Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Cover of Songs for Ghosts bt Claire Kumagi

Folktales and cycles through history

Songs for Ghosts by Clara Kumagai

July 17, 2025 by LB Leave a Comment

Songs for Ghosts fulfills the “culture” square on CBR17 Bingo. Songs for Ghosts is a beautiful, tragic story of the power of stories and love, as well as the way past choices can create cycles throughout time. I’m unfamiliar with it, but in the afterword the author talks about Songs for Ghosts being a retelling of Madama Butterfly opera by Puccini where Cio-Cio-San has more agency than just the reductive submissive wife trope. Adam is a seventeen year old whose boyfriend just broke up with […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Horror, Young Adult Tagged With: achillean, biwa, cbr17bingo, Clara Kumagai, folklore, historical fiction, historical horror, japanese, Multicultural, Nagasaki, queer, songs for ghosts, sophomore novel, World War II

LB's CBR17 Review No:14 · Genres: Fiction, Horror, Young Adult · Tags: achillean, biwa, cbr17bingo, Clara Kumagai, folklore, historical fiction, historical horror, japanese, Multicultural, Nagasaki, queer, songs for ghosts, sophomore novel, World War II ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

A doozy of a book!

You Weren't Meant to be Human by Andrew Joseph White

July 15, 2025 by LB 2 Comments

You Weren’t Meant to be Human fulfills the “black” square on CBR17 Bingo I had Andrew Joseph White on my radar from his debut, but it wasn’t until Compound Fracture that I finally read one of his books. Even though most of his books haven’t exactly been for me, I have a special spot in my heart for Appalachia, and especially West Virigina because it will always be home. So when I saw AJW’s upcoming adult debut was set in WV, I knew I needed to […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Horror Tagged With: Aliens, Andrew Joseph White, austism, bodily autonomy, body horror, cbr17bingo, pregnancy, queer, trans, West Virginia, you weren't meant to be human

LB's CBR17 Review No:13 · Genres: Fiction, Horror · Tags: Aliens, Andrew Joseph White, austism, bodily autonomy, body horror, cbr17bingo, pregnancy, queer, trans, West Virginia, you weren't meant to be human ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

One of my favorite fantasies

The Oleander Sword by Tasha Suri

July 15, 2025 by LB Leave a Comment

The Oleander Sword fulfills the “green” square on CBR17 Bingo. I read and reviewed this book for the first time back in 2022 and it still has me absolutely devastated and sitting here filled with feelings. Luckily this time around I have The Lotus Empire at hand and don’t have to wait to find out what happens next for Priya and Malini! The Oleander Sword takes place a year after The Jasmine Throne and is a story full of the ripple effects of war and […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction Tagged With: #fantasy, burning kingdoms, cbr17bingo, Indian fantasy, orbit publishing, queer, queer fantasy, sapphic, Tasha Suri, The Oleander Sword, tragic

LB's CBR17 Review No:12 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction · Tags: #fantasy, burning kingdoms, cbr17bingo, Indian fantasy, orbit publishing, queer, queer fantasy, sapphic, Tasha Suri, The Oleander Sword, tragic ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

A hopeful future with robots and food

Automatic Noodle by Annalee Newitz

May 27, 2025 by LB 1 Comment

If you need a story of chosen family and hope and good food, Automatic Noodle absolutely fits the bill. This is a delightful novella of a near-future where California has split from the United States after war, and part of California progressiveness was to give civil rights to human equivalent embodied intelligence (HEEI) robots. But those rights are limited – they’re not able to use a bank, own property, and there’s lots of prejudice against robots (very allegorical to American attitudes towards immigrants and marginalized […]

Filed Under: Featured, Fiction, Short Stories, Speculative Fiction Tagged With: #food, Annalee Newitz, friendship, near future, noodles, novella, queer, Romance, San Francisco, tor publishing, trans

LB's CBR17 Review No:5 · Genres: Featured, Fiction, Short Stories, Speculative Fiction · Tags: #food, Annalee Newitz, friendship, near future, noodles, novella, queer, Romance, San Francisco, tor publishing, trans ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment
Cover of Knife River by Justine Champion with a small house with lights on in the windows and darkening purple sky

“I would shiver the whole night through”

Knife River (2024) by Justine Champine

April 20, 2025 by drmllz Leave a Comment

When it comes to mysteries, I find the plot to be almost the least interesting thing–as long as it’s not too lazy or derivative or actively insulting to the reader, and fits into the vibes of the story. What I do care about, then, are the vibes–if the vibes are there, if the texture of the story is something I can snag myself on, I don’t really worry about clues or reveals (which I’m bad at predicting anyway). The vibes are pretty immaculate in Knife […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery Tagged With: cbr17, crime fiction, drmllz, Justine Champine, Justine Champion, mystery, queer, Small town

drmllz's CBR17 Review No:3 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery · Tags: cbr17, crime fiction, drmllz, Justine Champine, Justine Champion, mystery, queer, Small town ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The splash of my tongue melting you like a sugar cube

Crush by Richard Siken

April 14, 2025 by carmelpie 5 Comments

I learned about Richard Siken through Pinterest of all things. For those of you who frequent Pinterest, especially those dedicated to romantic pairings from books, the boards are littered with snippets of poetry rendered in retro fonts. Bits of Siken’s poem Little Beast kept showing up in my feed. However, finding a copy of his Yale Series of Younger Poets poetry collection was challenging and I had to special-order it from the UK. Since it is only sixty-two pages plus a forward, I thought I […]

Filed Under: Featured, Poetry Tagged With: abusive relationships, gay author, poetry collection, queer, queer author, Richard Siken, violence, Yale Younger Poets Prize

carmelpie's CBR17 Review No:10 · Genres: Featured, Poetry · Tags: abusive relationships, gay author, poetry collection, queer, queer author, Richard Siken, violence, Yale Younger Poets Prize ·
Rating:
· 5 Comments
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