Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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The Outsiders

April 4, 2018 by Ale Leave a Comment

Capital ‘L’ literature puzzles me as I often feel that it’s a giant waste of time while I’m in the middle, but then I get to the end and reflect on it, and I realize that having read the book was worthwhile. This sentiment couldn’t be more true than my feeling on finishing “The Heart is a Lonely Hunter.” On a surface perspective, I read 350 pages in which nothing really happened and the characters went nowhere. But on a deeper inspection, the pages roil with […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Great Depression, heart is a lonely hunter, Literature, loneliness, mccullers, poverty

Ale's CBR10 Review No:7 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Great Depression, heart is a lonely hunter, Literature, loneliness, mccullers, poverty ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

If you are different from a person everyone agrees is wonderful, it means you are somehow wrong.

April 29, 2017 by borisanne Leave a Comment

This was a tough one, emotionally. One True Thing is the story of a brilliant young woman “with her whole life ahead of her” who is guilted by her controlling and emotionally-arrested father into leaving her life behind to come home and care for her dying mother. And it covers so much ground in a very gentle but sad way: gender roles, parenting, family dynamic, literature and poetry, agency, friendship, romance, and ultimately, euthanasia. At the very beginning of the story, Ellen tells us that […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Anna Quindlen, brothers, cancer, cbr9, college, daughters, euthanasia, fathers, Fiction, journalism, Literature, medicine, mothers, Quindlen

borisanne's CBR9 Review No:17 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Anna Quindlen, brothers, cancer, cbr9, college, daughters, euthanasia, fathers, Fiction, journalism, Literature, medicine, mothers, Quindlen ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
The Marriage Plot - Jeffrey Eugenides

There is no happiness in love, except at the end of an English novel.

March 20, 2017 by Gracey the Giant 4 Comments

My friend M. found the beginning of this book to be quite pretentious. And it is.  It’s pretentious AF for the first 60 or so pages.  And it’s hard to read pretention too.  The first few pages, especially, seem to drag and serve no purpose other than to make you re-think your decision to read it. But, I’m here to tell you that, while the first part of The Marriage Plot is definitely pretentious, it’s pretentious for a reason.  The pretention of Madeline and her […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: college, India, Jeffrey Eugenides, Literature, Mental Health, mental health issues, The 80s, The Marriage Plot, WASPs, world travel

Gracey the Giant's CBR9 Review No:10 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: college, India, Jeffrey Eugenides, Literature, Mental Health, mental health issues, The 80s, The Marriage Plot, WASPs, world travel ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

Home Is Where the Heart Is…

February 9, 2017 by Lynn Leave a Comment

The library bookstore is my secret addiction. I don’t get to go often (at least, not in my county, what with the powers that be cutting library hours to a ridiculous degree), but when I do go, I load up. And I would say that of the books I pick up, I have about a 50% success rate. I donate the rest back, which results in a vicious circle where I’ve been known to re-buy previous rejects. (Yeah, I know.) Anyway, of that 50% success […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Literature, Southern, The Mama, Wiley Cash

Lynn's CBR9 Review No:3 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Literature, Southern, The Mama, Wiley Cash ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

To run a shtinker, you have to see the broken heart inside the deadest pan.

December 28, 2016 by borisanne 8 Comments

My first Chabon! OOOOOOF. WOW. Holy crap, you guys, did you know that his prose is exceptional and that there’s no exposition, and that he creates an utterly believable alternate timeline and a narrative that ramps up until you’re flying down the other side of the rollercoaster with no brakes? Are they all like this? Is my brain going to melt? How have I missed out this my entire adult life? Full disclosure: it took me a really long time to gather momentum with “The […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Alaska, CBR8, Chabon, chess, Fiction, heroin, Israel, jerusalem, jewish, jews, Literature, Michael Chabon, murder, Native American, rabbis, the mob, yid, yids

borisanne's CBR8 Review No:53 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Alaska, CBR8, Chabon, chess, Fiction, heroin, Israel, jerusalem, jewish, jews, Literature, Michael Chabon, murder, Native American, rabbis, the mob, yid, yids ·
Rating:
· 8 Comments

Art is an incitement to look at our world through another’s eyes

November 12, 2016 by Halbs Leave a Comment

While Alain de Botton’s How Proust Can Change Your Life is nearly twenty years old, the first I heard of it was on a 2015 episode of the Tim Ferriss Podcast. If you’re unfamiliar with Ferriss, he is outwardly a life-hacking blogger and podcaster. However, his deeper drive seems to be helping others live an examined life. I like that, so even though I’m not a life-hacky guy I listen to his show. On that 2015 episode, I found Botton to be especially charming, and I was […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: Alain de Botton, France, Literature, Philosophy

Halbs's CBR8 Review No:32 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: Alain de Botton, France, Literature, Philosophy ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
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