Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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The Dragon Revenant

The Tomb of Dragons by Katherine Addison

October 11, 2025 by LittlePlat Leave a Comment

A few weeks back, I wrote a review for Katherine Addison’s The Angel of the Crows. Reading this book was actually a bit of tangent for me; I had been meaning to hunt down the third book in her Cemeteries of Amalo series, The Tomb of Dragons. And then I got distracted by the book whose existence became as a surprise. And a massive library hold time. The Tomb of Dragons is the third book in the Cemeteries of Amalo set, which are, in turn, […]

Filed Under: Fantasy Tagged With: cbr17bingo, colonialism, dragons, genocide, katherine addison, lgtbqia, mystery, speculative, TBR, the goblin emperor, the witness for the dead

LittlePlat's CBR17 Review No:30 · Genres: Fantasy · Tags: cbr17bingo, colonialism, dragons, genocide, katherine addison, lgtbqia, mystery, speculative, TBR, the goblin emperor, the witness for the dead ·
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Cover of Mia Tsai’s The Memory Hunters

Who has the right to history?

The Memory Hunters by Mia Tsai

September 1, 2025 by LB Leave a Comment

The Memory Hunters fulfills the “red” square for CBR17 Bingo. I really enjoyed Mia Tsai’s Bitter Medicine, and was very excited to try The Memory Hunters, which is a completely new world and setting. It is set in a type of near future where climate change has resulted in much of the coast as we know it being devastated and swallowed by the ocean and storms, and fungi being used as a way to collect and remember history. It opens when Kiana Strade, a memory […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, Speculative Fiction Tagged With: #history, cbr17bingo, colonialism, consecrated, fungal fantasy, fungi, memory hunters, mia Tsai, queer, Religion, sapphic

LB's CBR17 Review No:20 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Speculative Fiction · Tags: #history, cbr17bingo, colonialism, consecrated, fungal fantasy, fungi, memory hunters, mia Tsai, queer, Religion, sapphic ·
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Kin in Far-flung Places

A Disappearance in Fiji by Nilima Rao

July 20, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

CBR17 Bingo: Diaspora – This story is intimately bound up in the experience of the Indian diaspora in colonial Fiji, who went to work there as indentured servants but were in reality little more than slaves. Caught between demotion and disgrace, Indian police officer Akal Singh is instead posted to colonial Fiji, where an investigation into the vanishing of an indentured Indian woman from a sugarcane plantation is complicated by the political pressures within the British Empire. I’m a sucker for an unusual setting in […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, History, Mystery Tagged With: audiobook, cbr17bingo, colonialism, early 1900s, historical, historical mystery, India, mystery, Nilima Rao, Oceania

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:40 · Genres: Audiobooks, History, Mystery · Tags: audiobook, cbr17bingo, colonialism, early 1900s, historical, historical mystery, India, mystery, Nilima Rao, Oceania ·
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“It may be said of some very old places, as of some very old books, that they are destined to be forever new. The nearer we approach them, the more remote they seem: the more we study them, the more we have yet to learn. “

Women in the Valley of the Kings: The Untold Story of Women Egyptologists in the Gilded Age by Kathleen Sheppard

April 9, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

In the so-called Golden Age of Egyptology, it was men who were known world-wide as the archeologists and academics who wrestled the secrets of Ancient Egypt from the desert, carrying away much of what they found. In this book, Sheppard turns the spotlight on female Egyptologists, who had less recognition but were equally instrumental in the early days of the discipline. I’m not very familiar with Egyptology in the Gilded Age beyond Howard Carter’s famous “Yes, wonderful things!” and a vague understanding of how the […]

Filed Under: Health, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #history, academia, ARC, archeology, colonialism, egypt, Kathleen Sheppard, NetGalley

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:24 · Genres: Health, Non-Fiction · Tags: #history, academia, ARC, archeology, colonialism, egypt, Kathleen Sheppard, NetGalley ·
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Same as it ever was

The Colony by Audrey Magee

March 15, 2025 by Zirza Leave a Comment

Ireland, 1979. Painter Lloyd gingerly takes a dinghy to a remote island off the Irish Coast, where he can lock himself in with the natives and paint for the summer. The natives eye him with wariness; they are happy to take his money and, in exchange, feed him, but they mistrust his motives. Not long after, French linguist JP also arrives on the island. JP is writing a dissertation about the Irish language spoken on the island; a language which is on the decline as […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: art, Audrey Magee, colonialism, Ireland, irish literature, island, The Colony, The Troubles

Zirza's CBR17 Review No:15 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: art, Audrey Magee, colonialism, Ireland, irish literature, island, The Colony, The Troubles ·
Rating:
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Perang Kemerdekaan Indonesia.

Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World by David van Reybrouck

February 9, 2025 by LittlePlat 1 Comment

After making Majaphait one of the last reads of last years Cannonball Read, I decided to keep with my South East Asian history roll with Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World by David van Reybrouck. As you can see, I’m also continuing with my long standard interest in Australia’s immediate northern neighbor. It just boggles the mind that such a large, diverse country has such a small impact on the public consciousness. I think a lot of this has to do with […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #history, colonialism, David van Reybrouck, everyone is bastards, Indonesia, post-colonialism, revolution, South East Asia

LittlePlat's CBR17 Review No:1 · Genres: Audiobooks, History, Non-Fiction · Tags: #history, colonialism, David van Reybrouck, everyone is bastards, Indonesia, post-colonialism, revolution, South East Asia ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment
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