Senin, 07 Juli 2008

Readers Digest: Best Jokes


“Laughter the best medicine” is a term coined by Reader’s Digest
and we deliver small doses in every issue of the magazine. But we
sometimes need an extra-large booster to get into really great shape,
and this book — a collection of the best jokes from all over — is it.

This book is guaranteed to keep you in good humour for a long time to come.

But don’t keep its benefits to yourself — tell them to your family, friends and colleagues. You’ll become their favourite physician.

One of the jokes:

"Aman was driving well above the speed limit when a police car suddenly emerged from behind, sirens blaring. Thinking he’d outpace the cop, the
man pushed his accelerator to the floor. His car’s speed rose to sixty, then
seventy, eighty, and ninety. Finally, the man thought, what the heck, and
pulled over, ready to receive a speeding ticket.
The police officer got out, leaned over the man and said: ‘Listen, Mister, I
have had a really lousy day, and I just want to go home. Give me a good
excuse and I’ll let you go.’
The man thought for a moment and said: ‘Three weeks ago my wife ran off
with a police officer. When I saw your car in my mirror, I thought you were
that officer and were trying to give her back to me.’
No ticket."

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Solar Zodiac Details


Zodiac denotes an annual cycle of twelve stations along the ecliptic, the apparent path of the sun across the heavens through the constellations that divide the ecliptic into twelve equal zones of celestial longitude. The zodiac is recognized as the first known celestial coordinate system. Babylonian astronomers developed the zodiac of twelve signs. The etymology of the term zodiac is that it comes from the Latin zōdiacus, from the Greek ζῳδιακός [κύκλος], meaning "circle of animals", derived from ζῴδιον, the diminutive of ζῷον "animal". However, the classical Greek zodiac also includes signs (also constellations) that are not represented by animals (e.g., Aquarius, Virgo, Gemini and for some Libra). Another suggested etymology is that the Greek term is cognate with the Sanskrit sodi, denoting "a path", i.e., the path through which the Sun travels.

The zodiac also means a region of the celestial sphere that includes a band of eight arc degrees above and below the ecliptic, and therefore encompasses the paths of the Moon and the naked eye planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn). The classical astronomers called these planets wandering stars to differentiate them from the fixed stars of the celestial sphere (Ptolemy). Astrologers understood the movement of the planets and the Sun through the zodiac as a means of explaining and predicting events on Earth.

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Kamis, 19 Juni 2008


Sherlock Holmes is a famous fictional detective of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who first appeared in publication in 1887. He is the creation of Scottish-born author and physician Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. A brilliant London-based detective, Holmes is famous for his intellectual prowess, and is renowned for his skillful use of "deductive reasoning" while using abductive reasoning (inference to the best explanation) and astute observation to solve difficult cases.

Conan Doyle wrote four novels and fifty-six short stories that featured Holmes. All but four stories are narrated by Holmes's friend and biographer, Dr. John H. Watson; two are narrated by Sherlock Holmes himself, and two others are written in the third person. The first two stories, short novels, appeared in Beeton's Christmas Annual for 1887 and Lippincott's Monthly Magazine in 1890. The character grew tremendously in popularity with the beginning of the first series of short stories in The Strand Magazine in 1891; further series of short stories and two serialised novels appeared almost right up to Conan Doyle's death in 1930. The stories cover a period from around 1878 up to 1903, with a final case in 1914.

But this novel wrote by Tracy Dawn Mack and Michael Peter Citrin who may be the fans of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

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Maya, Mystery of the World and Love


Jostein Gaarder (born August 8, 1952 in Oslo) is a Norwegian intellectual and author of several novels, short stories and children's books. Gaarder often writes from the perspective of children, exploring their sense of wonder about the world. He often uses metafiction in his works, writing stories within stories.

