Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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About vel veeter

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vel veeter's Reviews:

Early in 1949, in Trinidad, near the end of my schooldays, word came to us in the sixth form of Queen’s Royal College that there was a serious young poet in one of the smaller islands to the north who had just published a marvelous first book of poems.

A Writer's Journey by VS Naipaul

March 25, 2020 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

This is a late collection of essays by the Nobel Prize winning novelist VS Naipaul, who was of Indian descent, from Trinidad, and who wrote in English. The poet in the title of the essay (as Naipaul tells us “the reader may have guessed”) is Derek Walcott, who forms a kind of rival and mentor figure for the young Naipaul as a fledgling writer and thinker. Naipaul was not a poet and tells us he didn’t really like poetry that much either. So having his […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: A writer's people, vs naipaul

vel veeter's CBR12 Review No:150 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: A writer's people, vs naipaul ·
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I was set down from the carrier’s cart at the age of three; and there with a sense of bewilderment and terror my life in the village began.

Cider with Rosie by Laurie Lee

As I Sat out One Midsummer Morning by Laurie Lee

A Moment of War by Laurie Lee

March 25, 2020 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

Cider with Rosie This is a series of autobiographies (not as fiction as far as I can tell) about growing up in the Cotwolds between the war. Laurie Lee is born in the middle of the first World War in a small town in the middle nowhere in southwest England. He describes his childhood home as being 17th century, and when I look up what that likely means, it looks to be the most England house I could imagine. It had thick clay walls, carved […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir Tagged With: a moment of war, As I Set out One Midsummer Morning, Cider with Rosie, Laurie Lee

vel veeter's CBR12 Review No:149 · Genres: Biography/Memoir · Tags: a moment of war, As I Set out One Midsummer Morning, Cider with Rosie, Laurie Lee ·
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We were three kloms from King’s X when Carson spotted the dust.

Uncharted Territory by Connie Willis

March 24, 2020 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

This is a reread of a Connie Willis novella from the 90s. I reread it because this is a new audiobook version. We find ourselves on a kind of archeological/anthropological/paleontology survey of a foreign planet. The survey crew is abuzz because of a new member showing up that day. Evelyn is not a woman to the chagrin the male members of the crew and to the delight of at least one of the women. The novel then goes into the rules, regulations, and guidance that […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Connie Willis, uncharted territory

vel veeter's CBR12 Review No:146 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Connie Willis, uncharted territory ·
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Lov Bensley trudged homeward…

Tobacco Road by Erskine Caldwell

March 24, 2020 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

The literary equivalent of a Hee Haw joke. “Ah cot mah wife in bed with my brutha” “You bitter?” “Ayup, bit him too!” I am from the South and while I am not from the SOUTH-SOUTH and we were blue collar and working class (more from a mountain town), we didn’t have any money and my siblings and I were the first generation from the family to go to college. I’ve also taken a number of Southern Lit classes. That’s all to say that when […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Erskine Caldwell, tobacco road

vel veeter's CBR12 Review No:145 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Erskine Caldwell, tobacco road ·
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Not everybody knows how I killed old Philip Mathers, smashing his jaw in with my spade…

The Third Policeman by Flann O'Brien

March 23, 2020 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

So apparently I am just going to spend my morning listening to a highly absurdist novel. Makes perfect sense to me actually. This is a book written by Flann O’Brien who is one of the more or less grandfathers of Irish literature (especially during a certain time in the 20th century) and this novel feels in a lot of ways like a nice blend between Joyce and Beckett, who more or less bracket O’Brien’s career. The novel was written in the 1930s, but didn’t find […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Flann O'Brien, the third policeman

vel veeter's CBR12 Review No:144 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Flann O'Brien, the third policeman ·
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In pursuance of my duties of literary executor of the author of whom this, his first published posthumous work, is herewith offered to the delectation of some readers and the undoubted bewilderment of others…

The End of the World News by Anthony Burgess

March 23, 2020 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

So what is this novel? Well, it’s a kind of a collection of novellas — three, a science fiction novel taking place in the year 2000 as a giant planet called LYNX is coming unbearably close the Earth, threatening to destroy all life there and abscond with the moon while a high school teacher who first denies the existence of the planet is then mad that he won’t be selected to help with the solution to save humanity (escape on a kind of ark); the […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Anthony Burgess, the end of the world news

vel veeter's CBR12 Review No:143 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Anthony Burgess, the end of the world news ·
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