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Choose the book of April

👋Dear Kherson State University community!
With the beginning of a new month, we are choosing the book for our next KSU Book Club by voting in our social media. Therefore, we suggest you read the descriptions of the following books of different genres 📚 and vote for the one you would like to read in English this month below

Tuesday, April 02, 2024

1. “The Devil Wears Prada” is a 2003 novel by Lauren Weisberger about a young woman who is hired as a personal assistant to a powerful fashion magazine editor, a job that becomes nightmarish as she struggles to keep up with her boss's grueling schedule and demeaning demands. The novel is considered by many to be an example of the "chick lit" genre.

2. “Nineteen Eighty Four” by George Orwell (English novelist, essayist, journalist, and critic), written in 1949. Set in a dystopian future, the novel presents a society under the total control of a totalitarian regime, led by the omnipresent Big Brother. The protagonist, a low-ranking member of 'the Party', begins to question the regime and falls in love with a woman, an act of rebellion in a world where independent thought, dissent, and love are prohibited. The novel explores themes of surveillance, censorship, and the manipulation of truth.

3. “Wuthering Heights” is the only novel by the English author Emily Brontë, initially published in 1847 under her pen name "Ellis Bell". It concerns two families of the landed gentry living on the West Yorkshire moors, the Earnshaws and the Lintons, and their turbulent relationships with the Earnshaws' foster son, Heathcliff. The novel was influenced by Romanticism and Gothic fiction, and is now widely considered to be one of the greatest novels ever written in English.

4. “The Handmaid's Tale” is a futuristic dystopian novel by Canadian author Margaret Atwood published in 1985. It is set in a near-future New England in a patriarchal, totalitarian theonomic state known as the Republic of Gilead, which has overthrown the United States government. Offred is the central character and narrator and one of the "Handmaids": women who are forcibly assigned to produce children for the "Commanders", who are the ruling class in Gilead.

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