Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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“Now he carried the past with him rather than being carried on the back of the brute that was his history.”

The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey by Walter Mosley

February 23, 2022 by ElCicco Leave a Comment

If you were beginning to sense the onset of dementia and had the chance to take a drug that would clear your mind for a short period of time but then cause your death, would you take it? Ninety-one-year-old Ptolemy Grey doesn’t hesitate when offered the chance because he knows he has something important he is supposed to do before he dies and needs to remember what it is. This short 2010 novel by Walter Mosley is a touching reflection on memory, history and what […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: cbr14, ElCicco, Fiction, The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey, walter mosley

ElCicco's CBR14 Review No:11 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: cbr14, ElCicco, Fiction, The Last Days of Ptolemy Grey, walter mosley ·
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True life is often much more interesting than fiction

The Bastard Brigade: The True Story of the Renegade Scientists and Spies Who Sabotaged the Nazi Atomic Bomb by Sam Kean

February 21, 2022 by KimMiE" Leave a Comment

In the author’s note to The Bastard Brigade, Sam Kean responds to the question, why has he never written a book about physics before? His previous books (which are all fabulous and highly recommended by me) focus on genetics, chemistry, neuroscience, and the atmosphere, even though the author studied physics in college. He explains, “What I really love doing is telling stories, and when I’m planning a book, I look for rip-roarin’ stories first and foremost. I want heroes and villains, conflict and drama, plot twists […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: adventure, atomic bomb, cbr14, KimMiE", physics, Sam Kean, science, World War II

KimMiE"'s CBR14 Review No:7 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: adventure, atomic bomb, cbr14, KimMiE", physics, Sam Kean, science, World War II ·
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If Jane was vain, and Rochester was…sort of the same

Dragonwyck (1945) by Anya Seton

February 20, 2022 by drmllz 1 Comment

A Gothic scholar I follow on Twitter mentioned Dragonwyck quite recently, which recalled giddy memories of swooning at the suspense and romance and delicious clothes as an early teenager, probably too young to be reading about abusive relationships shrouded (at least initially) in glamour. But then again, I read Jane Eyre then too. So I ordered cheap secondhand paperback off Awesomebooks, and read it in a night. Miranda is a pretty farm girl with aristocratic aspirations, in Connecticut in the 1840s. A distant cousin, Nicholas Van […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery, Suspense Tagged With: american gothic tales, anya seton, cbr14, Dragonwyck, drmllz, gothic historical romance

drmllz's CBR14 Review No:2 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Suspense · Tags: american gothic tales, anya seton, cbr14, Dragonwyck, drmllz, gothic historical romance ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

It was the worst of times

Fingersmith by Sarah Waters

February 14, 2022 by ElCicco Leave a Comment

Fingersmith is award winning historical fiction set in 1862 London and at a country manor known as Briar. Like a Dickens novel, it features thieves, asylums, poor, rich and table turning, but this work also focuses on women, sex, matters of power/agency and the lack thereof.  The story is told in three parts: two from point of view of Sue Trinder, a 17-year-old orphan and fingersmith (thief), and one from point of view of 17-year-old Maud Lilly, who is an orphan and an heiress. Both […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: cbr14, ElCicco, Fiction, Fingersmith, historical ficiton, lesbian literature, Sarah Waters

ElCicco's CBR14 Review No:10 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: cbr14, ElCicco, Fiction, Fingersmith, historical ficiton, lesbian literature, Sarah Waters ·
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Ducks and biscuits and footnotes and fireworks

How to Be Brave by Daisy May Johnson

February 12, 2022 by drmllz 2 Comments

A number of classic children’s stories start with death or dislocation: Anne leaves her orphanage for Green Gables, Mary crosses the ocean to arrive at Misselthwaite Manor and discover the Secret Garden, Papa Alcott is absent at the Civil War front, leaving his Little Women to fend for themselves–and, in a more explicit early twentieth-century influence of Johnson’s, the orphan and impoverished Bettany sisters head to the Austrian Alps to start the Chalet School. The disruption of normal life, and a stable family unit, is […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Comedy/Humor, Fiction, Mystery, Young Adult Tagged With: cbr14, Daisy May Johnson, drmllz, How to Be Brave, school story

drmllz's CBR14 Review No:1 · Genres: Children's Books, Comedy/Humor, Fiction, Mystery, Young Adult · Tags: cbr14, Daisy May Johnson, drmllz, How to Be Brave, school story ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

The 80s were a magical time for dystopian near-future fiction

V for Vendetta by Alan Moore and David Lloyd

February 6, 2022 by KimMiE" 4 Comments

“I’m thinking of taking my family and getting out of this country soon, sometime over the next couple of years. It’s cold and it’s mean-spirited, and I don’t like it here anymore.” Surprisingly, the above quotation does not come from V for Vendetta, but from Alan Moore’s 1988 introduction to the graphic novel for the original DC Comics run. At the time, Margaret Thatcher was entering her third term as Prime Minster of the U.K., and Moore was despairing about, among other things, the treatment of […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Graphic Novels/Comic Books Tagged With: Alan Moore and David Lloyd, anarchy, cbr14, dystopian future, Graphic Novel, KimMiE", political

KimMiE"'s CBR14 Review No:6 · Genres: Fiction, Graphic Novels/Comic Books · Tags: Alan Moore and David Lloyd, anarchy, cbr14, dystopian future, Graphic Novel, KimMiE", political ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments
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