun to read despite it's intentionally low-brow approach. If you like funny, adventure/sci-fi, you will probably like this book a lot.
I liked this book more than the Hubbard "Dekaology". Battlefield Earth is pretty long, but generally holds my interest throughout. It's almost like (2) books, with an initial phase related just to earth, and a final phase, involving the 16 known universes. The Dekalogy in contrast had a lot of underlying bitterness, and was REALLY long, perhaps because Hubbard was near the end of his life, and his goal was to write the longest sci-fi book, not necessarily the best.
I can think of many "serious" sci-fi authors I prefer to L. Ron Hubbard, but I'm hard pressed to think of one who is more entertaining. I look at Battlefield Earth as equal parts Douglas Adams, Tom Swift, and Asimov. Hubbard is from the same generation of classic sci-fi authors as Heinlin, Clark, Asimov, et. al., but in Battlefield Earth, employs a more humorous and easy-going style, without the dated idealism and self-importance found in many older sci-fi classics.
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A remarkably well-written and well-researched biography that brings this vigorous, infuriating, yet oddly attractive ugly duckling to vibrant life. This must rank amongst the best biographies, up there with Ron Chernow's book about the Morgans. Anyone at all interested in movies and movie history will enjoy this.