Gaarder was born into a pedagogical family. His best known work is the novel Sophie's World, subtitled A Novel about the History of Philosophy (ISBN 0-425-15225-1). This popular work has been translated into fifty-three languages; there are over thirty million copies in print, with three million copies sold in Germany alone.

In 1997, he established the Sophie Prize together with his wife Siri Dannevig. This prize is an international environment and development prize (USD 100,000 = 77,000 €), awarded annually. It is named after the novel.

Now, he's back with the new novel Maya, Mystery of the World and Love.

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Barack Obama: From Jakarta to the White House

Elected the first black president of the Harvard Law Review, Obama was offered a book contract, but the intellectual journey he planned to recount became instead this poignant, probing memoir of an unusual life. Born in 1961 to a white American woman and a black Kenyan student, Obama was reared in Hawaii by his mother and her parents, his father having left for further study and a return home to Africa. So Obama's not-unhappy youth is nevertheless a lonely voyage to racial identity, tensions in school, struggling with black literature?with one month-long visit when he was 10 from his commanding father. After college, Obama became a community organizer in Chicago. He slowly found place and purpose among folks of similar hue but different memory, winning enough small victories to commit himself to the work?he's now a civil rights lawyer there. Before going to law school, he finally visited Kenya; with his father dead, he still confronted obligation and loss, and found wellsprings of love and attachment. Obama leaves some lingering questions?his mother is virtually absent?but still has written a resonant book.

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The Da Vinci Code


While in Paris on business, Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon receives an urgent late-night phone call: the elderly curator of the Louvre has been murdered inside the museum. Near the body, police have found a baffling cipher. Solving the enigmatic riddle, Langdon is stunned to discover it leads to a trail of clues hidden in the works of Da Vinci…clues visible for all to see…and yet ingeniously disguised by the painter.

Langdon joins forces with a gifted French cryptologist, Sophie Neveu, and learns the late curator was involved in the Priory of Sion—an actual secret society whose members included Sir Isaac Newton, Botticelli, Victor Hugo, and Da Vinci, among others. The Louvre curator has sacrificed his life to protect the Priory's most sacred trust: the location of a vastly important religious relic, hidden for centuries.

In a breathless race through Paris, London, and beyond, Langdon and Neveu match wits with a faceless powerbroker who appears to work for Opus Dei—a clandestine, Vatican-sanctioned Catholic sect believed to have long plotted to seize the Priory's secret. Unless Langdon and Neveu can decipher the labyrinthine puzzle in time, the Priory's secret—and a stunning historical truth—will be lost forever.

In an exhilarating blend of relentless adventure, scholarly intrigue, and cutting wit, symbologist Robert Langdon (first introduced in Dan Brown's bestselling Angels & Demons) is the most original character to appear in years. THE DA VINCI CODE heralds the arrival of a new breed of lightening-paced, intelligent thriller…surprising at every twist, absorbing at every turn, and in the end, utterly unpredictable…right up to its astonishing conclusion.

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Angels & Demons


When world-renowned Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon is summoned to a Swiss research facility to analyze a mysterious symbol -- seared into the chest of a murdered physicist -- he discovers evidence of the unimaginable: the resurgence of an ancient secret brotherhood known as the Illuminati... the most powerful underground organization ever to walk the earth.

The Illuminati has surfaced from the shadows to carry out the final phase of its legendary vendetta against its most hated enemy... the Catholic Church.

Langdon's worst fears are confirmed on the eve of the Vatican's holy conclave, when a messenger of the Illuminati announces he has hidden an unstoppable time bomb at the very heart of Vatican City. With the countdown under way, Langdon jets to Rome to join forces with Vittoria Vetra, a beautiful and mysterious Italian scientist, to assist the Vatican in a desperate bid for survival.

Embarking on a frantic hunt through sealed crypts, dangerous catacombs, deserted cathedrals, and even to the heart of the most secretive vault on earth, Langdon and Vetra follow a 400-year old trail of ancient symbols that snakes across Rome toward the long-forgotten Illuminati lair... a secret location that contains the only hope for Vatican salvation.

