Happy hour in hell free download on tusfiles
Advanced embedding details, examples, and help! Angel Bobby Dollar sets out to rescue his girlfriend Casimira, who is being held hostage in the netherworld by the demon Eligor, while also trying to elude an undead psychopath named Smyler. There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write a review.
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Loved each and every part of this book. I will definitely recommend this book to fantasy, fantasy lovers. Your Rating:. Tonari no Seki-kun Episode 2 - Owh kenapa mulutnya mengaga lebar gitu yak --" awas masuk lalatttttttttttttttttttttt ABC Fansub. Fun Fansub. Fansub no Sekai. Pika Subs. Yugure Fansub.
Sayonara - Selamat tinggal , selamat datang … Seiring projek yang berjalan, tidak terasa sudah selesai waktunya untuk menemani kita dalam ketegangan yang Animestar 3. S] Kodok Fansub. Cmon Frozen. Kioku Fansub. Fansub Jalanan - bukan fansub tl;dr. Reghyw Zoldyck Fansub. Ryouzanpaku Group. Animeslash Fansub. Tired old jokes aside, a real, powerful love does have one thing in common with Hell itself: it burns everything else out of you. Williams does an amazing job at world building and detailing pain and suffering.
I loved the unique settings and the cool Damned. Bobby was great and Gob and Riprash made for good side kicks. I loved the politics, the mysteries, and the awesome underlying theme about the state of Heaven and Hell. Did I mention that this is a Tad Williams book which means the writing is sublime and the fantasy is top notch This was the cold of the absolute dark, the cold in which nothing could live, the point at which even the play of atoms slowed to a stop. The end. It was alive, and it thought, and even though it was still tremendously far away, its presence sent my own thoughts shrieking in all directions like chickens trapped in a henhouse by a bloody-mouthed wolf.
View 1 comment. May 23, Raghunandan Purushothaman rated it it was ok. I was more than a little disappointed with this book. I had started reading this book with rather high expectations given that Dirty Streets in Heaven had such a fascinating setting. There is no doubt that the description of Hell is vivid and nauseatingly horrifying like any description of hell should be.
And that's about the only positive point I can think of. Now let me cover the negatives: 1. Plot: The whole plot of he book is that Bobby the angel enters hell to rescue his demoness girlfrien I was more than a little disappointed with this book. Plot: The whole plot of he book is that Bobby the angel enters hell to rescue his demoness girlfriend Cas.
Nothing else happens really. The whole book is just one long description of hell's horrors. Character building: Character? What character? Unless you count a long line of mutilated, oozing, slimy, tentacled monsters who reel of various cliched phrases as characters I don't know about others but I don't consider love sick angel being subjected to countless horrors as character building.
Ending: Don't ask. Its too spoilery and quite frankly not worth knowing. Well, should you read this book? If you are the kind of reader who can be satisfied with a rich and vividly described setting, then you should give this book a try. If you expect an actual plot with decent characters in them, well you are going to disappointed. Jan 24, Penni rated it really liked it. Nov 16, M Tat rated it it was ok. The storytelling is quite decent, yet when you reach the end and discover how much has not been accomplished, it feels like reading this volume was entirely anticlimactic read: worthless.
Williams clearly enjoys his storytelling, and his style has become far, far more focused compared to when he wrapped up his Otherland series. However, HHinH is The storytelling is quite decent, yet when you reach the end and discover how much has not been accomplished, it feels like reading this volume was entirely anticlimactic read: worthless.
However, HHinH is a rather blase' journey through hell. Williams demonstrated in River of Blue Fire that he can take us through some deftly imaginative worlds. When it came to mentally illustrating these components of hell, it's as though we fast-forwarded through these deftly imaginative worlds, which severely weakened the storytelling.
What would have strengthened this novel would be to cut the number of pages in half. Use those pages to vividly illustrate this imaginative and hellish realm. In other praise, Williams is decisively producing very adult-oriented material.
It would be great if Williams could act as decisively relative to crafting that same level of detail to embellish and develop the worlds he takes us to. Nov 25, Dylan rated it liked it.
This book was really 3. I'm incredibly torn. I really did enjoy this book and I love Tad Williams' writing in any of the books of his that T've read. However, while there was plenty of action and Bobby Dollar snark in this novel, there was just not a lot of progress. When I really sat down and thought about it, this book did not have a whole lot of overall plot progression for the series, just a lot of Bobby getting into situations and getting This book was really 3.
When I really sat down and thought about it, this book did not have a whole lot of overall plot progression for the series, just a lot of Bobby getting into situations and getting out of them which was sometimes a bit unbelievable.
Now, I still really enjoyed this book and I feel like a lot of the little nuggets in this book that were laid down will play off big to make the third one in the series the best one, but overall this book just didn't completely satisfy me. But, what really dropped this book from 4 stars to 3. Nov 04, Kathy Sebesta rated it did not like it. OK, I made it a third of the way thru and I'm just fed up reading descriptions after descriptions of the indescribable torments of hell. The premise of the first book and hence series in general is intriguing: why would anyone want an eternity of mindless bliss in heaven?
Alternatively, who truly deserves an eternity of damnation and uber-suffering in hell? Shouldn't there be a third place where you can grow and become better and really exist? However, in this the second book of the series, ou OK, I made it a third of the way thru and I'm just fed up reading descriptions after descriptions of the indescribable torments of hell.
