Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
| Log in
  1. Follow us on Facebook
  2. Follow us on Instagram
  3. Follow us on Bluesky
  4. Follow us on Goodreads
  5. RSS Feeds

  • Home
  • About
    • Getting Started in CBR17
    • Rules of Respect
    • Cannon Book Club
    • Diversions
    • Fan Mail
    • Holiday Book Exchange
    • Book Bingo Reading Challenge
    • Participation Badges
    • AlabamaPink
    • About Cannonball Read
  • Our Team
    • The CBR Team
    • Leaderboard
    • Recent Comments
    • Participant Interviews
    • Cannonballer Location Maps
    • Our Volunteers
    • Meet MsWas
  • Categories
    • Review Genres
    • Tags
    • Star Ratings
    • Featured Review Archive
  • Fight Cancer
    • How We Fight Cancer
    • Donate
    • CBR Merchandise
  • FAQ
  • Contact
    • Contact Form
    • Suggest a Review
    • 2025 Registration
    • Newsletter Sign Up
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Social Media

Ariadne could tell the time by its closeness, three o’clock.

Blood Tie by Mary Lee Settle

April 17, 2019 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

This novel won the National Book Award in 1977. I have read and reviewed a handful of Mary Lee Settle novels, many of which take place in Virginia and West Virginia in various times in the history of those states. She is most well known for writing what is called the Beulah Quintet–five novels that tell the history of a county in West Virginia, starting with the original settlers being forced out of England during the English Civil War and moving toward the incorporation of […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: blood tie, Mary Lee Settle

vel veeter's CBR11 Review No:194 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: blood tie, Mary Lee Settle ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Perhaps I should stop seeing myself as an individual and start identifying myself with the totality, but I just can’t do that.

July 1, 2018 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

The Faster I Walk….. 3/5 Stars I picked this one up because it was short and in the new books section of the library and I like little Scandinavian books, and this one was an odd and curious little gem of a book. The story here is about a woman living with a man and sort of trying to figure out who she is in the world. She’s closed off emotionally, she reads a lot, she thinks about death a lot, and she makes little […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Non-Fiction Tagged With: #writing, charley bland, fight no more, flavia biondi, generations, helen dewitt, kjersti skomsvold, Mary Lee Settle, some trick, the faster i walk the smaller i get, the killing ground, the ravishing of lol stein

vel veeter's CBR10 Review No:234 · Genres: Fiction, Non-Fiction · Tags: #writing, charley bland, fight no more, flavia biondi, generations, helen dewitt, kjersti skomsvold, Mary Lee Settle, some trick, the faster i walk the smaller i get, the killing ground, the ravishing of lol stein ·
· 0 Comments

Mother, mother

November 12, 2017 by vel veeter 1 Comment

The Scapegoat – Mary Lee Settle This is the fourth book in the Beaulah Quinet, Mary Lee Settle’s history of West Virginia through the lens of conflicts ranging from the ousting of a Puritan partisan in the English Civil War (leading to immigration to America) to the settling and drawing of land parcels in the 18th century to a novel I haven’t read yet in the 1840s to this coal mining dispute in 1912 and finally to more or less contemporary times. Following one family, in […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Amy tan, Mary Lee Settle, the bonesetter's daughter, the scapegoat

vel veeter's CBR9 Review No:452 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Amy tan, Mary Lee Settle, the bonesetter's daughter, the scapegoat ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

“How waste everything looks when ye can’t fix a name to it”

May 25, 2017 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

So imagine the movie The VVitch taking place about a 100 years later, and in western Virginia/border of Ohio territory instead. There’s still lots of fear and anxiety but there’s no witch. Not even a little witch. This novel comes from a collection of novels by a novelist most (including me until about a year or so ago) from West Virginis named Mary Lee Settle. One of those novelists who spends her entire career at a university, even wins some awards, but maybe doesn’t have the […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Mary Lee Settle, O Beulah Land

vel veeter's CBR9 Review No:213 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Mary Lee Settle, O Beulah Land ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments


Recent Comments

  • Zirza on A Gothic Classic for a ReasonIt's one of those wish-you-could-read-it-again-for-the-first-time books. I loved it.
  • Emmalita on “It came to something when you found yourself hoping that the footsteps you heard were ghosts.”I loved the ending! I don’t think it’s been out long enough to talk about why though.
  • Dixie on Track Her Down by Melinda LeighI am just starting Track Her Down and I have read them all in order till now and thought I...
  • Roland of Gilead on How can you give us the gift of a crazy character named Rando Thoughtful and then just as suddenly take that gift away? We need to talk, Uncle Stevie.I came across this randomly years after it was written because I was searching "Random Thoughtful. But I have the...
  • Emmalita on “Only you, Em, would refer to heartbreak as a distraction. I think I would have a more sympathetic response if I asked to marry a bookcase.”Oh my goodness, Gallifrey was beautiful. I’m sure her mittens were gloriously murdery.
See More Recent Comments »

Support Our Mission

  • Support Our Mission: Donate Today!
  • FAQ
  • Shop
  • Volunteers
  • Leaderboard
  • AlabamaPink
  • Contact

Help Our Mission

You can donate to CBR via:

  1. PayPal
  2. Venmo

The reviews and comments posted on this site reflect the opinions of individual posters and do not reflect the views of Cannonball Read.

© 2025 Cannonball Read Inc., a registered 501(c)(3) | Log in