An explosive international thriller, ANGELS & DEMONS careens from enlightening epiphanies to dark truths as the battle between science and religion turns to war...

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Digital Fortress



Chillingly current and filled with more intelligence secrets than Tom Clancy, Digital Fortress transports the reader deep within the most powerful intelligence organization on earth--the National Security Agency (NSA)--an ultra-secret, multi-billion dollar agency which (until now) less than three percent of Americans knew existed.

When the NSA's most classified technological wonder--an invincible code-breaking machine--encounters a mysterious code it cannot break, the agency calls in its head cryptographer, Susan Fletcher, a brilliant and beautiful mathematician. What she uncovers sends shock waves through the corridors of power.

The NSA is being held hostage... not by guns or bombs, but by a code so ingeniously complex that if released it will cripple U.S. intelligence.

Caught in an accelerating tempest of secrecy and lies, Susan Fletcher battles to save the agency she believes in. Betrayed on all sides she finds herself fighting not only for her country, but for her life, and in the end, for the life of the man she loves

With a startling twist that leaves the agency scrambling to avert the biggest intelligence disaster in U.S. history, Digital Fortress never lets up.

From the underground hallways of power, to the skyscrapers of Tokyo, to the towering cathedrals of Spain, a desperate race unfolds. It is a battle for survival -- a crucial bid to destroy a creation of inconceivable genius... an impregnable code-writing formula that threatens to obliterate the balance of power. Forever.

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Senin, 16 Juni 2008

Deception point


Rare object buried deep in the Arctic ice, the floundering space agency proclaims a much-needed victory… a victory that has profound implications for U.S. space policy and the impending presidential election.

With the Oval Office in the balance, the President dispatches White House Intelligence analyst Rachel Sexton to the Milne Ice Shelf to verify the authenticity of the find. Accompanied by a team of experts, including the charismatic academic Michael Tolland, Rachel uncovers the unthinkable—evidence of scientific trickery—a bold deception that threatens to plunge the world into controversy.

But before Rachel can contact the President, she and Michael are attacked by a deadly task force…a private team of assassins controlled by a mysterious powerbroker who will stop at nothing to hide the truth. Fleeing for their lives in an environment as desolate as it is lethal, they possess only one hope for survival: to find out who is behind this masterful ploy. The truth, they will learn, is the most shocking deception of all…

In his most thrilling novel to date, bestselling author Dan Brown transports readers from the ultra-secret National Reconnaissance Office to the towering ice shelves of the Arctic Circle, and back again to the hallways of power inside the West Wing. Heralded for masterfully intermingling science, history, and politics in his critically acclaimed thriller Angels & Demons, Brown has crafted another novel in which nothing is as it seems—and behind every corner is a stunning surprise. DECEPTION POINT is pulse-pounding fiction at its best.

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The Girls of Riyadh


An unknown girl in her early twenties decides to narrate the story of her friends. She is like a modern Scheherazade that narrates these stories every weekend. Her motivation is to revenge the tyranny of life and the society against her friends. Each chapter in the novel starts with a piece of poetry, a verse from the Quran, or lyrics from a famous song that captured the idea of the chapter.

The narrator sends e-mails from her internet group to the subscribers. Those e-mails as the narrator forecasts in the novel stir the media especially popular newspapers in Saudi like Al-Riyadh, Al-Watan and Al-Jazeerah which happened in real life after the novel was published. This kind of forecasting added reality and intrigue to the novel. In one segment, the narrator says that she will probably be interviewed on Al-Arabiya TV by one of the most important interviewers in the Arab World: Turki Al-Dakheel (his style is similar to Tim Sebastian in Hard Talk on BBC or Ted Koppel on ABC news) which also took place.

The novel speaks of 4 Saudi girls who are studying at the university in Riyadh, the Capital of Saudi Arabia: Sadeem, Qamrah, Lamees and Mashael (her name is similar to Michelle in pronunciation. She is half Saudi and half American. Her American mother and friends prefer to call her Michelle).

