Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Demons and wizards and magic – oh my!

Legendborn by Tracy Deonn

April 9, 2023 by Malin Leave a Comment

4.5 stars Bree Matthews applied to an early admissions residential program at the same college that her mother attended, only to discover that her mother strongly objected to her going there. They had a blistering argument, and Bree’s mother died in a car accident before they had a chance to settle things. Bree blames herself for her mother driving when angry. Her grief and guilt are overwhelming, so Bree hopes that being away from home is the best way forward. She has barely arrived at […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, Mystery, Romance, Young Adult Tagged With: BIPOC, CBR15, demons, legendborn, LGBTQIA, magic, mystery, paranormal fantasy, Racism, romantic, Slavery, Tracy Deonn, Young Adult

Malin's CBR15 Review No:13 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Mystery, Romance, Young Adult · Tags: BIPOC, CBR15, demons, legendborn, LGBTQIA, magic, mystery, paranormal fantasy, Racism, romantic, Slavery, Tracy Deonn, Young Adult ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

“When you get older, you may never have anyone sing to you personally again, but go all over the world and I bet you can’t find one baby that has never been sung to.”

The Good Times Are Killing Me by Lynda Barry

February 12, 2023 by GentleRain Leave a Comment

Lynda Barry’s other near-perfect YA novel, The Good Times Are Killing Me, marks my completing re-reading her non comics work, as I read and reviewed Cruddy last year. I do think Cruddy is a singular work of genius, but this novel is a close second and one that I find deeply moving and beautiful. It’s a short book, only 131 pages, but Barry manages to pack a lot of emotion and layered, thoughtful commentary on growing up, friendship, systemic societal racism, and the power of […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: coming of age novel, growing up/coming of age, Lynda Barry, music, Race relations, Racism

GentleRain's CBR15 Review No:10 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: coming of age novel, growing up/coming of age, Lynda Barry, music, Race relations, Racism ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

“How does a government steal a child and then imprison him? How does it keep it a secret? This is how.”

January 4, 2023 by GentleRain Leave a Comment

A very good and heartbreaking book to start the year with. Lemn Sissay’s powerful memoir My Name Is Why details his time in British foster care and shows the casual cruelty of the authoritarian system he was placed in. He had to fight the government for thirty years to get access to his records and he uses the paper trail of comments by his social worker, reports on his progress, and other pieces of the puzzle to show the gaps in the record and how […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir Tagged With: child abuse, foster care, institutionalization, post WWII Britain, Racism, systemic racism

Genres: Biography/Memoir · Tags: child abuse, foster care, institutionalization, post WWII Britain, Racism, systemic racism ·
· 0 Comments

might not be the book you think it is, but it might be the book you need

Babel, Or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators' Revolution by R.F. Kuang

December 30, 2022 by wicherwill 4 Comments

Man oh man do people dislike this book! And when they do, they seem to dislike it for all sorts of suspicious reasons. Oh, white/western person, do you think the main characters in this book, the majority of whom are from colonies, spend a little bit too much time griping about the evils of the British colonial empire? Well then, boy do I have some news that’s going to REALLY disturb you about non-fictional humans in the real world who were once subjugated by the […]

Filed Under: Fantasy Tagged With: all the isms, colonialism, R.F. Kuang, Racism

wicherwill's CBR14 Review No:167 · Genres: Fantasy · Tags: all the isms, colonialism, R.F. Kuang, Racism ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

Amazing and emotional

We Deserve Monuments by Jas Hammonds

November 27, 2022 by LB Leave a Comment

This book is so phenomenal and heart wrenching and absolutely perfect. I found it utterly unputdownable and love Avery, Simone, Zora, Carole, and Mama Letty so much. When Avery’s mom learns of her mom’s cancer diagnosis and that it’s probably the end for her, the Anderson family packs up and moves from DC to Bardell, Georgia. Avery wants to find a way to fix things between her mom and Mama Letty before her death, but that’s hard to do when grappling with a history of […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: Jas Hammonds, queer, Racism, Small town, southern America, we Deserve monuments

LB's CBR14 Review No:19 · Genres: Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: Jas Hammonds, queer, Racism, Small town, southern America, we Deserve monuments ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
1619 Project Book Cover

“Our myths have not served us well.”

The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones

November 19, 2022 by faintingviolet 4 Comments

I don’t imagine this will be a long review, not because the work doesn’t deserve it, and not because there wasn’t plenty to discuss during our book club earlier this fall, but because after spending months with this work, I don’t know how much more brain space I can give it. In a not insignificant way, I need to be done with this work for now. This book is a discussion. Its various contributors are providing context, new or more in-depth analyses of how so […]

Filed Under: History Tagged With: #history, American History, book club, CannonBookClub, historiography, how history is made, Nikole Hannah-Jones, Racism, reparations, Slavery, The 1619 Project

faintingviolet's CBR14 Review No:69 · Genres: History · Tags: #history, American History, book club, CannonBookClub, historiography, how history is made, Nikole Hannah-Jones, Racism, reparations, Slavery, The 1619 Project ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments
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