วันเสาร์ที่ 27 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Walking money talks-Outline



If you were "based on a crime that you had been watching from a senior official embedded you want them to know your name? If you knew was going to be taken based on every penny that had incorporated will try to stop them or some other built-in ", so you could?, officials call a Ponzi scheme is going to be played again and the suspect is not only unaware of what is about to happen, but can't they are passing on to their money. The fraudster is so good in this book called Miles Away ...Worlds Apart by Alan Sakowitz that almost makes you wish that the scam was true. If it were true you've specified embedded be buying too much into it. It is a financial thriller the sociopath next door and he's good.

What you have to decide, after reading the book, there was an informant or a true true Samaritan group for another human being. This book educates everyone on how actually do III be careful out there and remember the old saying "if it is too good to be true" what it is. This embedded will be a good book for your child to go to College age so they will not be taken advantage of while they are away from home. It gives many examples of how to do it and how easy it was for people to fall prey to scam like so: trackn artist. Was the fraud that enticed the lawyer to keep the Ponzi scheme? Maybe it was the fact that he said so please actually believed he was helping people. The only thing I was doing was a fortune for others and their money and not feeling any remorse.

At first no one embedded listen: represents and in the end everyone listened. The author has read this book from the time you pick it up until it's over. It's hard to believe that people were so easily fall in the trap, and you as the reader could not stop them as you saw it coming. The author provides details and a great amount of courage to come forward to "the truth.

Francis Odena is an avid reader and loves a good book every day!




วันอังคารที่ 16 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Circle of Assassins



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

A very unique, thought-provoking book and certainly not your every day mystery but one I will be thinking about for sometime.

An ad is placed in the paper entitled Revenge Is Sweet! The contact is A at a PO Box. After sorting through all the responses A comes up with five strangers that are willing to eliminate an unwanted person for another stranger. In return the assassin expects his unwanted person to be eliminated.

The members of the Circle are identified by the letters A, B, C, D, and E. Each person receives a color code as well as detailed instructions on various ways of committing murder, how to be sure you have covered your tracks, and how to make sure no one will discover your identity.

Each chapter is identified by a letter or in some instances a name. You will be reading the instructions given by A as well as details regarding each individual in their own words setting forth their reason for wanting to rid the world of one person.

There are also some before and after chapters which explain the murders feelings before they actually commit the crime and after the crime has been committed.

Victims actually speak to you, prior to their demise of course, regarding their feelings about their life and their friends and loved ones if they have any.

I took a different approach to this book than I normally do when I read a book. I took notes. I had a little note pad listing all the letters and the colors and the names as I found them out in reading the book. I noted who the victims would be under the appropriate letter and color. This was not very time consuming and took up one small page but I thought it really gave me a handle on what was going on and who was doing what and that there would be no surprises for me.

Wrong again! As I got to the end of the book I had one surprise after the other. Things that I didn't see coming even though I thought I had everything lined out.

I totally enjoyed this book and loved reading about the different killers as well as their victims. The killer's reaction after their event took place was a real eye opener.

The conclusion was stunning as far as I'm concerned. This is Tales From the Back Page No. 2. I no more than finished the last page until I ordered Who Gets The Apartment which is Tales From the Back Page No. 1. I understand that Steven Rigolosi will have a third book out in 2008 and I can't wait to order it.

Reviewed by Patricia Reid for Bestsellersworld.com Reviews http://www.bestsellersworld.com/

Cirlce of Assassins-5 Paws
Steven Rigolosi
Ransom Notes Press, 2007, 256 pgs.
ISBN 978-0-9773787-4-6




วันอาทิตย์ที่ 7 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2555

Is Hamlet in Reality a True Crime Story About the Murder of Tycho Brahe?



AppId is over the quota
AppId is over the quota

"Hamlet" by William Shakespeare (1564-1616) is considered one of the greatest plays of all times. We all know the story of the Danish prince whose mother has married the undisclosed murderer of his father, i.e. his uncle who now also has become the new king. However, when most of us see this as the well-established plot of the play, professor Peter Andersen (Universite de Strassbourg) sees it as a sort of allegory over the murder of the famous Danish astronomist, Tycho Brahe (1546-1601). This controversial theory was published in his new book, "Kunstvaerket" (: "The Artwork").

His key to this interpretation is a story from 1603: "Den Hvenske Kr?nike". It is about the enmity of the brother of King James I's wife, Anna, i.e. the Danish king Christian IV (1588-1648) and the astronomist, the murder by proxy by his relative, Erik Brahe, who admitted his crime in a letter, etc., etc.. The reason for the murder is according to Peter Andersen first and foremost the numerous slights by Tycho Brahe against the king's close friend and advisor, Jon Jakobsen (Also goes by the name of Venusin).

One of the reasons for the king's personal hatred of Tycho Brahe may have been the rumours that he had had an affair with his mother and that he had murdered his father, the former king. That made the astronomist out to be the king's natural father and thus robbed him of his legitimacy. According to Peter Andersen, the "Elsinore" of "Hamlet" is not the town of Helsingoer, but the small island of Hven which for many years was the home of Tycho Brahe.

To me this is a rather circumstantial evidence in a crime investigation, but Peter Andersen has assembled a large mass of evidence and is very well read. I think this is a book which shall fall totally or stand tall with time. Many will reject it on sight, so to speak, but only time will tell how it shall fare.

ALL rights reserved

Copyright EC