The Little French Bistro, Nina George (PRH/Crown; RH Audio/BOT; OverDrive Sample).
“Terribly depressed by the emptiness of her long marriage, Marianne decides to end it all by jumping off a Paris bridge. Her unwanted rescue and ensuing marital abandonment jolt Marianne into ditching her tour group and setting out for Finistere, the westernmost coast of Brittany. Keeping body and soul together by working at a seaside bistro, Marianne finds herself healing through the company of a diverse group of quirky locals. The Little French Bistro is merveilleux. It refreshes like the sea breeze sweeping the Breton coast.” — Sarah Nagle, Carver County Library, Chaska, MN
Trick wording and a $91 fee: Watchdog targets ticket seller
MEDia Dragons and Game Of Thrones
Young Chinese are 'too fat and masturbate too much to pass army fitness tests'
Young Chinese are 'too fat and masturbate too much to pass army fitness tests'
Thank God at least THAT military threat is gone!
“Swell”: Bernanke to Give Keynote Speech at October Cryptocurrency Event Michael Shedlock
Exclusive: Trump Vents in Oval Office, "I Want Tariffs. Bring Me Some Tariffs!"
Exclusive: Trump Vents in Oval Office, "I Want Tariffs. Bring Me Some Tariffs!"
High Tide For INTO THE WATER
Reviews are pouring in for Paula Hawkins’s second novel, Into the Water (PRH/Riverhead; RH Audio/BOT; OverDrive Sample). So far,seven are pans, as Literary Hub’s Book Marks characterizes them, with just one rave, one positive and one mixed.
In The Guardian, crime writer Val McDermid gives Hawkins some sympathy, “The second novel is a notorious challenge to a writer. Hawkins had a mountain to climb after the success of The Girl on the Train and no doubt the sales of her second thriller will be massive. I suspect her readers’ enjoyment may be less so.”
Entertainment Weekly offers a rare life raft, giving the novel a B-, writing, “The book’s piled-on storylines lack the feverish, almost subdermal intimacy of Train, and Hawkins’ pulp psychology has only the soggiest sort of logic. Still, buried in her humid narrative is an intriguing pop-feminist tale of small-town hypocrisy, sexual politics, and wrongs that won’t rinse clean.” (They gave The Girl on the Train an A-).
USA Today is also on board, writing,”The various plot currents eventually converge, and when they do Into the Water takes off with a rush … So do dive in. The payoff is a socko ending. And a noirish beach read that might make you think twice about dipping a toe in those dark, chilly waters.”
Reviews are predictors of popularity only to the extent that they anticipate word of mouth an this book has legs. Movie rights were sold to Dremaworks, it is rising on Amazon’s rankings, and is currently in the top ten. Although holds were light prepub, they have risen dramatically in several libraries, jumping from ratios of 2:1 to 5:1, and in one case from 4:1 to 12:1.
We expect it to to hit the NYT bestseller list in the top five next week and stay there the next month or so, sliding down and settling in for the rest of the summer. In other words, while not at the level of The Girl on the Train, it will do as well as most books by established best selling authors.
Wall Street Journal, No One Knows How Much to Pay in Bitcoin Cash Taxes:
Before rejoicing over a Bitcoin Cash windfall, here’s a warning: You may owe taxes on it.
After
years of discord over bitcoin’s future, the digital currency recently
split into two competing versions: one called bitcoin and an alternate
called Bitcoin Cash. As a result, each bitcoin owner received an equal amount of Bitcoin Cash, or the right to it.
But tax experts say there has been no guidance on how to treat the sudden receipt of Bitcoin Cash.
Ebay
seller avoids jail after £200k tax fraud (25
Aug 2017)
HMRC
wins bulk of tax avoidance challenges but loses IHT case
(25 Aug 2017)
Paul
Ryan Is Lying About High Corporate Tax Rates (25
Aug 2017)
Malta's
tax increase twice as high as EU average
(25 Aug 2017)
Tax
subsidies to attract corporations are bad business
(25 Aug 2017)
Two
International Bank Managers from Société
Générale, S.A
Charged in Libor Interest Rate Manipulation Scheme (25 Aug
2017)
CCAB
issues draft anti-money laundering guidance for accountants
(25 Aug 2017)
Here’s
how to prevent another BHS-style crisis (24 Aug 2017)
Belgium
named most lenient on money laundering in the EU
(24 Aug 2017)
Tax
the Rich and the Robots? California's Thinking About It (24
Aug 2017)
Apple
gets $208 million in tax breaks to build Iowa data center
(24 Aug 2017)
Governments for Sale: UK political
parties received record £40m of donations in election run-up
(24 Aug 2017)
RBS Settles Property Developer's $856
Million Libor-Rigging Suit (24 Aug 2017)
'Life-changing consequences:' HMRC
warns on risks of hiding wealth offshore in new crackdown (23
Aug 2017)
Millions
of UK taxpayers sent warning about secret offshore accounts
(23 Aug 2017)
#Declassified:
Apartheid Profits - nuclear bunkers and swiss bankers
(23 Aug 2017)
Commonwealth
Bank faces class action over money-laundering scandal (23 Aug
2017)
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Government Search System on Beneficial Ownership (23 Aug 2017)
Cambodia
PM orders English-language newspaper to pay taxes or close (23 Aug
2017)
HMRC
wins majority of tax avoidance cases (23 Aug 2017)
HMRC
loses case over Tesco Clubcard VAT treatment (23 Aug 2017)
Read
court Judgement in Tesco Freetime Ltd and Tesco PLC v Revenue and
Customs (VAT - INPUT TAX : Attribution) [2017] UKFTT 614 (TC) (04
August 2017) (23 Aug 2017)