Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Beauty, mystery, tradition, belonging and faith

August 22, 2018 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

The theme of Deep in the Sahara is simple: An Arab girl of the Sahara who wants to wear a malafa, the veil/dress worn by the women of her faith.  She wants to wear the malafa to be like the women of the village, but it is not until she learns what it really means that her mother allows her to wear it. Kelly Cunnane tells you that the malafa represents all the things the girl thinks it is: beauty, mystery, tradition and belonging. But it also means […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Fiction, Non-Fiction Tagged With: faith, Girls & Women, Hoda Hadadi, Kelly Cunnane, malafa, Middle East, Muslim, People & Places, Religion, Sahara

BlackRaven's CBR10 Review No:315 · Genres: Children's Books, Fiction, Non-Fiction · Tags: faith, Girls & Women, Hoda Hadadi, Kelly Cunnane, malafa, Middle East, Muslim, People & Places, Religion, Sahara ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

You can’t go home again

May 28, 2018 by Dusty Highway 1 Comment

I still remember watching E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial in the theater as a kid. The nearest movie theater was an hour’s drive from our little town in the Deep Midwest, so we didn’t get to go more than a few times a year. I’d been begging my parents to take us to see E.T. for weeks when they finally surprised me for my 8th birthday. I was enchanted from the start, so wrapped up in the story by the time Eliot said goodbye to E.T. that […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Fantasy, Fiction, Religion Tagged With: #CBR10, A Wrinkle in Time, children's book, fantasy, Fiction, fundamentalist christianity, Madeleine L'Engle, Religion, space travel

Dusty Highway's CBR10 Review No:29 · Genres: Children's Books, Fantasy, Fiction, Religion · Tags: #CBR10, A Wrinkle in Time, children's book, fantasy, Fiction, fundamentalist christianity, Madeleine L'Engle, Religion, space travel ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

I enjoyed it but have a hard time not complaining about problems

May 17, 2018 by CoffeeShopReader Leave a Comment

The epistemological vagueries of this novel was what annoyed me the most, followed closely by the lack of information concerning the relationships and actual descriptions of/between the three species participating in this narrative. Or in plainer English, there’s a few troublesome holes in the world-building that seem pretty important to the story. This is mostly a novel about characters and action; I appreciate this. However, when much of said action is directly related to the systems of faith, values, knowledge, and inter-species relationships in the […]

Filed Under: Fantasy Tagged With: fantasy, Religion, the nine, thieves of fate, tracy townsend

CoffeeShopReader's CBR10 Review No:27 · Genres: Fantasy · Tags: fantasy, Religion, the nine, thieves of fate, tracy townsend ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

So much talk of faeries, and none of it good

April 19, 2018 by Dusty Highway Leave a Comment

I love physical books. Aside from not being able to read e-books for any sustained period of time, I love the look and feel of physical books and wish every room in my home were lined with shelves that I could fill with a never-ending stream of new books. Hannah Kent’s The Good People is one of the most gorgeous physical books I’ve ever seen, with the murky underwater blues and teals overlaid with a metallic copper leaf that partially obscures the title and amplifies […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: #CannonballRead10, child abuse, faeries, Fiction, folk traditions, Hannah Kent, Religion, The Good People

Dusty Highway's CBR10 Review No:20 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: #CannonballRead10, child abuse, faeries, Fiction, folk traditions, Hannah Kent, Religion, The Good People ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

“What happens when you are worthless in somebody’s eyes”

April 7, 2018 by Dusty Highway 4 Comments

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Americanah was one of my favorite reads last year, and her Purple Hibiscus will be right up there on this year’s list, too. I don’t know how it took so long for me to find her books (correction: yes, I do), but she has quickly become one of my favorite writers. Purple Hibiscus tells the story of the Achike family through the eyes of Kambili, a young girl. Papa rules the family with an iron grip, infantilizing and militarizing and terrorizing his […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: #CannonballRead10, African fiction, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, history, Purple Hibiscus, Religion

Dusty Highway's CBR10 Review No:19 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: #CannonballRead10, African fiction, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, history, Purple Hibiscus, Religion ·
Rating:
· 4 Comments

Well, I guess the red capes had to come from somewhere

Genesis Part VII - Chapters 26-30 by 6000 years of male privelege

April 2, 2018 by PattyKates 4 Comments

Previously on Supernatural… Sarah’s death, Abraham’s death, Isaac’s marriage to Rebekah: the best little camel waterer in Texas, and sibling rivalry, as per the usual. In this installment… Patty: There was a severe famine so Isaac hightailed it to Gerar. God told him to stay put and not to go to Egypt and that if he obeyed, he would be rewarded with God’s standard offer of blessings and descendants. Now, stop me if you’ve heard this one but Isaac tells everyone in town that Rebekah […]

Filed Under: Religion Tagged With: 6000 years of male privelege, faith, Genesis, Jacob Sheep, katie71483, NSFW, Old Testament, PattyKates, PattyKates Reads The Bible, Religion, SRSLY, The Bible, The Handmaid's Tale, the other courtney, wtf

PattyKates's CBR10 Review No:2 · Genres: Religion · Tags: 6000 years of male privelege, faith, Genesis, Jacob Sheep, katie71483, NSFW, Old Testament, PattyKates, PattyKates Reads The Bible, Religion, SRSLY, The Bible, The Handmaid's Tale, the other courtney, wtf ·
· 4 Comments
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