When it comes to books, what type of reader are you?

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What type of reader are you? After all, one man’s thriller is another man’s bedtime story. Two people can read the same book and one will end up loving it, and the other one loathing it.

This got me thinking about the types of readers that exist and I set out collecting data from both my fellow students and the larger reading community on Instagram. I did this in an effort to find out what people, specifically students, read and why. Once you’ve answered this question and know what kind of reader you are, it is easier to find books that you enjoy.

So, what type of reader are you?

I did a few surveys on my Instagram (@carmens_book_nook) asking my fellow students about their favourite genres to read. The results showed that the most popular genres were historical fiction and thriller/mystery novels. Because these two are also my own personal favourites, I have plenty of recommendations. 

Another one of my surveys asked readers to describe their tastes and reading styles in three words. Based on the most frequent words in the responses, there emerged two distinct types of readers: the “fast, intense, cannot-put-the-book-down, reads-three-books-at-a-time” type of reader, and the “slow, relaxed, mood-based, one-book-at-a-time” reader.

For the “slow, relaxed, mood-based, one-book-at-a-time” reader, here are some highly recommended books that will captivate and enchant your senses:

Historical Fiction

‘The Dress’ by Kate Kerrigan

Joy is beautiful, but she has a secret fear. Although she is the toast of 1950s New York society, with everything money can buy, she is afraid that one day her beauty will fade and she will lose the love of her successful and charismatic husband.

Honor is a young Irish seamstress, who has been working her fingers to the bone with little reward but her luck is about to change. For her 30th birthday, Joy commissions Honor to create the most unforgettable and glamorous dress ever seen.

Lily has always loved vintage clothes. One day she stumbles upon an article about a legendary evening dress created in the 1950s but now lost to history. As Lily attempts to recreate this fames dress, she uncovers a story of glamour, friendship, love and betrayal all wrapped up in a story of two women, one ruthless man and one sublime dress.

Kate Kerrigan’s enthralling novel interweaves the glamour of 1950s New York with a wonderfully rich and dramatic story, filled with realistic and characters whom you cannot help but root for and love.

Historical Fiction/Mystery Thriller

reader book cover set on open book

’31 Bond Street’ by Ellen Horan

New York, 1857. In his lower Manhattan town house at 31 Bond Street, the body of Dr Harvey Burdell, a well-known and popular dentist, is found. He has been brutally stabbed and nearly decapitated.

“Who killed Dr. Burdell?” was a question that gripped the nation. 31 Bond Street, a debut novel by Ellen Horan, interweaves fiction with actual events in a clever historical narrative that blends romance, politics, greed and sexual intrigue in a suspenseful drama. The evidence points to his elegant and mysterious lodger and housekeeper, Emma Cunningham, who is arrested and charged with murder. A conviction will catapult flamboyant district attorney Abraham Oakley Hall into the mayor’s seat. But a formidable obstacle stands in his way in the shape of defence attorney Henry Clinton, a man willing to risk his whole career to prove a vulnerable woman’s innocence …

This is a wonderfully atmospheric novel with mystery, intrigue and an in-depth exploration of a trial that defined a century.

Then, not forgetting the “fast, intense, cannot-put-the-book-down, reads-three-books-at-a-time” reader, here are some books to add to your reading pile:

Mystery/Crime Thriller

reader book cover on moody blue background

‘Blue Monday’ by Nicci French

The abduction of five-year-old Matthew Farraday provokes a national outcry and a desperate police hunt. When a picture of his face is splashed across the pages of the newspapers, psychotherapist Frieda Klein is left troubled: one of her patients has been relating dreams in which he has a hunger for a child. A child he can describe in perfect detail, and this child is the spitting image of Matthew.

Detective Chief Inspector Karlsson doesn’t take Frieda’s concerns seriously until a link emerges with an unsolved child abduction 20 years before. He summons Frieda to interview the victim’s sister, hoping she can stir hidden memories. Before long, Frieda is at the centre of the race to track the kidnapper.

But her race isn’t physical. She must chase down the darkest paths of a psychopath’s mind to find the answers to Matthew Farraday’s whereabouts. And sometimes the mind is the deadliest place to lose yourself …

This is twisted and intense mystery that will have you on the edge of your seat the whole way through.

Thriller/Horror/Science Fiction

book cover bird box on open book reader

‘Bird Box’ by Josh Malerman

Something is out there, something terrifying that must not be seen. One glimpse of it and a person is driven to deadly violence. No one knows what it is or where it came from.

