Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About Jake

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I love reading! (Learn more about this Cannonballer: Jake's Quick Questions interview.)

Jake's Reviews:

Fruit of a Rotted Tree

Sovereign by CJ Sansom

November 21, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

Anyone who’s read my reviews knows how much I love reading about the Plantagenets and the Wars of the Roses in general. So when I got to book three in the Shardlake series, I had high hopes for it and it surely did not disappoint. But I have to start with something that nags: I’m not a fan of Shardlake himself. True he cannot help his physical condition and the way people treat him is terrible. But the way he treats everyone else is…also not […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: #Henry VIII, #Tudors, CJ Sansom, England, historical fiction, Matthew Shardlake, mystery, shardlake series, Sovereign, Tudor Era England

Jake's CBR16 Review No:175 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: #Henry VIII, #Tudors, CJ Sansom, England, historical fiction, Matthew Shardlake, mystery, shardlake series, Sovereign, Tudor Era England ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Three For When It Happens Here

Spook Street by Mick Herron

Guide Me Home by Attica Locke

The Order by Daniel Silva

November 16, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

Like a lot of folks in the ten days since the election, I’ve perhaps been slow to process the news. This has impacted my reading. Whereas I’m usually a speed reader, I have found myself often putting off my reading to do some mindless activities. Dealing with reality can be tough, the uncertainty of what comes after the next two months are over is difficult to grapple with. Inadvertently, the three books I’ve read from immediately before the election into the ten days since have […]

Filed Under: Featured, Mystery, Suspense Tagged With: attica locke, Catholic church, Daniel Silva, Darren Mathews, espionage, family secrets, Gabriel Allon, Guide Me Home, highway 59 series, Israel, London, mick herron, mystery, Religion, Slough House series, Slow Horses, Spook Street, Texas, The Order

Jake's CBR16 Review No:174 · Genres: Featured, Mystery, Suspense · Tags: attica locke, Catholic church, Daniel Silva, Darren Mathews, espionage, family secrets, Gabriel Allon, Guide Me Home, highway 59 series, Israel, London, mick herron, mystery, Religion, Slough House series, Slow Horses, Spook Street, Texas, The Order ·
· 0 Comments

The Navajo Lens

Shutter by Ramona Emerson

November 4, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

I have always pursued good character-driven crime fiction. Yes, plotting is important and necessary to a good story but as I’ve said many times, I need a reason to care about what’s going on. The less I care about the characters, the less I’ll care about what’s going down. This is why whodunits rarely do it for me: they’re too focused on the mystery to make me care about who killed who. Shutter is not a tightly-plotted novel and that might bother some readers but I was so […]

Filed Under: Featured, Horror, Mystery Tagged With: Albuquerque, American southwest, horror, mystery, Native American, New Mexico, photography, Ramona Emerson, Rita Todacheene, Shutter

Jake's CBR16 Review No:171 · Genres: Featured, Horror, Mystery · Tags: Albuquerque, American southwest, horror, mystery, Native American, New Mexico, photography, Ramona Emerson, Rita Todacheene, Shutter ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Secret Agent Man

A Perfect Spy by John Le Carré

October 27, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

John Le Carré’s books are often labors of love to read. This was both love and labor with neither of them necessarily intertwining. I don’t want to go into details but there was a specific moment at my job this past week where I had to face down reminders of a rough work moment from years before. Nothing bad in terms of abuse or harassment but awful stuff. And it felt good to be reading “Magnus Pym’s” (Le Carré’s, David Cornwell’s) story at the same […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Fiction Tagged With: A Perfect Spy, Britain, Czech Republic, England, espionage, john le carré

Jake's CBR16 Review No:170 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Fiction · Tags: A Perfect Spy, Britain, Czech Republic, England, espionage, john le carré ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Three-Four-One

