Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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“…believing in ghosts — that’s believing that love never dies.”

The Hundred Secret Senses by Amy Tan

May 19, 2021 by ElCicco Leave a Comment

Amy Tan’s The Hundred Secret Senses is a ghost story, a history, and a testament to the power of hope and love. This is only my second Amy Tan novel, but I must say, I am riveted by her storytelling. In this novel, as with The Kitchen God’s Wife, Tan manages to tell stories of the past that have a direct relationship to the present. This time, Tan reaches 100+ years into the past, to 1865, as she tells the story of Nunumu, the peasant […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Amy tan, CBR13, ElCicco, Fiction, The Hundred Secret Senses

ElCicco's CBR13 Review No:20 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Amy tan, CBR13, ElCicco, Fiction, The Hundred Secret Senses ·
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“See her name: Lady Sorrowfree, happiness winning over bitterness, no regrets in this world.”

The Kitchen God’s Wife by Amy Tan

April 12, 2019 by ElCicco 2 Comments

In the Chinese tale of the Kitchen God, a man named Zhang, who owes his wealth and success to the efforts of his wife Guo, grows tired of her and throws her aside for another woman. When he falls on hard times and becomes destitute, fate puts him back with Guo, but his shame leads to his death. In the afterlife, he is rewarded for his remorse by being made the Kitchen God, a sort of spy, susceptible to bribery, who bestows luck upon individuals. […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Amy tan, cbr11, ElCicco, Fiction, ReadWomen, The Kitchen God’s Wife

ElCicco's CBR11 Review No:17 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Amy tan, cbr11, ElCicco, Fiction, ReadWomen, The Kitchen God’s Wife ·
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· 2 Comments

“I can never remember things I didn’t understand in the first place.”

December 13, 2018 by Sophia Leave a Comment

I think I remember reading The Joy Luck Club (1989) by Amy Tan when I was a kid. My mother must have bought it, and I picked it up because I would read anything and everything I could get my hands on–even when I was too young to really understand it. So when I saw it on my list of 50 Books Every Woman Should Read Before She Turns 40, I wasn’t sure I needed to read it again. In the end, I figured it was worth the […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: Amy tan, Sophia

Sophia's CBR10 Review No:58 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: Amy tan, Sophia ·
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· 0 Comments

Mother, mother

November 12, 2017 by vel veeter 1 Comment

The Scapegoat – Mary Lee Settle This is the fourth book in the Beaulah Quinet, Mary Lee Settle’s history of West Virginia through the lens of conflicts ranging from the ousting of a Puritan partisan in the English Civil War (leading to immigration to America) to the settling and drawing of land parcels in the 18th century to a novel I haven’t read yet in the 1840s to this coal mining dispute in 1912 and finally to more or less contemporary times. Following one family, in […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Amy tan, Mary Lee Settle, the bonesetter's daughter, the scapegoat

vel veeter's CBR9 Review No:452 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Amy tan, Mary Lee Settle, the bonesetter's daughter, the scapegoat ·
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· 1 Comment

Amy Tan’s nonfiction

August 12, 2017 by bonnie Leave a Comment

I read The Joy Luck Club in college for a women’s literature course, and while it wasn’t my favorite book, it was certainly interesting. I do think Amy Tan gets pigeonholed quite a bit as a “Chinese” American writer, and while she writes about a heritage from China, it’s not exactly fair to think of the experiences she writes about as exclusive to Chinese-Americans, or even more broadly, Asian-Americans. I won The Opposite of Fate, a nonfiction collection, at my undergrad’s English Department annual Book […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir Tagged With: Amy tan, bonnie

bonnie's CBR9 Review No:102 · Genres: Biography/Memoir · Tags: Amy tan, bonnie ·
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· 0 Comments

North East South West

May 21, 2017 by vel veeter 1 Comment

  Obviously, this book makes me think of this clip from the Simpsons. I am left wondering why this book gets taught to high school students, at least in a compulsory sense. I think that this book makes a lot of sense for a self-motivated kind of student. Not to say that it’s a particularly complex or difficult book to read, but that it’s themes and issues kind of skip teenage years. For example, everyone in this book seems to be either a child or […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Amy tan, The Joy Luck Club

vel veeter's CBR9 Review No:212 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Amy tan, The Joy Luck Club ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment
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