Review of Man Mission
Posted: 12 May 2023, 15:15
[Following is a volunteer review of "Man Mission" by Eytan Uliel.]
Man Mission by Eytan Uliel is an adventurous novel containing fifteen adventures of four people within fifteen years. The book starts by mentioning the "Man Mission Charter," which contains ten rules the four men should obey when on adventures. Some of them are; it was supposed to be a men's adventure, with no luxuries and a pink bracelet for the one who whines the loudest. They opened their first adventure in New Zealand, where only Sam and the narrator attended. Daniel and Alec were absent in the first adventure but joined them in the other adventures. They adventured many places, such as Victoria, Australia; Seoul, Korea; and Kruger National Park, South Africa. They explored different things, such as their encounter with a herd of cows in New Zealand.
I loved the description of the adventures in the book; for instance, the adventure in New Zealand, where the narrator was injured and had to get help from drug dealers. It made the reader feel on the same adventure as the four Australians. The adventures were beautiful, and the author described them well, making the reader feel the pain or joy the adventurers experienced. The author provided maps at the beginning of each adventure showing the places they traveled in that specific chapter. It helped the reader visualize them when the author mentioned them in the text. The maps showed the terrain as transport means used by the adventurers. The author summarizes each adventure at the end of each chapter, enabling reflection on the chapter in case the reader forgets something.
I have nothing against the book. It was a great adventurous novel, and people who love adventures and traveling would fall in love with it.
I rate Man Mission by Eytan Uliel five out of five stars. The book was professionally edited because it had an error. The description of adventures was great. It made the reader enjoy the adventures as if they were actually on them. The author made the story's narration interesting with visuals and text. He used maps that the reader would refer to when reading the text, having a better picture of the adventures. He summarized each adventure, mentioning transport means and distance covered to enable readers to reflect on what they may have forgotten.
I recommend this book to lovers of adventurous novels. They will like this book because it describes fifteen different adventures. The narration style is enhanced by visuals and text, making the book enjoyable.
******
Man Mission
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon | on iTunes
Man Mission by Eytan Uliel is an adventurous novel containing fifteen adventures of four people within fifteen years. The book starts by mentioning the "Man Mission Charter," which contains ten rules the four men should obey when on adventures. Some of them are; it was supposed to be a men's adventure, with no luxuries and a pink bracelet for the one who whines the loudest. They opened their first adventure in New Zealand, where only Sam and the narrator attended. Daniel and Alec were absent in the first adventure but joined them in the other adventures. They adventured many places, such as Victoria, Australia; Seoul, Korea; and Kruger National Park, South Africa. They explored different things, such as their encounter with a herd of cows in New Zealand.
I loved the description of the adventures in the book; for instance, the adventure in New Zealand, where the narrator was injured and had to get help from drug dealers. It made the reader feel on the same adventure as the four Australians. The adventures were beautiful, and the author described them well, making the reader feel the pain or joy the adventurers experienced. The author provided maps at the beginning of each adventure showing the places they traveled in that specific chapter. It helped the reader visualize them when the author mentioned them in the text. The maps showed the terrain as transport means used by the adventurers. The author summarizes each adventure at the end of each chapter, enabling reflection on the chapter in case the reader forgets something.
I have nothing against the book. It was a great adventurous novel, and people who love adventures and traveling would fall in love with it.
I rate Man Mission by Eytan Uliel five out of five stars. The book was professionally edited because it had an error. The description of adventures was great. It made the reader enjoy the adventures as if they were actually on them. The author made the story's narration interesting with visuals and text. He used maps that the reader would refer to when reading the text, having a better picture of the adventures. He summarized each adventure, mentioning transport means and distance covered to enable readers to reflect on what they may have forgotten.
I recommend this book to lovers of adventurous novels. They will like this book because it describes fifteen different adventures. The narration style is enhanced by visuals and text, making the book enjoyable.
******
Man Mission
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon | on iTunes