Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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The American Dream as an iridescent admonition.

January 25, 2016 by ingres77 Leave a Comment

The Pearl is a fairly simple tale, a parable, of the destruction wrought upon a family by colonialism, capitalism, and wealth. Kino is a hardworking, but impoverished, man who works as a pearl diver. When his infant son, Coyolito, is stung by a scorpion, Kino seeks help from the village doctor. They are turned away for lack of funds, and Kino and is wife, Juana, make the best of the situation with an herbal poultice. He returns to the ocean in the hopes that he’ll […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: American Dream, colonialism, family, Great Depression

ingres77's CBR8 Review No:9 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: American Dream, colonialism, family, Great Depression ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Joseph Conrad Meets Graham Greene

July 7, 2015 by ElCicco 2 Comments

The Strangler Vine was long listed for the 2014 Bailey’s Women’s Prize for Fiction and the description — historical fiction set in early 19th-century India featuring a green soldier, a wizened political operative and Thuggees — made it sound too good to pass up. Images of Indiana Jones came to mind, but Carter offers her readers so much more than that pulpy comic-booky fare. Trained as a journalist, she delivers a meticulously researched political novel that reminded me of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: CBR7, colonialism, ElCicco, Fiction, historical fiction, India, M.J. Carter, ReadWomen, The Strangler Vine

ElCicco's CBR7 Review No:31 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: CBR7, colonialism, ElCicco, Fiction, historical fiction, India, M.J. Carter, ReadWomen, The Strangler Vine ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

A dark tale of colonialism and liberation in Africa

May 12, 2014 by Valyruh 3 Comments

This is a remarkable book about religion, racism, sexism, feminism, colonialism, capitalism, socialism …  and about an amazing family that came to Africa as missionaries and learned truths that had nothing to do with God and everything to do with humanity. The Price family arrives in the then-Belgian Congo of 1959, headed by Southern Baptist Reverend Nathan Price, a wife-abusing, child-abusing, fanatical tyrant and bitter disappointment of a man. He and his captive wife Orleana and his four daughters arrive unwanted in an impoverished Congolese village […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: Africa, colonialism, Lumumba, missionary

Valyruh's CBR6 Review No:30 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: Africa, colonialism, Lumumba, missionary ·
Rating:
· 3 Comments
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