The Message by Ta-Nehisi Coates

October 15, 2024 by Jake 2 Comments

Despite the backlash due to Coates’ writing and speeches on his time in Palestine, there are really three narratives in this travelogue. The Palestine one is the third one and it’s the one I’m going to spend as little time as possible on because I don’t want this page to be a forum on what’s happening there right now. I actually think the best essay here is the first one, where Coates finds himself in Dakar, Senegal. He has written at length about the rejection […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir Tagged With: book bans, Israel, Palestine, Race, senegal, South Carolina, Ta-nehisi Coates, the message, travelogue

Jake's CBR16 Review No:169 · Genres: Biography/Memoir · Tags: book bans, Israel, Palestine, Race, senegal, South Carolina, Ta-nehisi Coates, the message, travelogue ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Early Fall Leftovers

To Start A War: How the Bush Administration Took Us Into Iraq by Robert Draper

The Travelers by Chris Pavone

A Walk Among the Tombstones by Lawrence Block

Dark Fire by CJ Sansom

The Menendez Murders: The Shocking Untold Story of the Menendez Family and the Killings that Stunned the Nation by Robert Rand

Stasi Child by David Young

The Cover Wife by Dan Fesperman

So Thirsty by Rachel Harrison

Revelations of Divine Love by Julian of Norwich

Geiger by Gustaf Skördeman

Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001 by Steve Coll

Slow Horses by Mick Herron

The Devil Knows You're Dead by Lawrence Block

October 14, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

I’ve read some interesting stuff lately and I wish I had made more time to document it but life gets in the way that life sometimes does. Not all bad, just life. To Start A War**** I had a long thing here about connecting this to the 2024 election but I don’t want to talk current electoral politics on here, at least the specifics of them. A good book if you want to know the intelligence (ha) perspective of how we wound up in a […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History, Horror, Mystery, Non-Fiction, Religion, Suspense Tagged With: #Henry VIII, #history, 9/11, A Walk Among the Tombstones, Afghanistan, Berlin, Chris Pavone, Christian mysticism, Christianity, CIA, CJ Sansom, Colin Powell, Condolezza Rice, Dan Fesperman, Dark Fire, David Young, East Germany, espionage, Forever Wars, Geiger, George W. Bush, Germany, Ghost Wars, Gustaf Skördeman, Hamburg, historical fiction, horror, Julian of Norwich, Karin Muller, lawrence block, London, Matthew Scudder, Matthew Shardlake, medieval england, mick herron, mystery, New York City, Osama Bin Laden, Rachel Harrison, Religion, Revelations of Divine Love, Robert Draper, Robert Rand, Sara Nowak, Slow Horses, So Thirsty, Stasi, Stasi Child, Steve Coll, Sweden, The Cover Wife, The Devil Knows you're Dead, The Travelers, Thomas Cromwell, To Start a war, Tudor England, vampires, War in Iraq

Jake's CBR16 Review No:168 · Genres: Fiction, History, Horror, Mystery, Non-Fiction, Religion, Suspense · Tags: #Henry VIII, #history, 9/11, A Walk Among the Tombstones, Afghanistan, Berlin, Chris Pavone, Christian mysticism, Christianity, CIA, CJ Sansom, Colin Powell, Condolezza Rice, Dan Fesperman, Dark Fire, David Young, East Germany, espionage, Forever Wars, Geiger, George W. Bush, Germany, Ghost Wars, Gustaf Skördeman, Hamburg, historical fiction, horror, Julian of Norwich, Karin Muller, lawrence block, London, Matthew Scudder, Matthew Shardlake, medieval england, mick herron, mystery, New York City, Osama Bin Laden, Rachel Harrison, Religion, Revelations of Divine Love, Robert Draper, Robert Rand, Sara Nowak, Slow Horses, So Thirsty, Stasi, Stasi Child, Steve Coll, Sweden, The Cover Wife, The Devil Knows you're Dead, The Travelers, Thomas Cromwell, To Start a war, Tudor England, vampires, War in Iraq ·
· 0 Comments
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