The four girls were bound by a strong friendship despite their differences. Each one of them went into her own failures except Lamees who succeeded in both her professional career and her love life. She got married to a man of her choosing and went with her husband to Canada to get her Boards in Medicine. Lamees was the fortune teller of the group. She was consulted by her friends about their future matches and emotional relationships. At one point in the novel she had to sever her friendship with a girl called Fatima due to religious differences. Fatima was from the Shiites minority while Lamees belonged to the Sunnites majority. Lamees liked Fatima’s brother who was studying Medicine at the same University, but the relation had to end abruptly after they were both caught in a café by the Police of Morals and Virtue (dating is not allowed in Saudi and is an offense punishable by Men of Religion). Her father was more like her friend and was very understanding. He insisted that she never meet anyone outside the university in the future. Fatima’s brother, on the other hand, suffered at the hands of the Moral Police and his suffering was compounded since he was a Shiites.

Lamees had a kind heart. She helped her friends solve their problems and supported them in times of need. For example, she taught her ill-treated friend, Qamrah, how to use the internet, send e-mails and chat online to break through the isolation that was imposed upon her after she was divorced and was left with a baby.

The story of Qamrah who married Rashid after an arranged citing where the two families allowed the prospective husband to see the girl only once to decide whether he liked her or not and then if he did, he would marry her. There was no dating, no exchange of ideas or thoughts. “See the girl once and make up your mind!” The girl also used the same chance to see the man and give her opinion. Since they both agreed, their families proceeded with the marriage. The story unfolded with this beginning as the narrator continued to describe the wedding of Qamrah and how the tape for the walk-down the aisle music got stuck which symbolically signaled the failure of that marriage. The newly wed went to Chicago so Rashid could finish his postgraduate studies in electronic commerce. Seven nights passed and he did not care about his wife’s feelings and stayed away from her without touching her. The quarrels started in the end and reached a climax when Rashid declared his hate to his new wife. He eventually forced her to give up her hijab and she did in the hope she could win his heart (Moslem women are supposed to wear lose garments that did not reveal the silhouette of their bodies and they should not reveal any body parts except their face and hands). When he saw her without hijab, he thought she looked very ugly and asked her to wear the Hijab again to hide the ugliness. Qamrah loved Rashid despite his cruelty. When she learned of his betrayal with an American-Japanese woman called Carry, she lost her mind. She insisted on meeting the mistress and Carry mocked her by calling Rashid in front of her. Qamrah in return revenged or may be she thought it was revenge when she stopped taking her contraceptive pill. She became pregnant. In the back of her mind, she thought she could change the behavior of her husband through pregnancy as her mother advised her. When Rashid found out she was pregnant, he slapped her and sent her back to Riyadh followed up with her divorce paper. Her second tragedy unfolded when Qamrah used the first name of Rashid’s father to name her new baby in a last attempt to win the sympathy of her husband (it is a tradition in Saudi that babies are first-named after the first name of their grandparents as a gesture of love and respect). The husband did not care and his family showed callous reactions as they were not concerned with that new baby. Qamrah became a single parent and she lived at her father’s house isolated. Her family prevented her from going out since she was divorced and such actions from a divorced woman may bring her ill-reputation. Divorced women in their opinion only brought problems. But her friends managed to get her out of that unbearable jail every now and then.


