Review of Man Mission
Posted: 22 May 2023, 09:50
[Following is a volunteer review of "Man Mission" by Eytan Uliel.]
Man Mission by Eytan Uliel is a narration of four young college graduates who devised a caper to tour the world. With intentions and spirit to explore worldly pleasures as men, they formed an annual schedule of traveling to one country at a go. Their first journey was to New Zealand, a trip that gave them an insight into what the future trip would entail. They mingled with armed illegal drug dealers. In Africa, they visited national reserves in South Africa. A lion threatened to attack them. How would they escape a lion at a face? At the end of their caper, they traveled to Japan, South Korea, Australia, Spain, Peru, and Thailand, among other regions.
It is an entertaining book. The narrations are full of comedy and humor in the dramatic encounters of the friends on each of their trips. For instance, in New Zealand, young men almost filled the air with shouts when cows surrounded their camping tent in the middle of the night. Again, the book is educative on the paths that life would take when there is an imbalance between the various aspects of livelihood: work demands, family responsibility, and curious adventure. The young men spent much energy focusing on their adventurous schemes, forgetting the other duties they should have attended to, making weak bonds form in their marriages.
The character of the participants is corrupt. The majority had a commonality of decayed morality, loudly pronounced by their wanting sexuality.
I rate this book five out of five stars. There is a recommendable organization in the book, where no breaches are in the narrations. To add on, the editing is professional, and the unfolding of plots aligns with the suggestions made in the title, Man Mission.
I recommend this book to young adults who love spending leisure time exploring the world. The author highlights the beauty of explorations and the possible aftermath of the expeditions.
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Man Mission
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon | on iTunes
Man Mission by Eytan Uliel is a narration of four young college graduates who devised a caper to tour the world. With intentions and spirit to explore worldly pleasures as men, they formed an annual schedule of traveling to one country at a go. Their first journey was to New Zealand, a trip that gave them an insight into what the future trip would entail. They mingled with armed illegal drug dealers. In Africa, they visited national reserves in South Africa. A lion threatened to attack them. How would they escape a lion at a face? At the end of their caper, they traveled to Japan, South Korea, Australia, Spain, Peru, and Thailand, among other regions.
It is an entertaining book. The narrations are full of comedy and humor in the dramatic encounters of the friends on each of their trips. For instance, in New Zealand, young men almost filled the air with shouts when cows surrounded their camping tent in the middle of the night. Again, the book is educative on the paths that life would take when there is an imbalance between the various aspects of livelihood: work demands, family responsibility, and curious adventure. The young men spent much energy focusing on their adventurous schemes, forgetting the other duties they should have attended to, making weak bonds form in their marriages.
The character of the participants is corrupt. The majority had a commonality of decayed morality, loudly pronounced by their wanting sexuality.
I rate this book five out of five stars. There is a recommendable organization in the book, where no breaches are in the narrations. To add on, the editing is professional, and the unfolding of plots aligns with the suggestions made in the title, Man Mission.
I recommend this book to young adults who love spending leisure time exploring the world. The author highlights the beauty of explorations and the possible aftermath of the expeditions.
******
Man Mission
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon | on iTunes