Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Time to Ketchup

Black Cherry Blues by James Lee Burke

Last Call: A True Story of Love, Lust, and Murder in Queer New York by Elon Green

The Revelators by Ace Atkins

The Last Flight by Julie Clark

March 27, 2021 by Jake Leave a Comment

Because I read two behemoth 660+ page books back-to-back, I went on a little reading binge this week to “ketchup.” I liked most of these, two more so than the two others. Black Cherry Blues *** I want to go through the David Robicheaux series for two reasons: 1. I love Louisiana and 2. I want to see how Burke develops this story. After enjoying Heaven’s Prisoners, I found this a step back for multiple reasons… 1. Burke pads an already thin story with a lot […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Ace Atkins, Black Cherry Blues, David Robicheaux, Elon Green, James Lee Burke, Julie Clark, Last Call, LGBTQIA, Manhattan, mississippi, Montana, mystery, New York City, Quinn Colson, serial killers, the last flight, The Revelators, thriller, true crime

Jake's CBR13 Review No:46 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Ace Atkins, Black Cherry Blues, David Robicheaux, Elon Green, James Lee Burke, Julie Clark, Last Call, LGBTQIA, Manhattan, mississippi, Montana, mystery, New York City, Quinn Colson, serial killers, the last flight, The Revelators, thriller, true crime ·
· 0 Comments

She Used to Meet Me on the (Lower) East Side

The Snakehead: An Epic Tale of the Chinatown Underworld and the American Dream by Patrick Radden Keefe

Lush Life by Richard Price

December 3, 2020 by Jake Leave a Comment

Read two consecutive books whose geographies bumped up against each other; one set in Manhattan’s Chinatown, the other set partially in it, as well as the adjacent East Village. Both were excellent in their own respective ways. The Snakehead How is Patrick Radden Keefe so damn good at writing non-fiction? This doesn’t reach the heights of Say Nothing (really what can?) but it’s a fascinating story in its own right and Keefe tells it well and thoroughly, providing enough detail without larding the narrative. He also takes […]

Filed Under: Mystery, Non-Fiction Tagged With: Chinese-Americans, crime, Human Smuggling, Immigration, lower East Side, Lush Life, Manhattan, mystery, Patrick Radden Keefe, Richard Price, Sister Ping, The Snakehead, true crime

Jake's CBR12 Review No:180 · Genres: Mystery, Non-Fiction · Tags: Chinese-Americans, crime, Human Smuggling, Immigration, lower East Side, Lush Life, Manhattan, mystery, Patrick Radden Keefe, Richard Price, Sister Ping, The Snakehead, true crime ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

cbr12bingo – Music!

Meet Me in the Bathroom: Rebirth and Rock and Roll in New York City 2001-2011 by Lizzy Goodman

July 9, 2020 by andtheIToldYouSos Leave a Comment

The House of Jealous Lovers! Yes, it’s an excellent track by The Rapture. It could also be the title of this oral history (the actual title, Meet Me in the Bathroom, is a song by another prominently featured band, but we’ll get to that). This collection covers the movers, shakers, and hangers-on of NYC’s rock “revival” in the early hours of the 21st century- and man oh man are they a petty, catty, and jealous bunch! The “speakers” of this history are a collection of musicians, […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction Tagged With: "when I was your age", 9/11, Brooklyn, cbr12bingo, dotcom bubble, Drug Abuse, garage rock revival, gentrification, giuliani's NY, hipsters, Interpol, James Murphy, Jonathan Fire Eater, Kings of Leon, LCD Soundsystem, Lizzy Goodman, Manhattan, Moby, music, music industry, music snobs, New York City, oral history, partying, post-punk, rock critics, Ryan Adams, The Rapture, The Strokes, vampire weekend, Yeah Yeah Yeahs

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR12 Review No:73 · Genres: Audiobooks, Biography/Memoir, Non-Fiction · Tags: "when I was your age", 9/11, Brooklyn, cbr12bingo, dotcom bubble, Drug Abuse, garage rock revival, gentrification, giuliani's NY, hipsters, Interpol, James Murphy, Jonathan Fire Eater, Kings of Leon, LCD Soundsystem, Lizzy Goodman, Manhattan, Moby, music, music industry, music snobs, New York City, oral history, partying, post-punk, rock critics, Ryan Adams, The Rapture, The Strokes, vampire weekend, Yeah Yeah Yeahs ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

She’ll Take Manhattan

Dope by Sara Gran

August 25, 2019 by Jake Leave a Comment

Dope is such a solid crime novel that it makes me want to immediately clear my TBR pile and read Sara Gran’s entire catalogue. The problem with that is I’ve tried to read Claire DeWitt and the City of the Dead so many times and have never been able to get into it. I just can’t connect with the inner monologue of the titular character. Which sucks because it’s doubtless that Sara Gran is a talented writer. I picked this one up when I saw it on a […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: 1950s, Dope, drug addiction, Manhattan, mystery, New York City, sara gran

Jake's CBR11 Review No:85 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: 1950s, Dope, drug addiction, Manhattan, mystery, New York City, sara gran ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

It’s Chinatown

China Trade by SJ Rozan

August 18, 2019 by Jake Leave a Comment

In a context-free vacuum, China Trade is a fine, entertaining mystery. I liked the characters, especially the lead and her partner (though the “Will they or won’t they?” aspect was annoying), the plot is fine, the Chinatown setting done well. It’s a good start to a series that would potentially lead to more. But… It’s really tough to get over the idea of a white person (SJ Rozan) writing a first-person perspective novel from the POV of a Chinese woman. Now don’t get me wrong: I think […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: Bill Smith, China Trade, Chinatown, Lydia Chin, Manhattan, mystery, New York City, SJ Rozan

Jake's CBR11 Review No:79 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: Bill Smith, China Trade, Chinatown, Lydia Chin, Manhattan, mystery, New York City, SJ Rozan ·
Rating:
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Sorry. Wrong door. I thought it was the desert.

June 30, 2017 by borisanne Leave a Comment

Here it is, Book 3 of “The Dark Tower” series, which I may not finish the whole of in the next 5 weeks, but it won’t be for lack of trying! I love this series. I love these characters. The Waste Lands isn’t as fundamentally excellent as The Drawing of the Three was, but after the action and adventure that was The Drawing of the Three there’s some needed setting up of next steps in advance of Wizard and Glass. I assume. I don’t know. […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction Tagged With: ake ake, bermuda triangle, billy bumbler, Dark Tower, eddie dean, jake chambers, King, Manhattan, nazi aircraft, not manhattan, nuclear wasteland, oy, roland, Stephen King, susannah dean, trains, village, wasteland

borisanne's CBR9 Review No:25 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction · Tags: ake ake, bermuda triangle, billy bumbler, Dark Tower, eddie dean, jake chambers, King, Manhattan, nazi aircraft, not manhattan, nuclear wasteland, oy, roland, Stephen King, susannah dean, trains, village, wasteland ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
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