Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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When someone is that calm in a crisis, either they don’t know what’s happening, or you don’t.

The Hymn to Dionysus by Natasha Pulley

October 19, 2025 by carmelpie Leave a Comment

Suffering doesn’t make people good or noble. A little bit gives them perspective. A lot turns them cruel, and too much – you get a murder or a marvel, and neither of those are really people any more. ― Natasha Pulley, The Hymn to Dionysus His duty was hurting him, and this is the medicine, and the only reason you think that’s unreasonable is that your duty has hurt you much more, there never was medicine for you, and you don’t see why other people […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction Tagged With: Ancient Greece, cbr17bingo, Depression, duty, greek myths, hearing impaired, lgbtq characters, military, Natasha Pulley, ptsd, queer romance, Slavery, suicidal ideation, Troy

carmelpie's CBR17 Review No:34 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction · Tags: Ancient Greece, cbr17bingo, Depression, duty, greek myths, hearing impaired, lgbtq characters, military, Natasha Pulley, ptsd, queer romance, Slavery, suicidal ideation, Troy ·
Rating:
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Corruption and Colonization (And Kaiju)

A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett

April 14, 2025 by LittlePlat Leave a Comment

Yes, Robert Jackson Bennett is back! I am an unabashed fan of most of his writing, and was massively impressed when I first read The Tainted Cup, about a year ago. It was delightfully weird and just a little bit creepy; a Holmes and Watson style investigation in a Roman-style setting, topped off with some mycology-based body horror. In The Tainted Cup, the greatest threat the Empire of Khanum faced was not just the murders, but the Leviathans—kaiju-like creatures that emerge from the sea to wreak […]

Filed Under: Fantasy Tagged With: #fantasy, autocracy, Kaiju, Murder Fantastical, Mushroom Mushroom, mystery, Robert Jackson Bennett, Shadow of the Leviathan, Sherlock and Watson, Slavery

LittlePlat's CBR17 Review No:4 · Genres: Fantasy · Tags: #fantasy, autocracy, Kaiju, Murder Fantastical, Mushroom Mushroom, mystery, Robert Jackson Bennett, Shadow of the Leviathan, Sherlock and Watson, Slavery ·
Rating:
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Lost in the Weeds

Wildblood by Lauren Blackwood

March 8, 2025 by Pooja Leave a Comment

Victoria has been forced to work as a guide with the Exotic Lands Touring Company since she was six years old, and things are worse than ever now that her ex Dean has been promoted over her. Her last hope is to successfully guide Thorn, a high-profile client, safely to the depths of the jungle – but as she grows closer to him, she begins to wonder if there’s a life out there for in the broader world. I wanted to like this book so […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction Tagged With: #fantasy, adventure, ARC, Lauren Blackwood, NetGalley, Romance, Slavery, Young Adult

Pooja's CBR17 Review No:14 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction · Tags: #fantasy, adventure, ARC, Lauren Blackwood, NetGalley, Romance, Slavery, Young Adult ·
Rating:
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The Other Side of Huckleberry Finn

James by Percival Everett

October 28, 2024 by Pooja Leave a Comment

CBR16 Bingo: Fanfic – This book is a reimagining of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn which centers the viewpoint of the runaway slave Jim who accompanied Huck on his travels on the Mississippi. Jim is well-known as Huckleberry Finn’s runaway slave companion, but in this retelling we meet him as James, a character for who the stakes are higher and the world much more vicious than we ever glimpse in Mark Twain’s classic novel. It’s been a long while since I last read […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: 1800s, cbr16bingo, historical, literary fiction, Percival Everett, retelling, Slavery, United States

Pooja's CBR16 Review No:100 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: 1800s, cbr16bingo, historical, literary fiction, Percival Everett, retelling, Slavery, United States ·
Rating:
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Like the Oregon Trail Game with a Bodice Ripping Mod

Emerald Fire by Julia Grice

March 16, 2024 by Pooja Leave a Comment

Fleeing her plantation home to escape her lecherous cousin, Emerald ends up joining a wagon train headed to California as a mother’s helper. She’s drawn to their guide Mace, but has a long way to go before she can reach her happy ending. More a pioneer adventure than a true romance, we follow Emerald on her way west as the train tangles with illness and injury, hostile Native Americans and a pair of bank robbers. We encounter all kinds of curious characters both on and […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History, Romance Tagged With: 1880s, historical romance, Julia Grice, pioneers, Romance, Slavery, United States, wagon trail, western

Pooja's CBR16 Review No:41 · Genres: Fiction, History, Romance · Tags: 1880s, historical romance, Julia Grice, pioneers, Romance, Slavery, United States, wagon trail, western ·
Rating:
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Perhaps the most American of novels.

Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell

February 11, 2024 by ingres77 Leave a Comment

In 1905, Thomas Dixon’s The Clansmen: A Historical Romance of the Ku Klux Klan was published to massive sales and widespread scorn. The book was supportive of segregation, and glorified not only the Confederacy, but the Klan it was purporting to tell the story of. One year later, mobs of white Atlantans massacred African Americans following lurid and unfounded accusations made in local newspapers about the alleged rape of four white women at the hands of black men. At least 25 black people were murdered […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: civil war, Gone with the Wind, KKK, Margaret Mitchell, Racism, Reconstruction, Slavery, The South

ingres77's CBR16 Review No:2 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: civil war, Gone with the Wind, KKK, Margaret Mitchell, Racism, Reconstruction, Slavery, The South ·
Rating:
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