Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Evolution is a fickle bitch

I'm Just a Person by Tig Notaro

April 25, 2019 by Claire Badger Leave a Comment

I  set out to learn about Tig Notaro when she appeared on Star Trek: Discovery as the dry, hyper-confident engineer Jet Reno. I love this character so much that I went down the Tig Notaro rabbit hole and discovered she does not disappoint, and is possibly the only person worthy of depicting Jet Reno. I chose to do the audiobook version of her memoir, in part because I love her dry-Daria like delivery and wish I could truly perfect my like-I-give-a-fuck-about-emoting-monotone like she has. If […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Comedy/Humor Tagged With: #memoir, autobiography, cancer, Jet Reno, Star Trek, Tig Notaro

Claire Badger's CBR11 Review No:7 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Comedy/Humor · Tags: #memoir, autobiography, cancer, Jet Reno, Star Trek, Tig Notaro ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Just when you thought cancer couldn’t suck any more than it already does

The Neuroscientist Who Lost Her Mind: My Tale of Madness and Recovery by Barbara K. Lipska with Elaine McArdle

February 18, 2019 by KimMiE" 2 Comments

Barbara K. Lipska had already survived two encounters with the dreaded “C” disease when weird things started happening to her brain. In 2009 she fought off breast cancer, undergoing a mastectomy of her left breast, and then, in 2012, she defeated melanoma, or so she thought. That’s the trouble with cancer; you’re never really “cured.” There’s always the chance that it can metastasize somewhere else in your body. For Lipska, a neuroscientist who specializes in studying mental illness, the disease came roaring back in the […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Barbara K. Lipska, brain chemistry, cancer, cbr11, Elaine McArdle, KimMiE", neuroscience

KimMiE"'s CBR11 Review No:7 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction · Tags: Barbara K. Lipska, brain chemistry, cancer, cbr11, Elaine McArdle, KimMiE", neuroscience ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Love can overcome any obstacle

August 20, 2018 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

This is my SHINY SHINY SHINY book   While I really enjoyed Echo’s Sister by Paul Moiser, the writing is in a “debut author” style (meaning it can be a little “unsmooth” at times) even though this is his second book. It is also overly optimistic and “sweet” while dealing with a tough subject. With all that said, it is aimed perfectly at the audience of ages (high reader or concept understanding) 8 or 9-year-old up to about 10 years old. However, a slightly older […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Fiction Tagged With: #Shiny, art, cancer, cbr10bingo, Paul Moiser, siblilngs, Sisters

BlackRaven's CBR10 Review No:313 · Genres: Children's Books, Fiction · Tags: #Shiny, art, cancer, cbr10bingo, Paul Moiser, siblilngs, Sisters ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

A Seemingly Moderate Take on Terminal Illness

November 19, 2017 by ASKReviews Leave a Comment

Best for: People who enjoy memoirs such as When Breath Becomes Air. In a nutshell: Now-deceased writer Nina Riggs documents her illness from diagnosis onward. Line that sticks with me: “These are the things we all say at the end of book club now: ‘I love you.’ Of course we do. Why haven’t we been saying that all along?” Why I chose it: Memoir + death = A Lollygagger staple. Review: Author Nina Riggs gives us a gift with this book, in that it isn’t […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir Tagged With: cancer, Nina Riggs

ASKReviews's CBR9 Review No:90 · Genres: Biography/Memoir · Tags: cancer, Nina Riggs ·
Rating:
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Finally, an unreliable narrator who isn’t horrible

May 5, 2017 by ingres77 2 Comments

I’ve written fairly extensively about how much I dislike unreliable narrators, and how books written to damage the psyche are, I think, grotesque and antithetical to everything I want in a book. The narrator here is struggling through a fairly difficult time in her life, and therefore can’t always be relied on to objectively perceive her reality – but I think it’s handled in a way that is fair to the characters, and it’s done in service to the story, not as some cheap ploy […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Romance Tagged With: Before I Go, cancer, Colleen Oakley, unreliable narrator

ingres77's CBR9 Review No:36 · Genres: Fiction, Romance · Tags: Before I Go, cancer, Colleen Oakley, unreliable narrator ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Throwing a kitten out a window was only a warning shot.

April 29, 2017 by borisanne 2 Comments

Halfway through Moonglow, I caught myself with my hand over my mouth, trying to keep my breath inside my body because the prose was so exceptionally beautiful. I had my worries before reading this book. I have only recently discovered Chabon, and have only otherwise read The Yiddish Policeman’s Union, which was so stunning that it made me want to punch something. There is a lot of hype surrounding Moonglow, and even I only got it by accident from the library on a strict, one […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Fiction, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #memoir, cancer, Chabon, Cold War, divorce, horses, intelligence, Judaism, literary fiction, Love, lust, mental illness, Michael Chabon, nasa, Nazis, Non-Fiction, ptsd, rockets, science

borisanne's CBR9 Review No:18 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Fiction, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: #memoir, cancer, Chabon, Cold War, divorce, horses, intelligence, Judaism, literary fiction, Love, lust, mental illness, Michael Chabon, nasa, Nazis, Non-Fiction, ptsd, rockets, science ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments
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