Actress Photos Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers August 2023 By GethuCinema Admin August 27, 2023 Related Posts Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers November 2023 Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers November 2023 Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers November 2023 Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2023 Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2023 Actress Lisa Ray HD Photos and Wallpapers October 2023 Share This Post FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppReddItTelegram Sunsets savoured from our home above the clouds in Beirut. Sunsets savoured from our home above the clouds in Beirut. Sunsets savoured from our home above the clouds in Beirut. Sunsets savoured from our home above the clouds in Beirut. Sunsets savoured from our home above the clouds in Beirut. Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Beirut 2023. Feitroun, Mont-Liban, Lebanon Places I sat Beirut. August 2023 Places I sat Beirut. August 2023 Places I sat Beirut. August 2023 Places I sat Beirut. August 2023 A particularly delicious reading spree comes to a pause as the start of a new school year takes precedence. But let me share my recent top reads… 1. Wednesday’s Child by Yiyun Li is a collection of delicately layered short stories that evoke fully realised complexities in a few pages. They are simply dazzling. I feel sheepish to admit I hadn’t previously come across this talented literary star who emigrated from China to the US to study immunology and took up creative writing to improve her english. It is through literature that she has found a way to reveal herself. “One lives more feelingly in a borrowed life,” she wrote in an afterword to her memoir. You bet I’m ordering more of her work. 2. Drifts by Kate Zambreno is a sublime and mesmerising anti-novel in which nothing much happens, but nothing goes unobserved. I also share a particular passion for Rilke with the author and her musings are like stumbling on an appendix of your own moods and creative awakening. Hypnotic. 3. The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese is rightly celebrated. It’s a remarkable feat of endurance for both writer and reader, meticulously constructed, beautifully written. A multi generational saga set in Kerala, I flew through the book on vacation and was glad for the leisurely time I had to soak up the ambience- it’s probably a tougher bedside read. Not flawless, a bit dramatic in parts but nonetheless I shed many tears. ‘Things have a way of coming back when we think they are gone forever.’ states one of the characters. Certainly in Parambil, the fictional village at the heart of the story, they do. 4. Fate and Destiny by everyone’s favourite mythologist Michael Meade is simply marvellous. That’s all. Thanks @harpercollinsin for my advance copy of Yiyun Li’s book. A particularly delicious reading spree comes to a pause as the start of a new school year takes precedence. But let me share my recent top reads… 1. Wednesday’s Child by Yiyun Li is a collection of delicately layered short stories that evoke fully realised complexities in a few pages. They are simply dazzling. I feel sheepish to admit I hadn’t previously come across this talented literary star who emigrated from China to the US to study immunology and took up creative writing to improve her english. It is through literature that she has found a way to reveal herself. “One lives more feelingly in a borrowed life,” she wrote in an afterword to her memoir. You bet I’m ordering more of her work. 2. Drifts by Kate Zambreno is a sublime and mesmerising anti-novel in which nothing much happens, but nothing goes unobserved. I also share a particular passion for Rilke with the author and her musings are like stumbling on an appendix of your own moods and creative awakening. Hypnotic. 3. The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese is rightly celebrated. It’s a remarkable feat of endurance for both writer and reader, meticulously constructed, beautifully written. A multi generational saga set in Kerala, I flew through the book on vacation and was glad for the leisurely time I had to soak up the ambience- it’s probably a tougher bedside read. Not flawless, a bit dramatic in parts but nonetheless I shed many tears. ‘Things have a way of coming back when we think they are gone forever.’ states one of the characters. Certainly in Parambil, the fictional village at the heart of the story, they do. 4. Fate and Destiny by everyone’s favourite mythologist Michael Meade is simply marvellous. That’s all. Thanks @harpercollinsin for my advance copy of Yiyun Li’s book. A particularly delicious reading spree comes to a pause as the start of a new school year takes precedence. But let me share my recent top reads… 1. Wednesday’s Child by Yiyun Li is a collection of delicately layered short stories that evoke fully realised complexities in a few pages. They are simply dazzling. I feel sheepish to admit I hadn’t previously come across this talented literary star who emigrated from China to the US to study immunology and took up creative writing to improve her english. It is through literature that she has found a way to reveal herself. “One lives more feelingly in a borrowed life,” she wrote in an afterword to her memoir. You bet I’m ordering more of her work. 2. Drifts by Kate Zambreno is a sublime and mesmerising anti-novel in which nothing much happens, but nothing goes unobserved. I also share a particular passion for Rilke with the author and her musings are like stumbling on an appendix of your own moods and creative awakening. Hypnotic. 