Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About allisonata

CBR11 participant

Avid reader and writer in Northern California. Interests range from history to YA to NY Times best-sellers to graphic novels. Trying to decolonize my bookshelf and make sure women get at least equal time.

allisonata's Reviews:

The Elements of Style: The Sequel

On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction by William Zinsser

May 5, 2019 by allisonata Leave a Comment

A professor once threatened to boot me from his course for my crimes against the English language. My breezy essays were careless, inexact, perhaps even terrible. In his mercy Dr. Wright —a white-haired taskmaster in tweed jackets who frequently referenced “the war” (World War II)—gave me some advice: “Read Strunk and White every morning while eating your Wheaties.” If William Strunk and E.B. White’s The Elements of Style is the life vest keeping your head above water, William Zissner’s On Writing Well is the Coast […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: #howtoguide, #writing, cbr11, non fiction, William Zinsser

allisonata's CBR11 Review No:25 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: #howtoguide, #writing, cbr11, non fiction, William Zinsser ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Life is Hard: A Sermon (with a soupçon of Fix-My-Husband)

I'm Fine and Neither Are You by Camille Pagán

April 14, 2019 by allisonata 2 Comments

When I became too old for Sunday School, I had to learn to sit through sermons. At first I doodled hearts and flowers on the church bulletin. When I was too old for that, I turned my attention to analyzing the sermon. Depending on the preacher, I waited for Freudian slips, clichés, logical fallacies (“no true Scotsman”), and flights of magical thinking—flaws I found quite amusing. Yet the quickest way to lose my interest and respect was to traffic in the soggy old object lesson.  […]

Filed Under: Book Club, Fiction Tagged With: book club, Camille Pagán, cbr11, Fiction, ReadWomen

allisonata's CBR11 Review No:24 · Genres: Book Club, Fiction · Tags: book club, Camille Pagán, cbr11, Fiction, ReadWomen ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Five Books on Screenwriting

Screenplay by Syd Field

Save the Cat by Blake Snyder

Tough Love Screenwriting by John Jarrell

Writing Screenplays that Sell by Michael Hauge

The Wall Will Tell You by Hampton Fancher

April 10, 2019 by allisonata Leave a Comment

If current trends hold, the future’s great American novels will be movies or TV series. Film fully exploits sight and sound as well as action and dialogue, and—unlike video games—it requires little time or effort to participate in a complete story. Hollywood would be helpless without the imagination and craft of the not-so-famous people who spin narratives and sparkling dialogue out of thin air. Many screenwriters are self-taught, some graduate from fancy film schools (*cough* USC *cough*), and some are also novelists (see: F. Scott […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: Blake Snyder, cbr11, Hampton Fancher, John Jarrell, Michael Hauge, Screenwriting, Syd Field

allisonata's CBR11 Review No:23 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: Blake Snyder, cbr11, Hampton Fancher, John Jarrell, Michael Hauge, Screenwriting, Syd Field ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

What’s Not to Love?

The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion

April 6, 2019 by allisonata Leave a Comment

My romantic expectations hover somewhere between The English Patient and Lust, Caution. (Love is brief and destroys lives. THE END.) Reading The Rosie Project, I found myself loving the dispassionate narrator in spite of myself. Don is bright, witty, and somewhere on the spectrum. Though he has no use for love—he’s busy with his successful career and finds satisfaction in his careful routine—he decides a wife could be a helpful addition to his overall situation. Imagine Mr. Spock going on OKCupid. The author has said […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Romance Tagged With: Asperger's Syndrome, cbr11, romantic comedy

allisonata's CBR11 Review No:18 · Genres: Fiction, Romance · Tags: Asperger's Syndrome, cbr11, romantic comedy ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The Original YA Novel: Classic for a Reason

Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë

March 9, 2019 by allisonata 8 Comments

Everyone has a classic book that they’ve successfully managed to avoid. Jane Eyre is mine. After abusive Wuthering Heights left me fuming—f***ing emo Heathcliff—I binned all the Brontë sisters. I know now that I did wrong. Strong and sensitive Jane Eyre is the progenitoress of Anne of Green Gables, Meg Murray, Lyra Belacqua, and Katniss Everdeen. Unlike any English novel prior to 1847, the story happens *inside* a young woman’s mind, giving the reader direct access to her thoughts, emotions, and observations. (The book couldn’t […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Romance Tagged With: Brit Lit, cbr11, charlotte bront, Gothic Romance

allisonata's CBR11 Review No:17 · Genres: Fiction, Romance · Tags: Brit Lit, cbr11, charlotte bront, Gothic Romance ·
Rating:
· 8 Comments

Murder Mysteries: Hercule Poirot > Miss Marple

Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie

Nemesis by Agatha Christie

March 2, 2019 by allisonata 1 Comment

The ingenious website I Write Like has informed me on six separate occasions that my writing most resembles that of Agatha Christie, the best-selling author of all time, aside from Shakespeare and the Bible. Praise be! However, I have never read the First Lady of Mystery, as murders solved by someone other than Sherlock Holmes rarely appeal to me. Fortunately, on last week’s trip to the coast I came across Coalesce Bookstore, a shop packed to the rafters with volumes old and new. I left […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery Tagged With: #britishmystery, agatha christie, cbr11, mystery

allisonata's CBR11 Review No:16 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery · Tags: #britishmystery, agatha christie, cbr11, mystery ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment
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Recent Comments

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