Five years after it began, a handful of scattered survivors remains, including Malorie and her two young children. Living in an abandoned house near the river, she has dreamed of fleeing to a place where they might be safe. Now that the boy and girl are four, it’s time to go but the journey ahead will be terrifying: 20 miles downriver in a rowboat—blindfolded—with nothing to rely on but her wits and the children’s trained ears. One wrong choice and they will die. Something is following them all the while, but is it man, animal, or monster?

Interweaving past and present, Bird Box is a snapshot of a world unravelled that will have you racing to the final page.

There is also a great movie adaptation available on Netflix starring Sandra Bullock and Sarah Paulson.

When it comes to reading, just as with life in general, we all have our likes and dislikes, our different desires, and fears. These differences also have an effect on our reading preferences. Once you know what kind of reader you are, the horizons of your book world will open up!

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Cynthia Ritchie sends Rs120mn legal notice to Yusuf Raza Gillani

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US blogger Cynthia Ritchie sent former prime minister Yousaf Raza Gilani a legal notice of Rs120mn in which she threatened to take legal action against him unless he tendered an apology, on Thursday.

Ritchie sent the notice through her counsel Nasir Azeem Khan Advocate, in which she stated that Gilani had harassed her and damaged her reputation by making false accusations.

She alleged that the former prime minister had harassed her “in connivance” with ex-interior minister Rehman Malik 2011. The legal notice accused the PPP media cell of harassing Ritchie on social media as well.

Saying that she was defamed locally and internationally, the US blogger called on Gilani to apologise to her. Ritchie warned that in case the PPP leader did not apologise for levelling allegations against her within 14 days, she would initiate legal action against him.

Ritchie made headlines when she accused former interior minister Rehman Malik of raping her in 2011, during a video broadcast live on Facebook.

She also accused then health minister Makhdoom Shahabuddin of “manhandling” her, whiel saying that Gilani had given her an awkward hug, stating that the incidents occurred in 2011 when the PPP was in power.

Gilani had also sent a defamation notice of Rs100 million to Ritchie after she went public with accusations against him. The legal notice was sent to the US citizen through Gilani’s lawyers who asked her to respond within 14 days.

Malik, Gilani and Shahbuddin have categorically rejected Ritchie’s allegations. 

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Robert De Niro Reveals Why Trump’s Botched Coronavirus Response Is So Scary

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The actor, speaking with “The Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon, noted how the crisis that’s now killed more than 115,000 people in the U.S. “could have been avoided if Trump had listened to the people in the intelligence community.”

“They kept telling him something was coming,” De Niro said.

“What scares me is that people just were afraid to tell him the truth,” he continued. “If you tell him the truth then he’s gonna get mad at you and he’s gonna let you go, and then what?”

Check out the interview here:

A HuffPost Guide To Coronavirus



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In pics: When the national capital experiences dust storm, followed by rain

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Power supply in many parts of the city was affected due to dust storm followed by rain on Wednesday evening

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Delhi



BS Web Team  | 
New Delhi 



A view of Jama Masjid during the rain in New


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Photo: ANI



Vehicular movement seen as a tree falls down during a sudden dust storm on NH-24.

Vehicular movement seen as a tree falls down during a sudden dust storm at NH-24.


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Photo: ANI



People standing near an uprooted tree after the dust storm and rain in the capital

People standing near an uprooted tree after the dust storm and rain in the national capital


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Photo: ANI



Kids using a plastic sheet to cover themselves from the rain

Kids using a plastic sheet to cover themselves from the rain


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A child pulls a cycle rickshaw on a road amid rains in the capital region.

A child pulls a cycle rickshaw on a road amid rains in the capital region.


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A specially-abled man takes shelter under an umbrella during a rain.

A specially-abled man takes shelter under an umbrella during a rain.


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Solar panel collapsed near the Nizamuddin Bridge NH24 when a dust storm hit the capital.

Solar panel collapsed near the Nizamuddin Bridge NH24 when a dust storm hit the national capital.


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Photo: ANI





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George Floyd protests: officer bailed as protesters topple Confederate statue in Virginia – live

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Officer charged over George Floyd killing freed on $750,000 bail

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ECJ: Biting passengers does not oblige airlines to pay compensation for delays

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An airline does not have to pay compensation to passengers for a delayed flight if that delay is caused by a passenger’s unruly behavior — in this, biting another passenger — the Court of Justice of the European Union ruled today.

The case concerned a passenger traveling from Brazil to Norway via Portugal. An incident on the first leg of the trip in which a passenger bit a fellow traveler prompted the flight to be diverted, causing a delay of more than four hours.

EU air passenger rights law requires airlines to pay compensation of up to €600 for cancellations or delays beyond three hours, but only if the court determines that the delay was under the airline’s control.

In this case, the court ruled the behavior of the passenger was an “extraordinary circumstance.”

