Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About andtheIToldYouSos

CBR11 participant
CBR12 participant
CBR13 participant
CBR14 Participant
CBR14 Bingo Badges

Bookseller by day, book reader by night...and hopefully a reviewer somewhere in between. (Learn more about this Cannonballer: andtheIToldYouSos's Quick Questions interview.)

andtheIToldYouSos's Reviews:

“While I was killing him, I had to wipe my mouth with my sleeve every now and then because I couldn’t stop salivating.”

Mars by Asja Bakić

October 25, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

Anything can become normal, if you continue to stick through it. War, murder, cults, doppelgängers, being deported to Mars- whatever world you are dropped into becomes your world. Asja Bakić is a master of normalcy in abnormal times and places. Her short story collection, Mars, is filled to the gills with the weird becoming common place. I was originally drawn to this collection for less than academic reasons: it is short and it has a pretty corner! I was looking to race through my Bingo card, […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Science Fiction, Short Stories, Speculative Fiction Tagged With: #writing, Asja Bakić, bosnia, Creepy, croatia, dark humor, dystopia, Green, International, jennifer zoble, magical realism, refugee experience, short read, the feminist press, translated lit, war

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:111 · Genres: Fiction, Science Fiction, Short Stories, Speculative Fiction · Tags: #writing, Asja Bakić, bosnia, Creepy, croatia, dark humor, dystopia, Green, International, jennifer zoble, magical realism, refugee experience, short read, the feminist press, translated lit, war ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

cbr12bingo – white whale (and BLACKOUT!!!! now I if only I could blackout and forget that this book exists!)

Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov

October 24, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos 8 Comments

Lolita is absolutely vile, and I cannot be convinced otherwise. Yes, Humbert Humbert is the worst, and yes, we are supposed to know that he is a monster, but good lord this book is venerated from here to kingdom come as if it is the be all-end all of twentieth century literature. The edition that I picked up, which was published in 1997 as a commemoration of the 50th anniversary of the original pressing- and is still the one in current re-prints and mass circulation, STILL […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: 20th century lit, abuse, bingo, black out, cbr12bingo, jeremy irons, My Dark Vanessa, pedophilia, Rape, toxic masculinity, Vladimir Nabokov, white whale

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:110 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: 20th century lit, abuse, bingo, black out, cbr12bingo, jeremy irons, My Dark Vanessa, pedophilia, Rape, toxic masculinity, Vladimir Nabokov, white whale ·
· 8 Comments

things that go “scoff” in the night

Bunny by Mona Awad

October 18, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

This book was praised to high-heavens, thus giving me high hopes. It is all over “best of” lists, there are tons of snarky little quips in write-ups, and the paperback features pull-quotes from Margaret Atwood and Karen Russell. I was ready to be ruined by this book… but. …it fell flat, as so many pumped-up things often do. Samantha, an unreliable narrator if ever there was one, is a post-grad MFA fellow at Warren College, a told-but-not-shown sPoOoOoKy college somewhere in New England. There’s some […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Horror Tagged With: animal harm, body horror, cult, magic, mental illness, MFA program, mona awad, unreliable narrator, writers writing

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:109 · Genres: Fiction, Horror · Tags: animal harm, body horror, cult, magic, mental illness, MFA program, mona awad, unreliable narrator, writers writing ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Tana French is back with a vengeance and a penchant for Wild West-isms, and I am HERE. FOR. IT. 

The Searcher by Tana French

October 11, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos 2 Comments

This is a safe review; I’ll give you no spoilers and I’ll give you no major plot points- but I will let you know that no, we have not returned to the Dublin Murder Squad. While I found the departure disappointing in The Witch Elm, I found it thrilling here; the idyllic landscape filled with the insidious creep of small town communities. While we have not returned to the Murder Squad, we have returned to having a protagonist on the searching side of the law- and […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery, Western Tagged With: crime, Ireland, justice, return to form, rural life, Small town, Tana French, thriller, throwback, violence

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:108 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Western · Tags: crime, Ireland, justice, return to form, rural life, Small town, Tana French, thriller, throwback, violence ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

far from the confines of any one Room…

Astray by Emma Donoghue

October 8, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

not my best title, it’s true- but also not the best collection. I picked this up while looking for different work from Donoghue, and while it was not what I wanted it was a (mostly) pleasant way to spend my time. The idea is cool; this collection is filled with (often very) short stories divided into three “chapters”: Departures, In Transit, and Arrivals and Aftermaths. Each story is set in a different time; most are within the 19th century, but two creep into the 20th […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Short Stories Tagged With: Based on True Stories, emma donoghue, historical fiction, the new world

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:107 · Genres: Fiction, Short Stories · Tags: Based on True Stories, emma donoghue, historical fiction, the new world ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The Perks of No Longer Being a Teenager

The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

September 30, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos 6 Comments

Oh, this book. I treated it like a sacred text back in high school. I gave it regular re-reads through the beginning of college, but then I let it fade into the background. It used to be my “Fall” book (despite it covering an entire school year) and while I continued to think back on fondly, I started to replace that nostalgia drip with the character-created playlists from within the book. It’s been years since I last picked it up, but Ride’s “Vapour Trail” creeps […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: abuse, coming-of-age, cringeworthy, friendship, high school, nostalgia, reread, Stephen Chbosky, suburbia, the nineties, trauma

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:106 · Genres: Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: abuse, coming-of-age, cringeworthy, friendship, high school, nostalgia, reread, Stephen Chbosky, suburbia, the nineties, trauma ·
· 6 Comments
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