Sadeem’s story was not less tragic than that of Qamrah. This girl, who was raised by her father as her mother died soon after her birth, would lose her first love and the second one. She revenged both through her marriage to her cousin Tarik whom she never thought would marry despite his strong feelings towards her (Consanguineous marriages are discouraged by Islam but are not prohibited. In a society that separates men from women in all social gatherings, there is no chance to see a woman except those who are relatives which is another reason why consanguineous marriages make a big share of all marriages in Saudi). Her first emotional tragedy was caused by her fiancé Walid who deserted her after they were officially wed for a few months and before their wedding party. She gave him herself during one night considering that he was her husband officially despite that the wedding did not take place yet. He suddenly disappeared after that night and never showed up again. He eventually sent her the divorce paper. It was a shock which she blamed on herself as she did not wait till after the wedding party. Sadeem never told her family about that night and she collapsed emotionally onto herself. She believed the reason that Walid divorced her was that he thought she had previous sexual experiences (In Saudi, engagement is different from the West. The man and woman are considered officially engaged when their marital vows are exchanged and documents are signed. The period from the time of signing the documents till the night of the wedding when they practice sex together for the first time is the engagement period. The virginity of the woman is flowered at that night. There is nothing in Islam to prevent them from practicing sex before that night as they are officially wed, but that is considered a big mistake by the society and men usually get the impression that the girl is too easy or she had extra-marital relations with others if she did such a thing. The second shock was caused by Firas whom she met in London while she was recuperating from her first tragedy. She fell in love with him as he did. But his elite position in Saudi and the fact that he never married before prevented him from getting married to a divorced woman as it would have brought him bad gossip which he did not need (divorced women in the Saudi society are associated with ill-reputation especially if they traveled outside the country and met men like what Sadeem did). Firas married one of his relatives. He later called Sadeem and offered to continue the relationship without leaving his wife. Sadeem refused the offer and became more desperate. Her suffering increased as Firas continued to call her. She finally decided to forget all about him and established her own bridal arrangement company which was on its own an irony. Her friends helped her establish the company. In the end, Sadeem found herself in front of her cousin Tarik who adored her and revered her. She found no choice, but to marry him and revenge both men in her past who nearly destroyed her.

Mashael as her real Arabic name or Michelle as her mother and friends used to call her was more realistic and more liberal. On the contrary to her friends, she relatively enjoyed more freedom. Michelle was born to a Saudi father and an American mother. One day, she stumbled into Faisal by coincidence when he asked her along with her girlfriends to allow him to enter the shopping mall with them as a brother (In Saudi, single young men are not allowed to enter certain famous shopping malls to avoid the harassment and flirting they initiate towards women). This brief encounter was the start of mutual love and a happy Valentine’s Day for the first time in her life. After Valentine’s memorabilia spread every where, the university officially decides based on the request of the Police of Morals and Virtue to ban all forms of festivity of Valentine’s Day since it was a Christian event that ignited unvirtuous feelings between boys and girls. The love lasted a year and when Michelle asked Faisal to marry her, he backed off since his mother refused to allow him to marry a girl not of the family choosing and on top of that born to an American mother. She lost her faith in men. After such a shock, she traveled to San Francisco to study in the company of her American cousin. They developed mutual admiration, but things never progressed to frank love. Faced with this confusing relationship, she traveled back to her father who decided to move the whole family to Dubai to avoid the gossip and ill-reputation that haunted his daughter. He was a liberal and adored his American wife who lost her uterus to cancer. They decided to adopt a baby boy whom they called Mish-´al and they nicknamed him Misho. Being forthcoming and simple characterized Michelle’s personality. She hated hypocrisy and lies. When she moved to Dubai, she worked at one of the satellite TV channels owned by the father of her Emirati girlfriend, Jumanah (Emirati belonging to United Arab Emirates where Dubai is located). She succeeded in her work and lived freely. Michelle admired a TV director that worked with her, but remained confused whether she loved him or not. She asked her father if he would allow her to appear on TV as there was an opening for a TV hostess, but he refused and convinced her that her appearance on TV would lead to reverberations that might reach Saudi and his family. He also pointed out to her that he did not want that kind of headache. Michelle did not speak Arabic fluently and always used English words when her Arabic failed her. She revenged from Faisal when she attended his wedding uninvited and left him a message on his cell phone telling him that she was in the ball room. Michelle bewildered him. After some delay, he entered and found Michelle dancing among the girls. He started to worry: “what next?”, but Michelle left before others recognized her. She felt so happy after what she did.

