Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Cover of James by Percival Everett noting it is a Pulitzer Prize finalist

“Those little bastards were hiding out there in the tall grass.”

James by Percival Everett

April 27, 2025 by cheerbrarian 4 Comments

I heard from multiple people that James was THE BOOK to read last year, and it was on a lot of best of lists, so I was exicted to give it a read. It fully hooked me from the first sentence “Those little bastards were hiding out there in the tall grass.” I didn’t have a lot of expectations about this book, but having me chuckle from the start was a surprise. This is a retelling of the classic tale Huck Finn but from the […]

Filed Under: Featured, Fiction, History Tagged With: Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, African American literature, American Slavery, civil war, classic, historical fiction, James, Mark Twain, Percival Everett, Race

cheerbrarian's CBR17 Review No:1 · Genres: Featured, Fiction, History · Tags: Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, African American literature, American Slavery, civil war, classic, historical fiction, James, Mark Twain, Percival Everett, Race ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

All That She Carried – a powerful and important book

All That She Carried by Tiya Miles

November 23, 2022 by MarkAbaddon 2 Comments

What can a simple sack tell us about the past? As it turns out, an absolutely incredible amount. Sometime in the 1850s, a slave named Rose sent her daughter Ashley out of South Carolina to escape slavery with a sack that contained a tattered dress, 3 handfuls of pecans, a braid of her mom’s hair and love. With these talismanic items, Ashley (who was still a child) was able to escape the hellish conditions of the South to freedom in the North. How do we […]

Filed Under: History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: African, african american history, American History, American Slavery, Tiya Miles

MarkAbaddon's CBR14 Review No:9 · Genres: History, Non-Fiction · Tags: African, african american history, American History, American Slavery, Tiya Miles ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

A worthy literary endeavor that left me underwhelmed

December 29, 2017 by teresaelectro Leave a Comment

Colson Whitehead’s Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Underground Railroad, was another Mocha Girls Read book club selection. The novel follows Cora on her Odyssey-like journey to escape slavery traveling a magical realistic underground railroad. “Here was the true Great Spirit, the divine thread connecting all human endeavor – if you can keep it, it is yours. Your property, slave or continent. The American imperative.” – page 80 It begins in Africa following the first slaves as they were stolen and brought over to America. From […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: #CannonballRead9, african american history, American Slavery, Black History, cbr9, Colson Whitehead, Fiction, historical fiction, historical research, Pulitzer Prize, Slavery, The Underground Railroad

teresaelectro's CBR9 Review No:9 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: #CannonballRead9, african american history, American Slavery, Black History, cbr9, Colson Whitehead, Fiction, historical fiction, historical research, Pulitzer Prize, Slavery, The Underground Railroad ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

An Unsung American Hero

March 7, 2017 by ElCicco 1 Comment

This brief but riveting history was just released last month. Erica Armstrong Dunbar is a Professor of Black Studies and History at the University of Delaware and has previously published an historical work entitled A Fragile Freedom: African American Women and Emancipation in the Antebellum City. In the course of doing research some two decades ago, Dunbar came across an advertisement in an issue of the Philadelphia Gazette in 1796 for the capture of President Washington’s runaway slave Ona Judge. Her curiosity piqued, Dunbar resolved […]

Filed Under: History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: American History, American Slavery, cbr9, ElCicco, Erica Armstrong Dunbar, Non-Fiction, ReadWomen

ElCicco's CBR9 Review No:9 · Genres: History, Non-Fiction · Tags: American History, American Slavery, cbr9, ElCicco, Erica Armstrong Dunbar, Non-Fiction, ReadWomen ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment


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