Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About elderberrywine

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Elder LOTR/Holmes fan girl/writer since forever.

elderberrywine's Reviews:

Girlfriend Had a LIFE.

The True History of the First Mrs. Meredith and Other Lesser Lives by Diane Johnson

September 24, 2020 by elderberrywine Leave a Comment

That’s her on the cover, lower left hand corner. The first Mrs. George Meredith, nee Mary Ellen Peacock. This biography, written in 1972 by early feminist Diane Johnson, is wonderfully quirky and fascinating. Mary Ellen, to give her the only name that was truly hers, was not famous in her own right, but was what I’d call famous-adjacent. Her father was the Romantic poet Thomas Love Peacock, who, whilst rambling about Wales in search of dramatic scenery, met Jane Gryffydh, daughter of a vicar of […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Diane Johnson, feminism, Victoria writers, Victorian artists

elderberrywine's CBR12 Review No:13 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: Diane Johnson, feminism, Victoria writers, Victorian artists ·
· 0 Comments

Frozen Meets Fiddler on the Roof

August 12, 2020 by elderberrywine 4 Comments

This was a highly entertaining mashup, drawing from several familiar sources, but with very much its own unique story to tell.  The fairy tale influences range from The Snow Queen to Rumpelstiltskin but with the addition of Tsarist Russia’s history with its Jewish population tossed in too.  But the core of the story has to do with three very different women who are each unwillingly matched up with a husband who is repulsive to them, and the means they each take to solve their dilemma. […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, Romance Tagged With: Fairy Tales, feminist, Russia

Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Romance · Tags: Fairy Tales, feminist, Russia ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

Hear the Fearsome War Cry of the River Otter! Ic-yang!

Tarka the Otter by Henry Williamson

July 9, 2020 by elderberrywine Leave a Comment

Set in rural Devon and written in 1928, this is the life story of Tarka, the river otter, written as an unsentimental biography, from birth to death.  Williamson had an unusual talent of presenting the life of a wild creature just as is.  Well, there are some names, but that is only so that one can distinguish one creature from another.  Otherwise, they are very much not anthropomorphized.   The language, though, is a delight.  It’s not written in a dialect, per se, but rather […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: devon, Henry Williamson, nature, otters

elderberrywine's CBR12 Review No:12 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: devon, Henry Williamson, nature, otters ·
· 0 Comments

Ladies of the Canyons flashback

Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid

July 1, 2020 by elderberrywine 2 Comments

  What a blast from the past.  Spoiler alert, Daisy Jones and I am the same age, and living the 1970’s LA life whilst in your twenties was some good times.  The music was all around, in an LA-centric way I have not seen since.  (Still here.)  The clubs were rocking, but I did not have that kind of money, although the boyfriend and I managed to swing tickets once for the Universal Amphitheater and Linda Ronstadt in all her boy scout uniform glory (damn, […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: 70s rock, california, music, Taylor Jenkins Reid

elderberrywine's CBR12 Review No:11 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: 70s rock, california, music, Taylor Jenkins Reid ·
· 2 Comments

Australian spookiness. Just add panpipes and a didgeridoo.

Picnic at Hanging Rock by Joan Lindsay

May 21, 2020 by elderberrywine 10 Comments

  In 1975, I saw an Australian movie, Picnic at Hanging Rock, one of the most perfect and perfectly weird films I have ever seen.  The impact of this film still resonates with me, and when I was looking for another book at Powells, and noticed this, I HAD to have it.  I had no idea the film was based on a book, and yet here we are.  And it is every bit as freakily good as the movie as.   It begins as a […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Horror, Mystery, Suspense Tagged With: Ancient Momolith, Australia, Girl's Boarding School, Joan Lindsay, Peter Weir movie, Turn of the Century

elderberrywine's CBR12 Review No:10 · Genres: Fiction, Horror, Mystery, Suspense · Tags: Ancient Momolith, Australia, Girl's Boarding School, Joan Lindsay, Peter Weir movie, Turn of the Century ·
· 10 Comments

Damn, son. Be sure to hang on to that candelabra, though.

Malicroix by Henri Bosco

May 16, 2020 by elderberrywine Leave a Comment

What a wild ride.  Gothic mysticism is the best way to describe it, I guess.  Although I was unfamiliar with the French writer, he had been nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature four times, so there’s that. The book opens in a straightforward way with a pleasant young man being summoned to the estate of his recently deceased great-uncle.  He is dropped off by carriage in a desolate expanse of fields and wetlands where he is met by a taciturn shepherd sent to escort […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Camargue, French, gothic, Henri Bosco, Mystical realism, nature

elderberrywine's CBR12 Review No:9 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Camargue, French, gothic, Henri Bosco, Mystical realism, nature ·
· 0 Comments
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Recent Comments

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