Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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“Love is sharing your popcorn.” —Charles Schultz

A Salwar Kameez for Ambika by Arti Pandey

Samina Goes to a Wedding: Celebrations from a Bangladeshi Marriage by Farida Zaman

November 20, 2025 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

Somedays I think I must be one of the top 100 romantic skeptics. I mean, I love a good happily ever after, but I’m also the person who, when I see a public proposal, I’m the one saying, “Just say no! But if you do, get a good prenup!”  So when I recently found two picture books about weddings as online reader copies, I almost passed them by. I mean, I’m all for a wedding (I mean let me eat cake) but reading about them? […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Cooking/Food, Fiction, Poetry, Religion, Romance Tagged With: Arti Pandey, Asian American & Pacific Islander, Avneet Sandhu, Bangladesh, culture, Farida Zaman, holidays & celbrations, India, new experinces, traditions, weddings

BlackRaven's CBR17 Review No:515 · Genres: Children's Books, Cooking/Food, Fiction, Poetry, Religion, Romance · Tags: Arti Pandey, Asian American & Pacific Islander, Avneet Sandhu, Bangladesh, culture, Farida Zaman, holidays & celbrations, India, new experinces, traditions, weddings ·
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“A poem was pinned under Hoshiar’s picture of young Duleep: “I have been thrown into a far-flung place, had everything, all that I once cherished, my Kingdoms and my very life taken from me. I am now in a foreign place, so far from my people. So far from my homeland.”

The Patient Assassin: A True Tale of Massacre, Revenge, and India's Quest for Independence by Anita Anand

October 13, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

A Indian freedom fighter waited more than two decades to exact revenge for the Jallianwalla Bagh massacre which was ordered by the British Raj – but the story is more complicated and less cinematic than it has been often depicted since. At the start of this book, the author notes that as the descendent of Indians, she had to set aside her natural aversion to the British Raj and admiration for Udham Singh to tell the story in as unbiased a way as she could. […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Biography/Memoir, History Tagged With: #biography, #history, Anita Anand, audiobook, crime, India, non fiction, politics

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:62 · Genres: Audiobooks, Biography/Memoir, History · Tags: #biography, #history, Anita Anand, audiobook, crime, India, non fiction, politics ·
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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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I read a young adult book on India’s partition and felt like my heart was absolutely shredded

The Night Diary by Veera Hiranandani

June 22, 2025 by denesteak 4 Comments

The world is burning at the moment, and we may be hyper focused on the US trying to gun for the “Most Likely to Revert to a Dictatorship” award or Israel’s decision to start double-fisting wars or (literally happened today) US’s decision to join the Iran-Israel conflict — but do you know that WWIII came very close to breaking out in May? India and Pakistan — both nuclear-armed, and both sworn enemies since the Brits left — started bombing each other over militant attacks in […]

Filed Under: Featured, Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: Fiction, India, Pakistan, partition, The Night Diary, Veera Hiranandani, Young Adult

denesteak's CBR17 Review No:8 · Genres: Featured, Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: Fiction, India, Pakistan, partition, The Night Diary, Veera Hiranandani, Young Adult ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

Around the World Around the World

Night Prayers by Santiago Gamboa

May 4, 2025 by Jake Leave a Comment

Very mixed feelings on Night Prayers. Ultimately, it’s one of the best things I’ve read in 2025. It’s also one of the more frustrating. Gamboa writes in the style of his Latin American contemporaries such as Bolaño and Marquez. And for the most part, he does it well. This is a style I always enjoy sampling, even if it can frustrate me at times with its tangents and magic realism. I quit the book several times in the beginning but was inexorably drawn back to it and […]

Filed Under: Suspense Tagged With: Bangkok, bogota, Colombia, diplomacy, India, literary fiction, mystery, new dehli, Night Prayers, Noir, Santiago Gamboa, Thailand

Jake's CBR17 Review No:19 · Genres: Suspense · Tags: Bangkok, bogota, Colombia, diplomacy, India, literary fiction, mystery, new dehli, Night Prayers, Noir, Santiago Gamboa, Thailand ·
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Forced to leave home

Wings to Soar by Tina Athaide

March 14, 2025 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

Diversity CBR17 Pie Chart Challenge April is Poetry Month. Therefore in March I decided to find a few books of poetry or novels that were prose poetry. And one of them was Wings to Soar by Tina Athaide. Currently available, I read it via an online reader copy. I do not think I will purchase copies for myself, but I think anyone who is interested in refugees, women authors or places we do not normally read about, this is the book for you. Aimed at […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Cooking/Food, Fiction, Health, History, Poetry, Religion, Young Adult Tagged With: Autobiographical fiction, CBR17 Pie Chart Challenge, diversity, Emigration, England, europe, family, fathers, forced migration, Immigration & Refugees, India, parents, siblings, Tina Athaide, Uganda

BlackRaven's CBR17 Review No:140 · Genres: Children's Books, Cooking/Food, Fiction, Health, History, Poetry, Religion, Young Adult · Tags: Autobiographical fiction, CBR17 Pie Chart Challenge, diversity, Emigration, England, europe, family, fathers, forced migration, Immigration & Refugees, India, parents, siblings, Tina Athaide, Uganda ·
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