English, asked by priyankasuke9, 1 year ago

Write a review of your favourite book. Use the following points :

­ Title of the book ­ Author/Authors ­ The central idea or story

­ The important characters ­ Some special features of the book

­ Why it is your favourite book.

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
215
OK so my favorite book is blood for blood trilogy by Catherine Doyle. it is a fiction novel and it's genre is teenfiction. it's story revolves around a girl and a notorious mob.

it's main characters are : Falcone brothers namely Valentino Falcone, Gian Luca Falcone, Gino Falcone, Domnico Falcone and Nicoli Falcone
and then there is this girl named Sophie gracewell who never knew these boys before her summer holiday and she has a best friend named Millie Parker.

if there is any word which suits this book then that is incredibly awesome because this books deals with how the life of a simple teen girl who runs a family diner turns upside down when she meets the most handsome boy she thinks is an angel but in reality he turns out to be an angel maker. and that's not it Sophie gets to know a lot about her family which she never knew before and those dark secrets rise a lots of question in her mind. which push her more into that world from where it is hard to come back from.

this almost nothing in compared to what's inside but this book is filled with surprises and what you read in first part and who you think you now know from the book is actually not the same in it's second part and then comes the third and final part where there is more blood and more heartbreaks.



I love this book because before reading this book I was never a fan of novels and I used to think that novels are super boring but after reading this book I came to realise that these colourless books can be interesting too and this book pushed me more into reading and now I love reading that I read everyday and without reading it feels like my day is incomplete and this book is very special for me as it made me believe that novels can be interesting and I've actually recommend a lot of people to read this book and the review that I got is enough to suggest this book to more people .

this book in three word:
thrilling
exciting
incredible

priyankasuke9: thanks
Anonymous: you're welcome, please mark it as brainliest
Answered by ambikasadanandshetty
15

Now, read a book review.

Book: Gulliver's Travels

Author: Jonathan Swift

First published in 1726, this story of Gulliver's fascinating voyage, shipwreck and landing on the shores of Lilliput is perhaps one of the most read books ever written.

Gulliver begins the story of his journeys in the typical pattern of the travel narratives of his time. He tells the reader a great deal of background information, such as where he was born, the schools he attended, and his profession as a surgeon's assistant. The reader learns that Gulliver began his life in a very ordinary way. He was basically a middle-class man and had to work for a living. By setting up the narrator as an ordinary person in the beginning of the book. Swift helps readers to sense that Gulliver is trustworthy and a regular person whom they can relate to.

Shipwrecked and cast adrift, during one of his voyages, Gulliver wakes to find himself on Lilliput, an island inhabited by little people, whose height makes their quarrels over fashion and fame seem ridiculous. When Gulliver awakens, he finds himself lying on his back, unable to move at all. His arms and legs were firmly fastened on each side to the ground; and his long hair tied down in the same manner. He feels something moving along his body almost up to his chin, and he sees that it is a human creature not six Inches high, with a Bow and Arrow in his Hands, and a Quiver at his Back. Startled by this sight, Gulliver shouts out and soon manages to free his left arm. The frightened little men fire dozens of tiny arrows into his hand, face, and body until he lies calmly. They then build a stage to Gulliver's side that is about a foot and a half tall, upon which a 'Person of Quality stands and makes a ten-minute speech to Gulliver in a language he cannot understand. Gulliver however, understands that he is on the island of Lilliput and the little people are Lilliputians.

After giving assurances of his good behaviour, he is freed, given a residence in Lilliput and becomes a favourite of the court. From there, the book follows Gulliver's observations on the Court of Lilliput. Gulliver assists the Lilliputians to subdue their neighbours the Blefuscudians by stealing their fleet. However, he refuses to reduce the country to a province of Lillipur. This displeases the King and the court. Gulliver is charged with treason and sentenced to be blinded. With the assistance of a kind friend, Gulliver escapes to Blefuscu, where he spots and retrieves an abandoned boat and sails out to be rescued by a passing ship which safely takes him back home.

Gulliver's travels is a satire on human nature. The readers are placed in Gulliver's shoes. Gulliver represents an ordinary man, a middle-class Englishman who is fundamentally decent and well-intentioned. The Lilliputians, a tiny race of people, represent much of what is petty and small-minded about the English and humankind in gene They are physically and morally smaller than Gulliver. They are pompous, self-important, self-serving, hypocritical, and surprisingly dangerous and cruel in spite of their small size.

Similar questions