3. The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese is rightly celebrated. It’s a remarkable feat of endurance for both writer and reader, meticulously constructed, beautifully written. A multi generational saga set in Kerala, I flew through the book on vacation and was glad for the leisurely time I had to soak up the ambience- it’s probably a tougher bedside read. Not flawless, a bit dramatic in parts but nonetheless I shed many tears. ‘Things have a way of coming back when we think they are gone forever.’ states one of the characters. Certainly in Parambil, the fictional village at the heart of the story, they do. 4. Fate and Destiny by everyone’s favourite mythologist Michael Meade is simply marvellous. That’s all. Thanks @harpercollinsin for my advance copy of Yiyun Li’s book. A particularly delicious reading spree comes to a pause as the start of a new school year takes precedence. But let me share my recent top reads… 1. Wednesday’s Child by Yiyun Li is a collection of delicately layered short stories that evoke fully realised complexities in a few pages. They are simply dazzling. I feel sheepish to admit I hadn’t previously come across this talented literary star who emigrated from China to the US to study immunology and took up creative writing to improve her english. It is through literature that she has found a way to reveal herself. “One lives more feelingly in a borrowed life,” she wrote in an afterword to her memoir. You bet I’m ordering more of her work. 2. Drifts by Kate Zambreno is a sublime and mesmerising anti-novel in which nothing much happens, but nothing goes unobserved. I also share a particular passion for Rilke with the author and her musings are like stumbling on an appendix of your own moods and creative awakening. Hypnotic. 3. The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese is rightly celebrated. It’s a remarkable feat of endurance for both writer and reader, meticulously constructed, beautifully written. A multi generational saga set in Kerala, I flew through the book on vacation and was glad for the leisurely time I had to soak up the ambience- it’s probably a tougher bedside read. Not flawless, a bit dramatic in parts but nonetheless I shed many tears. ‘Things have a way of coming back when we think they are gone forever.’ states one of the characters. Certainly in Parambil, the fictional village at the heart of the story, they do. 4. Fate and Destiny by everyone’s favourite mythologist Michael Meade is simply marvellous. That’s all. Thanks @harpercollinsin for my advance copy of Yiyun Li’s book. A particularly delicious reading spree comes to a pause as the start of a new school year takes precedence. But let me share my recent top reads… 1. Wednesday’s Child by Yiyun Li is a collection of delicately layered short stories that evoke fully realised complexities in a few pages. They are simply dazzling. I feel sheepish to admit I hadn’t previously come across this talented literary star who emigrated from China to the US to study immunology and took up creative writing to improve her english. It is through literature that she has found a way to reveal herself. “One lives more feelingly in a borrowed life,” she wrote in an afterword to her memoir. You bet I’m ordering more of her work. 2. Drifts by Kate Zambreno is a sublime and mesmerising anti-novel in which nothing much happens, but nothing goes unobserved. I also share a particular passion for Rilke with the author and her musings are like stumbling on an appendix of your own moods and creative awakening. Hypnotic. 3. The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese is rightly celebrated. It’s a remarkable feat of endurance for both writer and reader, meticulously constructed, beautifully written. A multi generational saga set in Kerala, I flew through the book on vacation and was glad for the leisurely time I had to soak up the ambience- it’s probably a tougher bedside read. Not flawless, a bit dramatic in parts but nonetheless I shed many tears. ‘Things have a way of coming back when we think they are gone forever.’ states one of the characters. Certainly in Parambil, the fictional village at the heart of the story, they do. 4. Fate and Destiny by everyone’s favourite mythologist Michael Meade is simply marvellous. That’s all. Thanks @harpercollinsin for my advance copy of Yiyun Li’s book. #Glow written by my friend @vasudha.rai has completed 5 years of magnetising attention to potent Indian remedies. It’s so wonderfully accessible but written with reverence and care by a woman who dedicates herself to contextualising ancient and healing remedies. I personally love having a set of #Glow and #Ritual as a soothing bedside resource, all the more beautiful for the unsparing details Vasudha infused into her books be it the cover design or language. Packed with research, story-telling and personal insights, conflating Vasudha’s influence with only beauty is like calling a vibrant kanchipuram sari a cut of cloth. Get ready for a live walkthrough in our metaverse gallery, Artbode with Team TUS! We’re going to chat about our fave artworks, spill the tea on all the cool features, and give you the grand tour of our Vorlds’ space. Don’t miss out – it’s going to be fun! ⚡🕹️ Date and Time: Thursday, 24th August, 03:30 PM GST | 05:00 PM IST | 07:30 PM SGT | 03:30 PM GST To join the event, simply enter our Artbode space on the date and time mentioned above. You can sign in via a desktop/laptop at www.vorlds.com/artbode to enter. You can also find the link in our bio. See you there! . . . . . . . . . #metaverse #metaversenft #metaversegeneration #metaversenews #metaverseinfluencer #nfts #nftartwork #TheUpsideSpace #TUS TagsLisa Ray Previous articleActress Niti Taylor HD Photos and Wallpapers August 2023Next articleActor Pirapat Watthanasetsiri HD Photos and Wallpapers August 2023