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Reviews tagging 'Bullying'
The Shepherd's Life: Modern Dispatches from an Ancient Landscape by James Rebanks
2 reviews
alicepg's review against another edition
On on of the first pages, the author flippantly admits to bullying a classmate so viciously, they killed themselves in their car.
This is not an author whose book I want to read, no matter how much he knows about sheep. I can understand a farmer being harsh and unsentimental about farming. I cannot imagine any normal person leaving a by-the-by comment about one of the most horrific things you can do to someone in the intro of their book.
When people tell you who they are, believe them.
This is not an author whose book I want to read, no matter how much he knows about sheep. I can understand a farmer being harsh and unsentimental about farming. I cannot imagine any normal person leaving a by-the-by comment about one of the most horrific things you can do to someone in the intro of their book.
When people tell you who they are, believe them.
Graphic: Bullying
Moderate: Suicide
amberinbookland's review against another edition
informative
inspiring
medium-paced
5.0
A NEW FAVOURITE NON-FICTION BOOK!
It had the perfect combination of factual information, beautiful descriptions, social commentary and personal anecdotes.
I loved the discussions about how most people hold such a limited definition of intelligence and how that harms everyone involved. I loved the commentary on how artificial the tourism industry is and how you come to rely on it even though it also threatens your way of life in a lot of ways. And I loved how the author critiqued how the Lake District is romanticised by those who lack true insight and understanding of the land and life there.
Aaah I just loved this book so much.
I kind of want to read it again right now...
It had the perfect combination of factual information, beautiful descriptions, social commentary and personal anecdotes.
I loved the discussions about how most people hold such a limited definition of intelligence and how that harms everyone involved. I loved the commentary on how artificial the tourism industry is and how you come to rely on it even though it also threatens your way of life in a lot of ways. And I loved how the author critiqued how the Lake District is romanticised by those who lack true insight and understanding of the land and life there.
Aaah I just loved this book so much.
I kind of want to read it again right now...
Graphic: Animal cruelty, Animal death, Bullying, Cancer, Death, Gore, Suicide, Terminal illness, Excrement, Grief, and Pregnancy