Joe White
Autor(a) de Faith Training: Raising Kids Who Love the Lord
About the Author
Joe White is the president of Kanakuk Kamps. He is a popular speaker for organizations like Promise Keepers, Focus on the Family, AfterDark College Crusades, and NFL and professional baseball chapels
Obras por Joe White
Fuel: Devotions to Ignite the Faith of Parents and Teens (Focus on the Family Books) (2003) 57 exemplares
When So Many Feel Like Orphans at Home: It's Time to Fall in Love With Your Kids Again (1988) 33 exemplares
The Nox 5 exemplares
Friendship pressure 2 exemplares
Nine things teens should know and parents are afraid to talk about countdown to adolescence (2006) 1 exemplar
50 Ways to Tell Your Child 'I Love You' 1 exemplar
One2Won Crosstraining Workbook 1 exemplar
Orphans at Home 1 exemplar
Imparting God's Word 1 exemplar
Bangkok Guide 1 exemplar
Demisia lui Darwin 1 exemplar
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Data de nascimento
- 1948-10-20
- Sexo
- male
- Ocupações
- author
Membros
Críticas
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Estatísticas
- Obras
- 39
- Membros
- 959
- Popularidade
- #26,865
- Avaliação
- 3.6
- Críticas
- 8
- ISBN
- 44
- Línguas
- 2
The '3D Sound' technology is very impressive: immersive, complex, and spatial.
The cast all act their hearts out.
The story has some clever twists and some very tense moments.
There is a serious and sophisticated attempt to explore the textural differences between, dreaming, remembering and being awake and how those states can become harder to distinguish from one another in the Arctic dark after your circadian rhythms have been disrupted.
The things that overwhelm the good things.
The podcast format is annoying. I don't see the point of it. Why not just chapters? It was a distracting waste of time.
The 3D sound effects are pushed beyond their limits. Much of the story takes place in the dark, with minimal dialogue and no descriptive text, leaning entirely on the '3D sound experience' to let the listener understand what was going on. It worked but only some of the time and eventually became an obstacle to comprehension rather than an aid to storytelling.
The 'Am I awake or am I dreaming?' theme was carried so far that even the main character didn't know the answer and, by the end, I no longer cared.
The pacing of the final few chapters, sorry, episodes, felt slow to the point of being tedious. I hung on the end but I didn't get any value from the last ten per cent of the story.… (mais)