Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Sadly, one of my biggest disappointments of the year

Gul book (Yellow Book) by Zeshan Shakar

December 27, 2020 by Malin Leave a Comment

Official book description (any errors in translation are mine): Mani is a newly graduated economist and has just secured a job at the Ministry of Education and Research. He is a young man who lives with his father in a flat at Haugenstua, in the east of Oslo, and has a girlfriend he thinks he’s going to marry someday. Preferably, he’d like to use his abilities in the private sector, where the prestige and the money lies, because he’s painfully aware that both his girlfriend […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: #ownvoices, cbr12, contemporary fiction, culture clash, Gul Bok, Immigration, Malin, Norwegian, Yellow Book, Zeshan Shakar

Malin's CBR12 Review No:86 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: #ownvoices, cbr12, contemporary fiction, culture clash, Gul Bok, Immigration, Malin, Norwegian, Yellow Book, Zeshan Shakar ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

A glistening doorknob without a door

Paradise Rot by Jenny Hval

November 19, 2019 by Claire Badger Leave a Comment

I picked up this book because I wanted something atmospheric. When daylight savings hits and I stop experiencing sunlight I get into these funks and all I want is deep base and prose the blurs the line between poetry and description, and narratives that aren’t but could be. I found this book on a list of books similar to Annihilation, so if you liked the atmosphere woven through that story, and want something with even less coherent narrative, this is it. You’ve found that weird […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: body horror, England, Jenny Hval, Norwegian, novella

Claire Badger's CBR11 Review No:27 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: body horror, England, Jenny Hval, Norwegian, novella ·
Rating:
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A bit like “About a Boy”, except here the Hugh Grant character is a heroin addict

Sangen om en brukket nese (The Ballad of a Broken Nose) by Arne Svingen

October 25, 2019 by Malin Leave a Comment

4.5 stars Bart is about to turn thirteen. He’s named after Bart Simpson, because it seems his mother wanted him to be tough and clever and able to handle himself. This is also why she’s signed him up for boxing lessons. He dutifully  goes to practise several times a week, and one of these days, he may actually start hitting. His boxing coach suggests he may want to try out for some other sport, which Bart can understand, as except for having a pretty good […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: About a Boy, alcoholism, Arne Svingen, cbr11, contemporary fiction, Malin, Norwegian, opera, poverty, romantic, Sangen om en brukket nese, The Ballad of a Broken Nose, Young Adult

Malin's CBR11 Review No:76 · Genres: Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: About a Boy, alcoholism, Arne Svingen, cbr11, contemporary fiction, Malin, Norwegian, opera, poverty, romantic, Sangen om en brukket nese, The Ballad of a Broken Nose, Young Adult ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

#CBR10Bingo: Home, Something, Home (double Bingo!)

November 21, 2018 by Malin Leave a Comment

#CBR10Bingo: Home, Something, Home (this book is set at Stovner in Oslo, three stops away from where I live on the metro. It also concerns exactly the sort of pupils that I teach.) Two youths, both living in the same tower block in a suburb on the east side of Oslo, in Stovner (where the large majority of inhabitants are immigrants or the children of immigrants). They start out going to the same high school. Starting in the year 2000, the framing device consists of these […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: #CBR10, cbr10bingo, coming-of-age, contemporary fiction, home something home, Immigration, Malin, Norwegian, poverty, Racism, Tante Ulrikkes vei, Zeshan Shakar

Malin's CBR10 Review No:99 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: #CBR10, cbr10bingo, coming-of-age, contemporary fiction, home something home, Immigration, Malin, Norwegian, poverty, Racism, Tante Ulrikkes vei, Zeshan Shakar ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Resonating for the last 135 years

March 5, 2017 by KimMiE" Leave a Comment

I first read An Enemy of the People when I was in high school and I can recall being quite moved by it. Since the phrase “enemy of the people” has been bandied about in the news lately, I thought this would be an excellent time to revisit the play. Would it be as poignant as I remembered, or would I discover that the brain of a teenager is too unsophisticated to appreciate Norwegian drama and that I’d missed the nuance? The plot is pretty much as […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: cbr9, drama, Henrik Ibsen, KimMiE", Norwegian, plays, political, theater

KimMiE"'s CBR9 Review No:5 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: cbr9, drama, Henrik Ibsen, KimMiE", Norwegian, plays, political, theater ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The book that ate November (The Count of Monte Cristo)

December 26, 2016 by Malin 1 Comment

4.5 stars Young sailor Edmond Dantés is well-meaning, kind and really rather naive, wanting nothing more than to make enough money to take care of his elderly father and marry his beloved Mercedes. There are other, less well-meaning people in his life who want what he has and are prepared to frame Dantés for treason to get these things. While celebrating his engagement to Mercedes, Dantés is arrested, charged with aiding in a plot to restore the exiled Napoleon to the throne. The anonymous scheming […]

Filed Under: Book Club, Fiction, History Tagged With: adapted into TV and film, alexandre dumas, CBR Book Club, CBR8, historical fiction, Malin, Napoleonic wars, Norwegian, revenge, the count of monte cristo

Malin's CBR8 Review No:125 · Genres: Book Club, Fiction, History · Tags: adapted into TV and film, alexandre dumas, CBR Book Club, CBR8, historical fiction, Malin, Napoleonic wars, Norwegian, revenge, the count of monte cristo ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment
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