There was one more character that was connected to the four girls: Um Nowayer. In the Arab World, the mother and the father are nicknamed after their offspring as a sign of respect. The offspring name appears preceded by a prefix Abu for the father and Um for the mother. Um Nowayer was a Kuwaiti lady that was married to a Saudi who left her and her son after 15 years of marriage. She opened her house to the girls to meet when they could not find a place to meet. She became a friend to all of them, helped them in times of need and worked sometimes with them. Um Nowayer was in her 39th year, a bald woman who was able to face her only son’s problem with courage. Her son’s name was Nouri, but he was gayish and that made people call him Nowayer which is a feminine name close to Nouri. Consequently, everyone called her Um Nowayer instead of Um Nouri. At first, she did not bear ridicule, but she defied her neighbors and insisted later on being called Um Nowayer. She sought medical treatment of her son’s condition. One doctor told her it is a psychological problem and not a physical one which may be related to the loss of the parental figure in the family. The son eventually grew out of it after two years of psychological treatment.

The title of the novel is full of irony. It was taken from a song by a very famous Saudi singer and the internet address of the group was called “Memoirs Exposed” which is a twist on the name of a famous TV show called “Memoirs Disclosed”. The novel was also full with humor and laughs as the narrator commented on the events with her witty style. For example, she described how the girls danced in the wedding in a hilarious way and the way women looked at each other with jealousy. She also described how men walked in their ugly underwear in the house after marriage and made fun of that.

The novel ended with one success which was the marriage of Lamees to her colleague in Medical School. As it seemed Lamees learnt from the mistakes of her friends and never repeated them. In fact, she planned a strategy to win her colleague’s heart after she saw him and fell in love with him from first sight. She used everything at her disposal to lure him into her net. Her successful strategy culminated with a lovely marriage and a trip to Canada to obtain her boards in Medicine.

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The Sisters Grimm: The Fairy-Tale Detectives


The Sisters Grimm: The Fairy-Tale Detectives (Book One)

By Michael Buckley
Illustrated by Peter Ferguson

In Book One of the series, we meet two sisters, Sabrina and Daphne, who have been sent to live with their mysterious grandmother, Relda Grimm. From their first day in Ferryport Landing, the sisters begin to unravel a mystery that reveals a family secret. Sabrina and Daphne learn they are descendants of the Brothers Grimm, whose famous book of fairy tales is actually a history book. Snow White, the Three Little Pigs, the Big Bad Wolf—they're all alive and now neighbors of Granny Relda in this community of Everafters, as magical folks like to be called.

But life is not a fairy tale in Ferryport Landing. Someone has set a giant loose on the town, and it's up to the sisters Grimm to stop the giant and find the Everafter behind its murderous rampage. Is it Mayor Charming, formerly Prince Charming, who may have plans to get his kingdom back? Or Jack, the erstwhile giant killer, now working at the Big & Tall store?

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The kite runner..


The Kite Runner tells the story of Amir, a boy from the Wazir Akbar Khan district of Kabul, who is haunted by the guilt of betraying his childhood friend Hassan, the son of his father's Hazara servant. The story is set against a backdrop of tumultuous events, from the fall of the monarchy in Afghanistan through the Soviet invasion, the mass exodus of refugees to Pakistan and the United States, and the rise of the Taliban regime.
The story of 25 chapters is narrated by Amir, directed to the reader, except that chapter 16 is narrated by Rahim Khan, directed to Amir.

The two main characters of the story are Amir, a well-to-do Afghan boy, and Hassan, a Hazara and the son of Amir's father's servant, Ali. The boys spend their days in a peaceful Kabul, kite fighting, roaming the streets and being boys. Amir’s father, Baba, loves both the boys, but seems critical of Amir for not being manly enough. Amir also fears his father blames him for his mother’s death during childbirth. However, he has a kind father figure in the form of Rahim Khan, Baba’s friend, who understands Amir better, and is supportive of his interest in writing stories.

