Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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March 2023 Leftovers

The Cult of We: WeWork, Adam Neumann, and the Great Startup Delusion by Eliot Brown, Maureen Farrell

The Terra-Cotta Dog by Andrea Cammalleri

Eight Perfect Murders by Peter Swanson

Tina, Mafia Soldier by Maria Rosa Cutrufelli

The Writing Retreat by Julia Bartz

An Assassin in Utopia: The True Story of a Nineteenth-Century Sex Cult and a President's Murder by Susan Wels

Every Man a King by Walter Mosley

The Triumph of the Spider Monkey by Joyce Carol Oates

Robert B. Parker's Lullaby by Ace Atkins

The Godwulf Manuscript by Robert B. Parker

Play the Fool by Lina Chern

April 2, 2023 by Jake Leave a Comment

Man, that month went fast The Cult of We: WeWork, Adam Neumann, and the Great Startup Delusion**** I might have a lot more to say about this one had I finished it weeks ago but I’ll be honest, I’m starting to hit my limit on books about tech geniuses that the public discovers aren’t all they’re cracked up to be only after they’re handed billions of dollars. Theranos, Uber and now WeWork all run by self-glorifying con artists. This book is as well done as the […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Fiction, History, Mystery, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #history, Ace Atkins, Adam Neumann, an assassin in utopia, Andrea Cammalleri, Boston, Charles Joseph Guiteau, corporate nonsense, eight perfect murders, Eliot Brown, Maureen Farrell, Every Man a King, feminism, hard case crime, Inspector Montalbano, isolation, James Garfield, Joyce Carol Oates, Julia Bartz, King Oliver, Lina Chern, lullaby, Maria Rosa Cutrufelli, mystery, new york, Peter Swanson, Play the Fool, presidential assassinations, Robert B. Parker, Robert B. Parker's Lullaby, Sicily, Spenser, Susan Wels, tarot reading, The Cult of We, The Godwulf Manuscript, the terra-cotta dog, The Triumph of the Spider Monkey, the writing retreat, tina mafia soldier, true crime, walter mosley, WeWork

Jake's CBR15 Review No:43 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Fiction, History, Mystery, Non-Fiction · Tags: #history, Ace Atkins, Adam Neumann, an assassin in utopia, Andrea Cammalleri, Boston, Charles Joseph Guiteau, corporate nonsense, eight perfect murders, Eliot Brown, Maureen Farrell, Every Man a King, feminism, hard case crime, Inspector Montalbano, isolation, James Garfield, Joyce Carol Oates, Julia Bartz, King Oliver, Lina Chern, lullaby, Maria Rosa Cutrufelli, mystery, new york, Peter Swanson, Play the Fool, presidential assassinations, Robert B. Parker, Robert B. Parker's Lullaby, Sicily, Spenser, Susan Wels, tarot reading, The Cult of We, The Godwulf Manuscript, the terra-cotta dog, The Triumph of the Spider Monkey, the writing retreat, tina mafia soldier, true crime, walter mosley, WeWork ·
· 0 Comments

Bored in the House, Bored in the House

Daisy Darker by Alice Feeney

February 11, 2023 by Jake Leave a Comment

A review of another book summed this one up perfectly for me: this is a rebound book. You’re kind of interested but not really. You’re not ready for anything heavy so you pick it in an I-guess-it’s-you kinda way. You have some mildly entertaining dates but you feel like you’re just passing the time. You’re holding its hand while in the relationship waiting room, hoping for something better. This is that book for me. It’s been a rough week professionally and I don’t want to […]

Filed Under: Mystery, Suspense Tagged With: Alice Feeney, Daisy Darker, England, Haunted House, isolation, mystery

Jake's CBR15 Review No:15 · Genres: Mystery, Suspense · Tags: Alice Feeney, Daisy Darker, England, Haunted House, isolation, mystery ·
Rating:
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A labyrinth of isolation and connection

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

November 28, 2020 by Mobius_Walker Leave a Comment

Piranesi live in the House. The House is expansive and full of many mysteries. Piranesi lives, for all intents and purposes, alone though the House is occupied by one other person, The Other. What mysteries does the House hold? What lessons is the House ready to teach? And that’s all I’ll say about the plot because the less you know going in, the better. When we are all isolating and distancing from others as much as we can (at least, I hope we all are), […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Fantasy, Fiction Tagged With: isolation, Labyrinth, susanna clarke

Mobius_Walker's CBR12 Review No:37 · Genres: Audiobooks, Fantasy, Fiction · Tags: isolation, Labyrinth, susanna clarke ·
Rating:
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cbr12bingo – No Money!

Bright and Dangerous Objects by Anneliese Mackintosh

September 13, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

Full disclosure: I received this ARC from the Tin House Galley Club The atmosphere here in Bright and Dangerous Objects is heavy. It’s laden down with creeping grief, sudden disappointment and the growing dread of continuing to exist while things crash apart around you. Sensitive tattoo-artist boyfriends, fancy craft beer,  and getaways in stone cottages cannot save you from yourself. Solvig has inherited her mother’s furious brain. She has inherited her father’s tend towards self destruction. She has inherited a hunk of malachite that is supposed to […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Speculative Fiction Tagged With: Anneliese Mackintosh, ARC, cbr12bingo, deep sea diving, english coast, grief, isolation, loss, mars, No Money, tin house, trauma, want

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:99 · Genres: Fiction, Speculative Fiction · Tags: Anneliese Mackintosh, ARC, cbr12bingo, deep sea diving, english coast, grief, isolation, loss, mars, No Money, tin house, trauma, want ·
Rating:
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“I’m no expert, but I remember reading somewhere, every time you retrieve a memory, that act of retrieval, it corrupts the memory a little bit. Maybe changes it a little.”

The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel

April 21, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos 6 Comments

This book is highly readable. While it may appear that I am damning with faint praise, that is not my intention. This book is readable because, despite being filled with topics and characters that do not automatically appeal to me, I was interested and invested from page one. Had this book not been written by Emily St. John Mandel I probably would have glanced at the dust jacket and gone on my merry way, but since it was written by her I knew that I […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: 2008 recession, Emily St. John Mandel, finance, fraud, Greek tragedy, grief, guilt, isolation, memory, shared universe, Station Eleven, wealth

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:36 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: 2008 recession, Emily St. John Mandel, finance, fraud, Greek tragedy, grief, guilt, isolation, memory, shared universe, Station Eleven, wealth ·
Rating:
· 6 Comments

Were I to Pull Every Line that Made Me Gasp I Would be Quoting the Book in its Entirety

The Dark Dark by Samantha Hunt

January 7, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

I’d lick my lips, slowly, letting my pink tongue dangle out of my black mouth a little just like some animal waiting by the side of the road for the driver who killed it to come back one more time and kill it again This collection is stitched together with muscle, sinew, and blood. Samantha Hunt writes in a way that tears apart beautiful language and forces you to read the story through twisted entrails like a time-forgotten seer. The tales are modern in theme […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Short Stories Tagged With: collection, connection, dark, isolation, magical realism, modern gothic, Motherhood, samantha hunt, short stories

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:2 · Genres: Fiction, Short Stories · Tags: collection, connection, dark, isolation, magical realism, modern gothic, Motherhood, samantha hunt, short stories ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
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