Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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A middle-class, middle-aged poet of middling success

The Anthologist by Nicholson Baker

May 9, 2019 by Wanderlustful Leave a Comment

Nicholson Bakker apparently tends to write slow, thoughtful and literary texts- I say ‘apparently’ because I know this now, but not, unfortunately, when I started reading, and my expectations made for a disappointing reading experience.  Instead of ‘contemplative literary novel’, I was primed for ‘book-themed thriller’, largely because I’d picked up The Book Thief and The Thirteenth Tale around the same time as The Anthologist, and both of those books are thriller-esque.  All of which makes this review hard to write as an objective assessment […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Poetry Tagged With: #Contemplative, #TheAnthologist, nicholson baker, poetry

Wanderlustful's CBR11 Review No:21 · Genres: Fiction, Poetry · Tags: #Contemplative, #TheAnthologist, nicholson baker, poetry ·
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“We should teach our girls that snapping is ok, instead of waiting for someone else to break them.”

Shout by Laurie Halse Anderson

April 26, 2019 by cosbrarian Leave a Comment

I only learned that Laurie Halse Anderson wrote her modern classic and much challenged novel Speak in response to her own rape as a young teen. But where Melinda came to art to find her voice, Anderson came to writing. Anderson writes in verse that runs the gambit of emotion and holds no punches.  It is a memoir of her full life, opening with a reflection on her father, whose severe PTSD sets the tone for her complicated home (later reflected in her YA fiction The […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, Poetry Tagged With: #memoir, autobiography, censorship, Laurie Halse Anderson, poetry, rape culture, verse

cosbrarian's CBR11 Review No:27 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, Poetry · Tags: #memoir, autobiography, censorship, Laurie Halse Anderson, poetry, rape culture, verse ·
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Pretty Poems from a Local Artist

Nature's Secrecy: Collected Poems by Amiyo Basu

April 20, 2019 by Halbs Leave a Comment

Several years ago I reviewed David Byrne’s How Music Works. One of the most interesting things in Byrne’s book is how differently we experience music today than we did prior to the phonograph. Until that time, music was localized and live by necessity. Every version of a song you heard was likely an interpretation, a cover; there was no “definitive” album version of a song. Additionally, musical styles were also more local because it wasn’t feasible to keep up with artists or a favorite genre outside […]

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: Amiyo Basu, Local, National Poetry Month, poetry

Halbs's CBR11 Review No:14 · Genres: Poetry · Tags: Amiyo Basu, Local, National Poetry Month, poetry ·
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National Poetry Month- what doesn’t kill you still hurts

Our Lady of the Ruins by Traci Brimhall

April 19, 2019 by ElCicco Leave a Comment

When it comes to reading poetry, I tend to stick with the classic epic poems like Beowulf and The Odyssey or more contemporary YA poetry-as-novel (The Poet X, Brown Girl Dreaming). I can’t remember a time outside of a classroom when I read a poetry collection. So for the CBR book exchange last December, one of my suggestions for whomever was buying for me was a book of poems, and Cannonballer Bonnie sent me this slim but stunning and provocative collection by contemporary award-winning poet […]

Filed Under: Poetry Tagged With: bonnie, cbr11, ElCicco, Our Lady of the Ruins, poetry, ReadWomen, Traci Brimhall

ElCicco's CBR11 Review No:18 · Genres: Poetry · Tags: bonnie, cbr11, ElCicco, Our Lady of the Ruins, poetry, ReadWomen, Traci Brimhall ·
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Now Hear This

The Poet X: A Novel by Elizabeth Acevedo

March 11, 2019 by ElCicco 3 Comments

The Poet X is a novel written in verse and the recipient of many prestigious awards including the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature. In this impressive debut work, Elizabeth Acevedo demonstrates with passion and heart both the power and the vital necessity of being heard, especially when you are a young woman of color. And conversely, the novel shows the terrible destructive power of being silenced, ignored and relegated to an object, a mere physical body subject to the rules and punishments of […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Poetry, Young Adult Tagged With: cbr11, ElCicco, elizabeth acevedo, Fiction, poetry, ReadWomen, the poet x, YA

ElCicco's CBR11 Review No:12 · Genres: Fiction, Poetry, Young Adult · Tags: cbr11, ElCicco, elizabeth acevedo, Fiction, poetry, ReadWomen, the poet x, YA ·
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Enduring a hundred humiliations, I can only cry in vain

Island: Poetry and History of Chinese Immigrants on Angel Island, 1910-1940 by Him Mark Lai, Genny Lim, and Judy Yung

March 2, 2019 by Manimama 1 Comment

  As immigrants from China arrived by boat to San Francisco in the early 1900s, they were detained at Angel Island to await determination of their immigration application. Men and women were separated and held for weeks to months at a time while awaiting entry in to the United States or deportation back to China. The progressively stricter immigration laws during that time were aimed at keeping Chinese immigrants out of the country. With no contact with their families, no freedom to wander the island, […]

Filed Under: History, Poetry Tagged With: #history, angel island, poetry

Manimama's CBR11 Review No:13 · Genres: History, Poetry · Tags: #history, angel island, poetry ·
Rating:
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