However, in this the second book of the series, our hero angel has fallen in love with one of the top demons of hell, and has gone to hell to rescue her - and there he witnesses all this horrific stuff. There's way way way too much of it, and to be honest it's more than boring.
I'm done. View 2 comments. That is the short version of my review. Just meh. But yeah, I'm gonna elaborate, don't you worry! This is the second installment of a trilogy I think dealing with all the wonderful misunderstandings of Heaven and Hell, the two H's humanity has always loved to discuss.
More than ever, movies, shows, books and comics have been twisting the tales of angels and demons and taken what we know from the Bible to another dimension. Angels aren't always as good as they seem, demons understandabl Meh. Angels aren't always as good as they seem, demons understandable and nearly human in their evildoing.
The book doesn't really come up with all that much new stuff, than rehashing what we know from some place or another granted, there are some scenes and things you might never have heard of, but that doesn't really help the book too much. Patrick Rothfuss, another author I thoroughly admire, has his praise added on the back of this edition of the book.
It reads "Snarky, fast-paced, and above all, original". It really, really pains me to say that I have to disagree. Quite strongly even. But that annoyed me more than ever. Bobby's voice is a frigging pain to read after so many pages. I already mentioned in my first and rather favorable review of the first book, that sometimes it just gets to be too much.
At some point he just becomes a whiny douchebag whom I could care less about. He pretty much gets into this mess because of his own stupidity, so no, I don't really feel too badly for him.
I read about a third of the book when I was well and ready to drop it. And I have only done that with one book so far, and that was because of a personal experience I did not want to read about on a character. So you see, I don't drop books easily. It is actually that fact that got me reading it again.
I read, I think, about ten books in between that third, where I just couldn't care about the story and the end. I know it seems harsh, but this book just starts so slowly and annoyingly, that I'm surprised I made it to the end. It does pick up after the second half, but yeah, that's it.
Fast-paced to me is a book that gets you reading a book in a day, even when you have no time. Having read all those books in between, I sure as heck had the time. Not really. I mean, most of the intriguing questions were already posed in the first book. He mostly just chews on stuff he already knew and then some more towards the end of the book after experiencing lotsa pain and lotsa feels in hell.
As for the world building, I just don't know. Maybe I've seen so many versions of Urban Fantasy Heaven and Hell, maybe the tropes have been used one time too often, but for the most part it was just like playing a game where you had to get character A from hell city B to city C.
Then again, writing about heaven and hell might be a tad bit hard to come off original when there's already so much out there. The underlying story that drove the main character though, was nothing else than a fucking "Damsel in Distress" story. Of course, there is this whole conspiracy going on in the background, but you barely notice that because the only thing Bobby Dollar thinks about is his D that should go into the V of a certain Demon Lady.
For that, he needs to be the hero and rescue the princess from the big bad dragon in hell. Really, it doesn't get any more simple than that. So: Original? So many things were obsolete. Looking at Williams's former books, it would have payed off to just make two volumes he certainly has never been afraid to pack a lot of pages into one tome. The first third was really a repetition of the first book, explaining stuff we already know and preparing us for Bobby's new genius idea: Let's go to hell and free the love of my heart, Caz the demon.
Caz, the possession of one of the most powerful demon lords in the history of ever. Easy, eh? The middle and last part could've done with less chapters that got repetitive really soon and thus assimilated within book one and two respectively. But that is often the curse of the second book, so I'll let that slide for now. But let's have a look at the actual story: We have Bobby, who's up to some frying in hell - quite literally.
He gets into hell through a very secret door and meets many creatures, low and high, that will either want to eat him alive, do him some other harm or, believe it or not, help him. The concept of hell seems to be much more tangible than heaven. Whereas heaven was this murky bubble of happiness that no one quite remembers, hell is hands-on and feisty. Bobby notices that about two seconds in, as pretty much everything and anything tries to make his life as miserable as possible.
He arrives in one of the lower layers of hell, not at all where he wants to be, but there's the only place he can enter. You'll hear a lot of familiar names and places like Abbadon, Erebos and Pandaemonium. Some references to literature, too. Some imaginative place names in the middle spice things up a bit. The ecosystem of hell is very diverse, so each level is not necessarily connected other than through the rivers of hell.
And even though Bobby says time and again that the physics are different in hell, just as they are in heaven, I think most of what he describes is not that far off in terms of imagination. Sure, some things are weird and out of this world, but come on, we're in hell. You'd expect it to be magical in gruesome ways and to not quite play along our rules. As such, the place itself seems pretty straightforward: The lower you get, the closer you get to the devil and his very unpleasant fiery bits.
The higher you get, the more civilized, while still crazy, things seem to get. So yeah, that's not all that complicated. I think where Williams does show his talents in world building, is the respective levels themselves. Also a few choice characters are quite imaginative.
But the hell-system as a whole does not really bring any surprises. He also seems to not quite understand that hell himself. At one point it is just this unchanging thing that has a few changes in the middle to get everyone in despair but at the end it is the ever-changing that makes hell so hellish. So, which is it? It's probably safe to say that it depends on which level you are and how high you are on the demon-status-level. Something which is also never quite clearly explained, but yeah, no details.
Something Bobby does often, too: " And you wonder, when that day will be - not that I necessarily want to hear all those stories he omits As for Bobby himself, his story doesn't really get all that interesting, either. He just tries to get his boss's Tamuel or what's his face job done and then go fetch his girl and get outta hell.
Needless to say, things get a bit hard very soon. Adaption to hell takes his toll on our snarky feather-boy and he feels losing himself more and more.
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