Assef, a notoriously mean and violent older boy with sadistic tendencies, blames Amir for socializing with a Hazara, according to Assef an inferior race that should only live in Hazarajat. He prepares to attack Amir with his brass knuckles, but Hassan bravely stands up to him, threatening to shoot Assef in the eye with his slingshot. Assef and his henchmen back off, but Assef says he will take revenge.

Hassan is a successful "kite runner" for Amir, knowing where the kite will land without even watching it. One triumphant day, Amir wins the local tournament, and finally Baba's praise. Hassan goes to run the last cut kite, a great trophy, for Amir saying "For you, a thousand times over." Unfortunately, Hassan runs into Assef and his two henchmen. Hassan refuses to give up Amir's kite, so Assef exacts his revenge, assaulting and anally raping him. Wondering why Hassan is taking so long, Amir searches for Hassan and hides when he hears Assef's voice. He witnesses the rape but is too scared to help him. Afterwards, for some time Hassan and Amir keep a distance from each other. Amir reacts indifferently because he feels ashamed, and is frustrated by Hassan's saint-like behavior. Already jealous of Baba's love for Hassan, he worries if Baba knew how bravely Hassan defended Amir's kite, and how cowardly Amir acted, that Baba's love for Hassan would grow even more.

To force Hassan to leave, Amir frames him as a thief, and Hassan falsely confesses. Baba forgives him, despite the fact that, as he explained earlier, he believes that "there is no act more wretched than stealing". Hassan and his father Ali, to Baba's extreme sorrow, leave anyway. Hassan's departure frees Amir of the daily reminder of his cowardice and betrayal, but he still lives in their shadow and his guilt.

A short while later, the Russians invade Afghanistan; Amir and Baba escape to Peshawar, Pakistan and then to Fremont, California, where Amir and Baba, who lived in luxury in an expensive mansion in Afghanistan, settle in a run-down apartment and Baba begins work at a gas station. Amir eventually takes classes at a local community college to develop his writing skills. Every Sunday, Baba and Amir make extra money selling used goods at a flea market in San Jose. There, Amir meets Soraya Taheri and her family; Soraya's father has contempt of Amir's literary aspiration. Baba develops lung cancer but is still capable of granting Amir one last favor: he asks Soraya's father permission for Amir to marry her. He agrees and the two marry. Shortly thereafter Baba dies. Amir and Soraya learn that they cannot have children.

Amir embarks on a successful career as a novelist. Fifteen years after his wedding, Amir receives a call from Rahim Khan, who is dying from an illness. Rahim Khan asks Amir to come to Pakistan. He enigmatically tells Amir "there is a way to be good again". Amir goes.

From Rahim Khan, Amir learns the fates of Ali and Hassan. Ali was killed by a land mine. Hassan had a wife and a son, named Sohrab, and had returned to Baba’s house as a caretaker at Rahim Khan’s request. One day the Taliban ordered him to give it up and leave, but he refused, and was murdered, along with his wife. And the secret truth about Hassan is that Ali was not his father. He is the son of Baba, and is Amir's half-brother. Finally, Rahim Khan reveals that the true reason he has called Amir to Pakistan is to go to Kabul to rescue Hassan's son, Sohrab, from an orphanage.

Amir returns to Taliban-controlled Kabul with a guide, Farid, and searches for Sohrab at the orphanage. However, he does not find Sohrab there. The director of the orphanage tells them that a Taliban official comes often, brings cash and usually takes a girl home. Once in a while however, he takes a boy, recently Sohrab. The director tells Amir to go to a football match and the man "wearing black sunglasses" will be the man who took Sohrab. In order to enter Taliban territory, Amir, who is normally clean shaven, dons a fake beard and mustache, because otherwise the Taliban would exact Shariah punishment against him. Farid manages to secure an appointment with the speaker at his home, by saying that he and Amir have "personal business" with him.

