Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Life is just a bowl of (sour) cherries

October 2, 2018 by Dusty Highway Leave a Comment

CBR10Bingo: Delicious Finding a book for this CBR10Bingo square was oddly tough for me, as nothing in my TBR list really jumped out at me as being obviously about food. When I started pulling my books off the shelf, one by one, and saw those gorgeous yellow cherries on the cover of Dina Nayeri’s Refuge, I knew this was the one.  Early in the book, Niloo’s father imparts his life’s philosophy to his young daughter.: “Life in Ardestoon is a shank of lamb so bursting […]

Filed Under: Cooking/Food, Fiction Tagged With: #CBR10, Addiction, amsterdam, cbr10bingo, Dina Nayeri, Iran, Persian food, refuge, refugees

Dusty Highway's CBR10 Review No:53 · Genres: Cooking/Food, Fiction · Tags: #CBR10, Addiction, amsterdam, cbr10bingo, Dina Nayeri, Iran, Persian food, refuge, refugees ·
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How to Fight Loneliness

October 22, 2017 by Ellesfena Leave a Comment

Digging to America is the story of two Baltimore families who meet each other in an airport, pre-9/11, when they come to pick up their infant daughters they have adopted from South Korea. It’s similar to other Tyler novels, in that it’s an intimate examination of family dynamics, but it’s different than all the others, too–it’s bigger, as it also examines what it means to be an American. I know that makes it sound terrible and tiresome, but trust me, it is anything but. It’s […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: anne tyler, Baltimore, family, Iran

Ellesfena's CBR9 Review No:49 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: anne tyler, Baltimore, family, Iran ·
Rating:
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I shouldn’t know more than our culture’s leading experts…

March 21, 2017 by ingres77 Leave a Comment

While reading this, I found myself questioning beliefs I have held for many years. Not because this book presents novel ideas or is deeply informative about a subject I mistakenly thought I was familiar with (though it did represent what are to me novel ideas, and I am not overly familiar with this subject), but because its author’s views occupy the same space as mine, and he has fallen not only into controversy, but disfavor. Which, of course, makes me question how I see the […]

Filed Under: History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Afghanistan, Bernard Lewis, east vs west, Iran, Iraq, Islam, Middle East, Muslim history, neo-conservatives, orientalism, Turkey, What Went Wrong?

ingres77's CBR9 Review No:22 · Genres: History, Non-Fiction · Tags: Afghanistan, Bernard Lewis, east vs west, Iran, Iraq, Islam, Middle East, Muslim history, neo-conservatives, orientalism, Turkey, What Went Wrong? ·
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First world problems getting you down? Try Tehran

April 16, 2016 by cheerbrarian 1 Comment

On a scale of Donald Drumpf to Samantha Power (United States Ambassador to the United Nations) regarding my knowledge of the geopolitical landscape, I would rate somewhere in the middle, as I had to Google to figure out who to herald as an example of someone very well knowledgeable regarding world events, but I knew what the word “geopolitical” meant.  That being said, I wasn’t terribly familiar with the history and current events of Iran, and this memoir was a stark look at what it […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: #memoir, Iran, Lolita, Reading Lolita in Tehran, war

cheerbrarian's CBR8 Review No:8 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: #memoir, Iran, Lolita, Reading Lolita in Tehran, war ·
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· 1 Comment

The Iran We Didn’t Know as Told by a Damn Smart Woman

July 20, 2015 by ElCicco 2 Comments

Marjane Satrapi’s graphic novel is both an autobiography and an historical/political education. Her simple yet bold black and white drawings beautifully illustrate the story of her childhood in Teheran in the early 1980s, her teen years in Vienna and her return to Iran in 1989. As an observer of and participant in Iran’s revolutionary upheaval, Satrapi gives a personal view of events and their effect on her family’s welfare while neatly outlining the complicated and complex national story that serves as their context. This is […]

Filed Under: History, Non-Fiction Tagged With: autobiography, CBR7, ElCicco, Graphic Novel, Iran, Marjane Satrapi, non fiction, political history, ReadWomen, The Complete Persepolis

ElCicco's CBR7 Review No:34 · Genres: History, Non-Fiction · Tags: autobiography, CBR7, ElCicco, Graphic Novel, Iran, Marjane Satrapi, non fiction, political history, ReadWomen, The Complete Persepolis ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

A Tale of Two Worlds

April 27, 2015 by Valyruh Leave a Comment

This is an exquisite debut novel with the mixed flavors of Amy Tan’s The Bonesetter’s Daughter, Khaled Hosseini’s A Thousand Splendid Suns, and even a taste of the powerful memoir Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali. It is a story about culture clash, immigration, tradition, and love in all its many forms. Maryam Mazar is a middle-aged wife and mother, married to an Englishman, living in London and dreaming of her former life in Iran. Her beloved sister back home has just died and her teenaged […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: authoritarian, culture clash, Immigration, Iran, Shah, tradition

Valyruh's CBR7 Review No:31 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: authoritarian, culture clash, Immigration, Iran, Shah, tradition ·
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· 0 Comments
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