Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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“She writes that she will walk across the ocean to be with her lover. He sees this, not as a declaration of love, but as a statement of a single-mindedness so total that a kind of grandeur creeps into it.”

In Pursuit of Love: A Journey in the Footsteps of Obsession by Mark Bostridge

August 31, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

CBR17 Bingo: I – Re: the title. Victor Hugo was the most famous writer in the world when his daughter, Adèle, left their home in Guernsey on a years-long mad pursuit of a former lover. Centuries later, author Mark Bostridge retraces her steps and tries to understand her obsession in the prism of his own life. I have not seen acclaimed 1975 film The Story of Adele H., so this was my first real acquaintance with the strange life of Adèle Hugo, whose story was […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #biography, #history, #memoir, 19th century, ARC, cbr17bingo, Mark Bostridge, mental illness, NetGalley

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:50 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction · Tags: #biography, #history, #memoir, 19th century, ARC, cbr17bingo, Mark Bostridge, mental illness, NetGalley ·
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La Parisienne

The Ladies' Paradise by Émile Zola

Nana by Émile Zola

June 28, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

The Ladies’ Paradise – 4 stars Denise Baudu comes dirt-poor to Paris with her younger brothers to work at her uncle’s shop, but instead goes to work at its greatest competitor – the ever-growing department store the Ladies’ Paradise, presided over by the Great Seducer Octave Mouret, who falls in love with Denise only to find out she may be one of the only things in the world he cannot buy. I was in the mood for a Victorian novel, but none of the usual […]

Filed Under: Featured, Fiction Tagged With: 19th century, classics, Émile Zola, France, french literature

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:34 · Genres: Featured, Fiction · Tags: 19th century, classics, Émile Zola, France, french literature ·
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1880s romance and human rights

Renegade Girls by Nora Neus and Julie Robine

June 6, 2025 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

When I started the Nora Neus and Julie Robine graphic novel, Renegade Girls, I was not enjoying it. Things felt too simple, romanticized, not original and terribly slow paced. I already knew the ending. Or so I thought. Granted, there was the obvious ending (if you are paying attention) but things did not take the obvious path to get there. We have a realistic look at the troubles of the factor workers and we see the ugly but it is not gratuitous. In fact, if […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Comedy/Humor, Fiction, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, Health, History, Mystery, Romance, Young Adult Tagged With: 19th century, Alice Austen, Children, civil rights, employee rights, factory workers, female photography, female reporters, human rights, Julie Robine, LGBTQ, Nell Nelson, Nora Neus, Nora Neus and Julie Robine, photography, reporters, social classes, Social Themes, stunt girl journalists, stunt girls

BlackRaven's CBR17 Review No:292 · Genres: Children's Books, Comedy/Humor, Fiction, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, Health, History, Mystery, Romance, Young Adult · Tags: 19th century, Alice Austen, Children, civil rights, employee rights, factory workers, female photography, female reporters, human rights, Julie Robine, LGBTQ, Nell Nelson, Nora Neus, Nora Neus and Julie Robine, photography, reporters, social classes, Social Themes, stunt girl journalists, stunt girls ·
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The Thin Line Between Fantasy and Reality

Mary and the Birth of Frankstein by Anne Eekhout

March 29, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

The year is 1812, and fourteen-year-old Mary Goodwin is living in pastoral Dundee, where she may find love but may find danger as well. The year is 1816, and eighteen-year-old Mary Shelley is living in rainy Geneva, where she may conceive of something that is strange and fearful and all hers, if she will allow herself to do it. I have still not read Frankenstein. (I keep meaning to! There’s just so many books to read!) But I am familiar with its plot, and the […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: #fantasy, 19th century, Anne Eekhout, ARC, gothic, historical, horror, lgbt, NetGalley

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:19 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: #fantasy, 19th century, Anne Eekhout, ARC, gothic, historical, horror, lgbt, NetGalley ·
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Are you a Lucy Stoner?

One Girl's Voice : How Lucy Stone Helped Change the Law of the Land by Vivian Kirkfield and Rebecca Gibbon

February 27, 2025 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

You have probably heard of Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton, but have you heard about Lucy Stone? You might not have, but you should as she would influence Anthony and others to join the women’s rights movement and to keep up the good fight. The title One Girl’s Voice : How Lucy Stone Helped Change the Law of the Land by Vivian Kirkfield and illustrated by Rebecca Gibbon inspired me to google Women’s Right Activists to see if Stone’s name came up. Even […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Children's Books, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: 19th century, Civil & Human Rights, Lucy Stone, Rebecca Gibbon, Social Themes, Social Topics, United States, Vivian Kirkfield, Vivian Kirkfield and Rebecca Gibbon, women history

BlackRaven's CBR17 Review No:112 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Children's Books, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: 19th century, Civil & Human Rights, Lucy Stone, Rebecca Gibbon, Social Themes, Social Topics, United States, Vivian Kirkfield, Vivian Kirkfield and Rebecca Gibbon, women history ·
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“Before you sentence the guilty, at least listen through to the end of the story.”

Memoirs of a French Courtesan: Volume 1: Rebellion by Celeste Mogador, Kristen Hall-Geisler (translator)

Memoirs of a French Courtesan: Volume 2: Spectacle by Celeste Mogador, Kristen Hall-Geisler (translator)

January 13, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

Memoirs of a French Courtesan: Volume 1: Rebellion – 4 stars Before she was the famed courtesan Mogador, Céleste was a young girl with a troubled childhood running with her mother from an abusive stepfather. Sex workers were an integral part of Paris’s bohemian society in the 19th century, but one of the first of them to put her own story down for herself was Céleste Mogador. Having heard plenty on the subject in operas and Les Mis, I was interested in hearing one of […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #memoir, 19th century, Celeste Mogador, Kristen Hall-Geisler (translator), France, french literature, sex work

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:5 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction · Tags: #memoir, 19th century, Celeste Mogador, Kristen Hall-Geisler (translator), France, french literature, sex work ·
Rating:
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