Amir goes to the house where he finds out that the Taliban official, the man in sunglasses, is actually his childhood nemesis Assef, who recognizes his face behind the fake beard. Sohrab is being kept at the home where he is made to dance dressed in women's clothes, and it seems Assef might have been sexually assaulting him. (Sohrab later says, "I'm so dirty and full of sin. The bad man and the other two did things to me.") Assef agrees to relinquish him, but only if Amir can beat him in a fight to the death, with Sohrab as the prize. Assef brutally beats Amir, but Amir is saved when Sohrab uses his slingshot to shoot out Assef's left eye, fulfilling the threat his father had made years before.

Amir tells Sohrab of his plans to take him back to America and possibly adopt him, and promises that he will never be sent to an orphanage again. When difficulties arise in adopting Sohrab from Afghanistan, Amir tells Sohrab that he might have to stay in an orphanage for a while after all, and, Sohrab, devastated that Amir considers going back on his promise, attempts suicide by repeatedly cutting himself. Amir finds Sohrab in time to save his life, and takes him back to the United States. However, Sohrab is emotionally damaged and refuses to speak. This continues on for about a year until his frozen emotions are temporarily thawed when Amir reminisces about his father, Hassan, while kite flying. Amir shows off some of Hassan’s tricks, and Sohrab begins to interact with Amir again. In the end Sohrab only shows a lopsided smile, but Amir takes to it with all his heart as he runs the kite for Sohrab, saying, "For you, a thousand times over."

This ebook is indonesian version, for download please go to the following link:

http://tinyurl.com/43hh92

Attention.. very important!!

For anyone who needs email and password, please kindly download the following file:

http://tinyurl.com/5pema8

patria es humanidad


Tracy Kidder (born November 12, 1945, in New York City) is an American author and Vietnam War veteran. Kidder may be best known, especially within the computing community, for his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Soul of a New Machine, an account of the development of Data General's Eclipse/MV minicomputer. The book typifies his distinctive style of research. He began following the project at its inception and, in addition to interviews, spent considerable time observing the engineers at work and outside of it. Using this perspective he was able to produce a more textured portrait of the development process than a purely retrospective study might.

Kidder followed up with House, in which he chronicles the design and construction of the award-winning Souweine House in Amherst, Massachusetts. House reads like a novel, but it is based on many hours of research with the architect, builders, clients, in-laws, and other interested parties.

In 2003, Kidder also published Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, A Man Who Would Cure The World after a chance encounter with Paul Farmer led him to do extensive research on Farmer's life and work on alleviating poverty and disease worldwide. The book received wide critical acclaim and became a New York Times bestseller. Actor and social activist Edward Norton has said the book had a profound influence on him. It is now widely assigned as required reading for incoming freshman at various colleges and universities.

This book is indonesian version, for you who want to download please click the following link:


http://tinyurl.com/6x5dn5

Senin, 09 Juni 2008

euro cup 2008 schedule..

guys, sorry i'm posting this just now. but for a good thing that is never too late.
for u football maniacs, i give schedule of euro cup 2008 in excel format. you can modified that file with an update of the tournament.

please click the link below:

download



don't forget to watch ur favourite teams.

my last words, bravo Germany..! !

many ebooks u can download..

hi all..
on this site u can download any kinds of ebook that i provide..
from medical until computing and from love stuff until making money from internet.
all u just to do is only download, download and download.
never worried about payment things because all ebooks in my database are totally free..
once again, those are ultimately free..
horray..horray..

i'm also give some review about the books, maybe u can put up some comments there.

and some advice from me, although those ebooks are free please be gentle not to commercialize them, you'll take more once you give more.. and please buy those books once available on the store.. (if u have money certainly, hehe..)

okay, that's all guys and gals..