Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Fresh scares from a needed perspective

Living Ghosts and Mischievous Monsters: Chilling American Indian Stories by Dan SaSuWeh Jones

November 11, 2024 by cosbrarian Leave a Comment

Readers who have been craving a selection of tales reminiscent of Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark should look no further than Living Ghosts and Mischievous Monsters: Chilling American Indian Stories, compiled by Ponca storyteller Dan SaSuWeh Jones.  Jones is a busy guy: he is a writer, producer, and artist; he’s worked as an Imagineer for Disney and produced for Sesame Street; he is a sculptor, a former Chairman of the Ponca Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma, and he assembled this creepy collection of […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Featured, Horror, Short Stories Tagged With: American Indian, Dan SaSuWeh Jones, folklore, Ghost Stories, Indigenous Americans, Native American, ponca, scary stories, spooky, supernatural, urban legends

cosbrarian's CBR16 Review No:9 · Genres: Children's Books, Featured, Horror, Short Stories · Tags: American Indian, Dan SaSuWeh Jones, folklore, Ghost Stories, Indigenous Americans, Native American, ponca, scary stories, spooky, supernatural, urban legends ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Started November 12th. Finished January 12th. The breaks in reading were NECESSARY

The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones

January 12, 2021 by andtheIToldYouSos 7 Comments

…but the journey was worth it. This book is brutal. If you are sensitive at all to suffering- be it human, animal, generational, cultural- turn away now and do not look back. Four Blackfeet men engage in a bit of last-minute less-than-legal Elk hunting the weekend before Thanksgiving. What happens that day never really leaves them, but what they left behind comes rocketing back into their lives 10 years later. The 10 years since that day have not been easy; the men are plagued by […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Horror, Suspense Tagged With: American Indian, audio, blackfeet, book riot read harder challenge, cultural identity, folklore, generational trauma, gore, graphic violence, legend, murder, native voices, Own voices, paranormal, Shaun Taylor-Corbett, Stephen Graham Jones, supernatural, survival, thriller, tradition

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR13 Review No:6 · Genres: Fiction, Horror, Suspense · Tags: American Indian, audio, blackfeet, book riot read harder challenge, cultural identity, folklore, generational trauma, gore, graphic violence, legend, murder, native voices, Own voices, paranormal, Shaun Taylor-Corbett, Stephen Graham Jones, supernatural, survival, thriller, tradition ·
Rating:
· 7 Comments

An Native American novel “tender with significance”

The Night Watchman by Louise Erdrich

June 6, 2020 by tiny_bookbot Leave a Comment

“The sun was low in the sky, casting slant regal light. As they plodded along, the golden radiance intensified until it seemed to emanate from every feature of the land. Trees, brush, snow, hills. She couldn’t stop looking. The road led past frozen sloughs that bristled with scorched reeds. Clutches of red willow burned. The fans and whips of branches glowed, alive. Winter clouds formed patterns against the fierce gray sky. Scales, looped ropes, the bones of fish. The world was tender with significance.” It […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Fiction, History Tagged With: American Indian, historical fiction, Louise Erdrich

tiny_bookbot's CBR12 Review No:11 · Genres: Audiobooks, Fiction, History · Tags: American Indian, historical fiction, Louise Erdrich ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
Cover of the book I Can Make This Promise by Christine Day

Stories from the 1% (no not THAT one)

I Can Make This Promise by Christine Day

February 11, 2020 by cosbrarian Leave a Comment

Recently I was lucky to present at our state comic con on Teen Girls in Space, and one of the focuses of my panel contributions was diversity in pop culture. I got to really dig into the still terrible statistics of representation in literature and media, and while it was nice to see the numbers getting better, all in all it is a “long way to go” situation – unsurprising to any Pajiban and Cannonballer, I am sure. Of the many major bummers, one super-major […]

Filed Under: Children's Books Tagged With: American Indian, children's book, children's lit, christine day, contemporary fiction, duwamish nation, middle grade, Multigenerational, Native American, suquamish nation

cosbrarian's CBR12 Review No:4 · Genres: Children's Books · Tags: American Indian, children's book, children's lit, christine day, contemporary fiction, duwamish nation, middle grade, Multigenerational, Native American, suquamish nation ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The central truth of their lives was the past….

October 5, 2016 by ingres77 Leave a Comment

Empire of the Summer Moon is not for everyone. It’s an elegiac paean to frontier America and the doomed struggle of Comanche Indians to maintain their way of life in the face of an unrelenting onslaught of white encroachment. It broadly encompasses the rugged bravado of American pioneers trying to fulfill their Manifest Destiny and the individual horrors of trying to eek out a life in a hostile world. It walks the delicate line between explaining how these disparate and dichotomous worlds clashed and parsing […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction, Western Tagged With: American Indian, Comanche, frontier, Native American, Quana Parker, the American West

ingres77's CBR8 Review No:87 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, History, Non-Fiction, Western · Tags: American Indian, Comanche, frontier, Native American, Quana Parker, the American West ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

“Death is never added to death, it multiplies.”

August 23, 2016 by ingres77 4 Comments

I’m not going to review the book too deeply, in anticipation of our discussion. These are just some thoughts I had. I had no idea that Sherman Alexie wrote the screenplay for Smoke Signals. if you haven’t seen it, I highly recommend that you do. If you enjoyed this book, I couldn’t recommend that movie enough. It has a similar tone, and touches on some of the same themes. Stylistically, this book could’ve been written by Stephen King. Maybe that’s a weird comparison to make, but […]

Filed Under: Book Club, Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: American Indian, cannonball book club, censorship, Native American, Sherman Alexie

ingres77's CBR8 Review No:74 · Genres: Book Club, Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: American Indian, cannonball book club, censorship, Native American, Sherman Alexie ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments
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