fredag 24. september 2010

Kite runner... so far

I started reading The Kite Runner a few days ago, the book is mostly interesting. I haven't read far enough for it to make me excited. I've read the book before so i know exactly what's going to happen, this takes away most of the excitement in the book. Still, i know the book will entertain me when i really get into it.
so far, the main character Amir has been hanging around with his best friend/servant Hassan. Amir and Hassan has mostly been talking about the upcoming kite competition where Amir controls the kit and Hassan is the kite runner. through the parts i've read so far, Amir act as if Hassan is only hes servant.
That's how far i have read. by the way, there is some kinds of war going on, i don't really know what's going on yet.

fredag 17. september 2010

Erin B


Erin Brockovich was an unemployed single mother of three children who, after losing a personal injury lawsuit against a doctor in a car accident she was in, asks her lawyer, Edward Masry, if he can find her a job in compensation for the loss. Ed gives her work as a file clerk in his office, and she runs across some files on a pro bono case involving medical records in real-estate files and the company PG&E offering to purchase the home of Hinkley, California resident Donna Jensen.
Erin begins digging into the particulars of the case, convinced that the facts simply do not add up, and persuades Ed to allow her further research. After investigation, she discovers a systematic cover-up of the industrial poisoning of the town of Hinkley's water supply that threatens the health of an entire community. She finds that PG&E is responsible for the extensive illnesses that the residents of Hinkley have been diagnosed with and fights to bring the company to justice.
Erin meets a mysterious man in a bar who claimed to Erin to have destroyed documents at PG&E, and discovers a 1966 document that ties a conversation of a corporate executive in the San Francisco PG&E headquarters to the Hinkley station that knew the water was contaminated but didn't do anything about it and advised to keep it a secret from the Hinkley neighborhood. The evidence was examined by a judge without a jury and PG&E was ordered to pay a settlement amount of $333 million that was divided among the plaintiffs.