Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About andtheIToldYouSos

CBR11 participant
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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:

familiar fables

Kissing the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins by Emma Donoghue

December 29, 2019 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

Familiar stories are passed, one by one, from one storyteller to another. There are thirteen tales in Kissing the Witch; some will be immediately recognizable, some will require you to dust off your mental library, and some are fantastically new- conjured from collective memory and superstition but new none the less. Each tale is handed off from teller to teller; frequently the perceived villain will be the heroine of the following story. Most are, to quote Emmylou Harris, “full of heartbreak and desire”. She sings that […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, Short Stories Tagged With: classics, emma donoghue, fairy tale, feminist lit, gothic, magic, queer, retelling, short stories, spooky

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR11 Review No:17 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Short Stories · Tags: classics, emma donoghue, fairy tale, feminist lit, gothic, magic, queer, retelling, short stories, spooky ·
· 0 Comments

a slight peek into the obscured past

Costalegre by Courtney Maum

December 29, 2019 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

The concept of capital-A ART reigns lavishly above the characters within Costalegre. A woman and her daughter, stand-ins for Peggy and Pegeen Guggenheim, go to Mexico to wait out the steamroller of World War II. They are surrounded by the mother’s collection of artists and hangers-on. They wait for a steamship full of the mother’s collection of art which may still be creeping across the ocean towards their hideaway in the jungle. The mother’s collection is full of people and pieces deemed to be unworthy; Europe did […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: art, artists, coming-of-age, courtney maum, dada, Djuna Barnes, Emily Coleman, Ferdinand Cheval, Max Ernst, mexico, peggeen guggenheim, peggy guggenheim, WWI, WWII

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR11 Review No:16 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: art, artists, coming-of-age, courtney maum, dada, Djuna Barnes, Emily Coleman, Ferdinand Cheval, Max Ernst, mexico, peggeen guggenheim, peggy guggenheim, WWI, WWII ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Dear Diary; nature has gone haywire

Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich

December 29, 2019 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

A young Native American woman learns that she is pregnant in a time of miracles and disaster; nature has gone haywire. Evolution has sped up, gone sideways, and/or stopped all together. Times are trying. It is a particularly frightening time to be a single person with an unplanned pregnancy- especially when religious-esque government agents are collecting and imprisoning pregnant women. Our narrator, Cedar, gives us her story through the pages of her diary. She is keeping accounts of her body and the world around her […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Science Fiction Tagged With: adoption, Catholicism, cultural identity, dystopian future, evolution, handmaid's tale, Louise Erdrich, magical realism, marital law, miracles, Motherhood, native voices, reproductive rights

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR11 Review No:15 · Genres: Fiction, Science Fiction · Tags: adoption, Catholicism, cultural identity, dystopian future, evolution, handmaid's tale, Louise Erdrich, magical realism, marital law, miracles, Motherhood, native voices, reproductive rights ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

This is not a happy story, but hey- neither is The Little Mermaid. 

The Seas by Samantha Hunt

December 19, 2019 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

I devoured Samantha Hunt’s previous novel, Mr. Splitfoot, last year and it easily fell into my top 10 of the decade (If you have yet to come across Mr. Splitfoot then I implore you to check it out; it has everything you’ll ever need: ghosts! cults! comets!) but The Seas easily steals a spot among my favorites of all time. The Seas is slim, spare, and haunting.  I have always been drawn to tales of maritime peril, and while there is no shipwreck here there are […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction Tagged With: alcoholism, coastal life, dark, desire, destiny, magical realism, maritime peril, Mermaid, Mr. Splitfoot, ptsd, samantha hunt

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR11 Review No:14 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction · Tags: alcoholism, coastal life, dark, desire, destiny, magical realism, maritime peril, Mermaid, Mr. Splitfoot, ptsd, samantha hunt ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

ugh. show not tell the “NOT ALL CONFEDERATES” edition

Varina by Charles Frazier

December 18, 2019 by andtheIToldYouSos 3 Comments

Well y’all, I’ve done it again. I found another piece of sniveling, self-serving garbage. I finished this one out of spite. I wanted very badly, much like Signature of All Things, to cast this garbage into the sea. Unlike that previous disaster, I could not bring myself to punish the environment with this piece of “not all confederates” garbage.  Charles Frazier spent a mind-numbing 353 pages elaborating on what could have been a pamphlet – “Varina Davis was a lady that had ideas outside of […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: #trashy, American History, Antebellum South, Charles Frazier, civil war, Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, lauded author, varina davis

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR11 Review No:13 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: #trashy, American History, Antebellum South, Charles Frazier, civil war, Confederacy, Jefferson Davis, lauded author, varina davis ·
Rating:
· 3 Comments
Trust Exercise Cover

*bell tolls* SHAME! SHAME! SHAME!

Trust Exercise by Susan Choi

December 11, 2019 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

Trust Exercise punched me in the gut, kicked me while I was down, and still I could not leave it alone.  I was once an insufferable THEEEEAAAAATER kid, and the teens on display here made my blood curdle- out of immediate and inescapable recognition. I was a pretentious brat until far too recently (still pretentious, just too old to be a brat) and roiling guilt flowed through my veins throughout the entire book. I have been working diligently on keeping my ideas off of other […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: 2019, abuse of power, Award Winner, best of 2019, drama, Fiction, high school, National Book Award, Performing Arts, perspective, sex, Shame, susan choi

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR11 Review No:12 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: 2019, abuse of power, Award Winner, best of 2019, drama, Fiction, high school, National Book Award, Performing Arts, perspective, sex, Shame, susan choi ·
· 0 Comments
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