Bartleboom

DeRank : 35,89
DeAge™ : 7617 days • Here since 9 august 2005
Pajo Scream With Me
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Replaced the language with a working one... enjoy it!! :)))
Pajo Scream With Me
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To tell the truth, the language is correct... I think it's just the destination that's a mess. I shall seek clarification from the reviewer!!
Pajo Scream With Me
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Oh my gosh Giustino, how jittery you are... take a PAJO of tranquilisers! :DD
Pajo Scream With Me
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You said it all!
Depeche Mode Sounds Of The Universe
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Good to know!!! :DD
Depeche Mode Sounds of the universe
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I’m stepping in just to break a piece of orange in favor of the excellent Donnie Darko, who - the only one among the depeche-reviewers - reached out to us before all the others asking if he could send his writing! Love him!! :)))
Marnie Stern This Is It and I Am It And You Are It and So Is That and He Is It ...
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Sorry, I'm not trying to be a show-off myself, but I heard a couple of pieces at the link and I didn't see much virtuosity... I mean: I’ve never been a guitar genius, but I feel I can say that tapping like that isn't a technique for "elected minds." And then all this "cleanliness of the sound just like the guitar" I didn't find... maybe it’s just because I’m used to other listens! Great review anyway and excellent suggestion! :))
Conception In Your Multitude
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But how beautiful was Under a Mourning Star?!? Congratulations also on the review! :))
Jack London Martin Eden
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I have only read 3 of them, so I don't have much weight to throw around. I believe this one is splendid, one of those books that "should be read": it deals with the same political intensity and passion (though it might be better to say "obsession") of writing, of learning. Martin is a character that hides enormous depth: in him converge the most sordid ambitions of capitalism, the desire for success, for wealth, the longing for redemption, along with a good dose of arrogance (as is evident in a scene early in the book, when he sees some students on a bus), but also certain values that stem from his coming from a very low social class, from knowing hunger, poverty, toil, the kind of work that mortifies man more than ennobles him. What the reviewer says is true: by the end of the book, Martin is a man who, one could say, represents the synthesis of two realities (the bourgeois and the proletarian) and, precisely for this reason, cannot be happy in either.
McLusky Undress for Success
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Sir Pipetta!! Then the little island bird does not deceive me!! If only you knew my gratitude towards you... :))