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Description
FDW Lift Top Coffee Table with Hidden Compartment and Storage Shelf Wooden Lift Tabletop for Home Living Room Reception Room Office (Black)About This Melamine veneer veneer: The surface of this coffee table is made of a layer of melamine veneer with modern design style, which is beautiful, wear resistant and scratch resistant, which improves the beauty of the tea table to a greater extent . LIFT TOP Design: The tabletop of this coffee table can be effortlessly lifted up and forward to create a workspace when sitting on your sofa. The high quality metal mechanism enables the tabletop to
About This
- 👍·Melamine veneer veneer: The surface of this coffee table is made of a layer of melamine veneer with modern design style, which is beautiful, wear-resistant and scratch-resistant, which improves the beauty of the tea table to a greater extent .
- 👍·LIFT-TOP Design: The tabletop of this coffee table can be effortlessly lifted up and forward to create a workspace when sitting on your sofa. The high-quality metal mechanism enables the tabletop to be lifted up or lowered down easily and without noise.
- 👍·Considerable Storage Space: Lift up the tabletop and reveal a hidden compartment, it helps to store often-used items like laptops, chess, remote controllers, game controllers and suchlike under the top when not in use, keeping them handy and dirt-free. Two partitioned lower shelves can hold blankets, or books.
- 👍·Appropriate Collocation: modern design style, simple lines, can make this coffee table match your room just right, without any abruptness, such as placing it in the study room, living room, bedroom or even a rocking chair Balcony.
- 👍· Environmental Protection And Safety: The entire coffee table is made of P2 grade MDF boards certified by CARB, which can be used in your house with confidence.
Overview
- Brand : FDW
- Product Dimensions : 39"D x 28"W x 24"H
- Maximum Weight Recommendation : 150 Pounds
- Color : Black
- Product Care Instructions : Wipe with Damp Cloth
- : Item Weight 52 Pounds Frame Material Engineered Wood
- : Item Weight 52 Pounds
- : Frame Material Engineered Wood
- : Top Material Type Engineered Wood Shape Rectangular
- : Top Material Type Engineered Wood
- : Shape Rectangular
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4.1 ★★★★★
Based on 68 reviews
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Product Reviews
★★★★★ 5
Extraordinary Chronicle of an Avenging Warrior
I purchased this book, although I had read this several years ago. My interest to revisit the novel was aroused when I read The Good Lord Bird and viewed the series. There are strong parallels in the struggles and the motivations explored in these works. Styron is a talented writer who makes this history come alive and gather relevance. The brutal consequences of an impossible circumstance lives on through this century as the legacy of slavery is explored in splendid literary works such as this powerful novel. I highly recommend it.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2021
★★★★★ 4
Make Sure You Read the Vintage Edition with the Afterword
I initially purchased this book to read for two reasons: First, it was written by William Styron, who wrote the great "Sophie's Choice;" and second, it won a Pulitzer Prize. It was only after I was into the book that I learned that this vintage sixties' book was the subject of a major controversy over the depiction of the title character, Nat Turner.
I learned that Styron openly acknowledged fictionalizing large portions of Turner's life, including his motivations for leading the slave revolt. I also learned that Styron's largely fictionalized portrait of Turner outraged many black leaders of the time. Rather than painting Turner (entirely) as a hero, called to action by the injustices of slavery, Styron created a darker picture of a man fixated on religion, a vision of himself as a prophet, and frustrated by lust and desire (particularly, for a young, blond haired white girl).
As I read the book, I search my own feelings, and felt that if I were black, I would certainly have objected similarly. We all need our heroes, who become much larger as symbols than they could ever be as people. For the sake of those that come after, such icons are perhaps entitled to be treated with a greater level of sensitivity and care--even at the cost of literary restraint.
It is here that the story gets fascinating. After I finished the novel, I read Styron's Afterword. Styron was truly stung by the criticism and in the Afterword, provided an elegant and persuasive defense of his writings. While I will not say that Styron entirely changed my position, he definitely made me see the other side of the argument. The dialogue between Styron and his critics not only allows the reader to consider one of the great social and political issues of our time, but permits the reader a unique insight into the thinking of a great writer--and suffices, in and of itself, as a reason for reading this novel. MAKE SURE YOUR VERSION OF THE NOVEL HAS THIS AFTERWORD.
Putting the issue aside as to the real "Nat Turner," the novel itself is beautifully written. The characters are fully developed and believable. The description of the system of slavery and the relationship between whites and blacks feel very real, and very accurate. Styron shows us good and bad of each race, and how all of them are bound by the system of slavery and their actions directly the product of it.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2008
★★★★★ 5
I loved this book.
I read this book for my book club and I thought it was beautifully written. It has stayed with me for weeks now. I love when a book does that. I'm glad I wasn't swayed by controversy. I had no problem with the fact that the author was white and using a black voice(maybe because I'm white - but I do like when an author gets the voice right and I thought Styron did that). I didn't understand the charges of racism after reading the book. Sometimes I wonder if, what some people find uncomfortable, they label as racist or sexist or whatever. Anyway, I would encourage everyone to read this book because it gave me a fresh awareness of a huge part of U.S. history, it reminded me that there are always gray areas to consider and it was a great novel. You might think so too.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2007
★★★★★ 5
great read
I enjoyed this book. As a person who enjoys history this book was a great read for me and the author gives an in depth vision on the trial.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2023
★★★★★ 3
Nat Turner was NOT happy
I think Mr Styron may have took some liberties with Nat Turner's "orientation" without the research or data to support his opinion.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2016