Referring to the biting incident and the crew’s struggles to calm the passenger down, the court said: “Such behaviour is not, in principle, under the control of the air carrier, since, first, the behaviour of a passenger and his reactions to the crew’s requests are not foreseeable, and, secondly, on board an aircraft, both the commander and the crew have only limited means of controlling such behaviour.”

The court added that rerouting the delayed passenger on the next available flight — which TAP Air Portugal, the airline in question, did — was the best course of action in the circumstances.



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Sharm el-Sheikh prepares for antiquities museum opening

Jun 11, 2020

CAIRO — Engineers and construction workers are working hard to complete the construction of the first antiquities museum in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, before its official opening later this year.

The museum is set to house more than 3,000 artifacts, representing all of Egypt’s historical phases. It is part of a plan by Egypt’s tourism authorities to diversify tourist attractions in Sharm el-Sheikh and bring the ancient Egyptian civilization to a city that, according to Mo’men Osman, head of the Museums Section at the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, has been known for its beaches and mountains since it was built as a resort almost five decades ago.

“This is a huge project that aims to introduce a new tourist product that adds to the attractions of the city,” Osman told Al-Monitor. “We hope that it can play a role in attracting more tourists to the city.”

The construction of the museum started before the 2011 uprising that ended the rule of then-President Hosni Mubarak. 

After the uprising, the project was stopped because of a lack of funds. At the time, the museum’s construction cost was estimated at about $11 million. Work resumed in September 2018, but the estimated cost jumped to about $47 million. The cost of its first phase alone increased to $17 million.

“A project like this one will cater to the different needs and interests of tourists visiting Sharm el-Sheikh,” said Alaa al-Ghamri, member of the board of the Egyptian Travel Agents Association, the independent guild of the travel agencies operating in Egypt.

Final preparations for the opening of the museum come as the Egyptian tourism sector is trying to compensate for some of the losses it sustained over the past three months because of the coronavirus-induced closures. The sector has lost around $1 billion every month due to the suspension of flights and the closure of hotels. 

Egypt suspended international flights March 19, in an effort to curb the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19. The flight suspension was imposed after a dozen Nile River cruise ship workers tested positive for the virus in the southern city of Luxor.

The nation’s hotels were shut down in late March amid fears that the tourism sector would turn into an infection hotspot. The closure of the tourism sector dealt a painful blow to the national economy given the sector’s large contributions.

In 2018, the tourism sector contributed 11.9% to the country’s gross domestic product. In March, Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Khaled al-Anani said tourism revenues amount to $1 billion each month. In 2019, 13.6 million tourists visited Egypt. 

The sector employs over 12% of the country’s workforce of 29 million people. Some of the hotels reopened at a reduced capacity in mid-May, after obtaining a health clearance certificate showing that they meet the standards imposed by the Tourism and Antiquities Ministry and the Health Ministry.

So far, 125 hotels have obtained health clearance to reopen for domestic guests. Egypt is also making preparations for the resumption of international flights and the full reopening of the tourism sector.

Sharm el-Sheikh is by far Egypt’s most famous resort on the Red Sea, which is known for its beautiful beaches and clear waters.

The city’s geography offers visitors the most diverse of experiences, with mountains, deserts, greenery, water and blue skies. The resort boasts some of the world’s most luxurious hotels but can accommodate travelers on a limited budget as well.

The city saw a surge in international arrivals before the suspensions and closures in March, following the lifting of the travel bans slapped on it by most countries following the 2016 bombing of a Russian passenger plane in its airspace.

The Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities has not specified a date yet for the opening of the new museum, but officials told Al-Monitor it would open to the public before the end of the year.

“We are confident that visitors of Sharm el-Sheikh will like the museum,” Mahmud Mabrouk, adviser to the Minister of Tourism and Antiquities, told Al-Monitor. “We have selected some of the most important pieces to exhibit in the new museum to give its visitors a taste of the diversity and beauty of Egypt’s civilization.” 

On June 2, the museum received three large artifacts from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo — two wooden boats, 10 meters (33 feet) long and 2.3 meters (7.5 feet) wide, and a statue of a baboon standing upright in praise of the rising sun.

The museum is built on 21 hectares of land and includes a main building and a large garden landscaped to suit the environment around it. It will house nine main exhibition halls, restaurants, commercial outlets and an open-air theater.

There will be outlets for selling traditional Egyptian products, including clothes, replicas of ancient kitchen tools and statues.

The artifacts exhibited at the museum will be on loan from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, as well as from antiquities warehouses elsewhere in Egypt. They will represent the various phases of Egyptian history, with artifacts dating to the ancient Egyptian civilization, the Christian era and the Islamic era.

