Reviews and other content aren't verified by Google
A country, Malawi, is teetering on the brink of drought and famine. A boy, William, comes up with an alternative source of water, and the success to do so is a journey full of hardships and hurdles.
The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind
Review·2y
More options
It's a great movie. But. I felt like they should've made it a trilogy for character development and effective plot. But all in all it's not a bad movie.
The Dark Tower
Review·3y
More options
Adris played the murderous character with compelling menace. Excellent plot.
No Good Deed
3 likes
Review·3y
More options
Season 1 was exceptional. Season 2 the show took a nose dive...
eHostela
Review·3y
More options
"The wall" is my favourite part of the show.
Solar Opposites
2 likes
Review·4y
More options
I have found many motivational books tedious to read because the author would convey the main massage of the book in the first few chapters, and then paraphrase the massage throughout seemingly unending pages of the book. They all seem like repeating sentences and phrases for pages on end.
But not Who Moved My Cheese?
The book is made reader-friendly. In only 96 pages, It introduces the reader to four types of characters (two mice and two little people in a maze searching for cheese) which represent human behavior towards a change (might be towards work or life).
I think It's a safe bet to think that almost every reader could see themselves in at least one of the given characters:
Mice
¬Sniff- sniffs out change and
¬Scurry- Scurries into action
Little people
¬Hem- Resists change
¬and Haw- Adapts to change
It's a must-read for everyone who is change resistant, or for everyone in general.
5/5 stars. Excellent work.