Mabrouk said the diversity of items aims to satisfy the interests of the international visitors to Sharm el-Sheikh.

The Antiquities and Tourism Ministry hopes that the museum will encourage visitors to include other Egyptian cities in their itineraries, especially the southern cities of Luxor and Aswan, where most of the ancient antiquities are concentrated.

“The museum will be a very interesting place for visitors,” Mabrouk concluded. “We hope it can make tourists curious to visit other tourist and ancient sites in other Egyptian cities.”



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Over 300,000 without power in Michigan after severe thunderstorm downs trees, drops hail

DETROIT — A severe thunderstorm slammed southeast Michigan on Wednesday, toppling trees across the tricounty area, pelting protest marchers in downtown Detroit with 1-inch-diameter hail and leaving more than 300,000 customers without power.

As of 8 p.m. Wednesday, Consumers Energy reported nearly 172,000 customers were without power, and DTE reported it had more than 184,000 customers in the dark. (Each utility “customer” represents one electric meter, serving a home, apartment or business.)

Hard hit with outages and downed trees were Detroit’s eastern suburbs — the Grosse Pointes, St. Clair Shores and Roseville — as well as the Farmington Hills/West Bloomfield area, and also homes in a swath from Lake Orion to Oakland Township.

Lights flickered and trees toppled in the Grosse Pointes over the dinner hour. 

Across the region, winds gusted over 50 m.p.h. and, at one point in Ann Arbor topped 60 m.p.h., according to the National Weather Service’s regional office in White Lake Township. No tornadoes formed, however, despite concerns of forecasters, as the remnants of Tropical Storm Cristobal swept north through Michigan into Canada. By 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, most of the storm’s effect had left southeast Michigan but Saginaw was feeling it, according to Weather Service staff meteorologist Trent Frey.

With flooding possible, the Detroit Water and Sewerage Department recommended:

  • Avoid driving through standing water.
  • Check your basement drain(s) to make sure they are not clogged in case they are needed if water enters your basement.
  • Clear leaves, trash and other debris from above and around the catch basins, and make sure no objects such as garbage and recycling bins are on top of the storm drain; during the COVID-19 pandemic be sure to follow the CDC and Detroit Health Department guidelines.

Live Michigan weather radar

DTE Energy has advised residents to take precautions in case outages occur. It suggested charging any mobile device or battery pack as soon as possible. It also recommend assembling an emergency kit, including flashlights, candles, a battery-powered radio, bottled water and nonperishable food.

Contributing: Detroit Free Press staff writer Bill Laitner and Associated Press.

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Ukraine: Parents meet surrogate babies after lockdown lifts

A group of parents from around the world have finally been able to collect their babies born to surrogate mothers in Ukraine.

A total of 125 surrogate babies were stuck there, after the country closed its borders because of the coronavirus.

Al Jazeera’s Charlotte Bellis reports.

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UK coronavirus live: urgent cancer referrals in England fell by 60% in first month of lockdown, NHS reveals

Patients are missing out on vital treatments, diagnostic tests and outpatient appointments due to the coronavirus pandemic, new data shows, as waiting times soar across NHS England.

The full extent of the monumental pressure the NHS came under at the height of the Covid-19 crisis and the effect the crisis has had on patients is laid bare in the latest data.

Cancer

The number of people entering treatment for cancer has dropped significantly meaning many patients who would have ordinarily been tested for cancer were not seen. In April 2019 almost 200,000 people were referred to a consultant for suspected cancer by their GPs. This April that figure fell to just 79,573.

MacMillan approximate, 210,000 people should have entered the system in April. That means roughly 130,000 people who would ordinarily be referred to a consultant have not been. Around 7% of these patients would usually require cancer treatment meaning around 9,000 people might not have had their cancer diagnosed in April.

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Diagnostics

Patients requiring certain diagnostic tests – such as MRI scans, echocardiograms and colonoscopies – for six weeks or more soared to 468,622 making April the worst month on record. On average in the year to January 5,741 patients were waiting more than six weeks for an MRI scan. That figure stood at almost 79,000 in April.

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Referrals to treatment

The median length of time patients are waiting on the referral for treatment stood at 12.2 weeks in April, the longest they have been in well over a decade. More than a million patients are now waiting for more than 18 weeks for treatment.

The number of patients waiting over a year for a test jumped from 1,613 in February to 11,042 in April, a seven-fold increase in just two months.

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A&E

Having fallen to an all time low in April the number of people attending major A&E departments rose again in May, from 689,720 to 924,215. In the year prior to the crisis hitting A&E attendances averaged at 1.3m.

When other A&E attendances are included (single specialty and minor injury units) 1.3m people attended A&E departments in May, the second lowest number since records began.

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