Cannonball Read 17

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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“I believe in a kind of holiness in our connection to everything on Earth. Holy is the mouse. Holy is the grain the mouse eats. Holy is the seed. Holy are we.”

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

November 26, 2022 by faintingviolet Leave a Comment

I am an outlier on this work. Yaa Gyasi writes like a motherfucker and I will continue to seek out her work, but this book just wasn’t for me. Transcendent Kingdom aims for big, heavy topics but its treatment of them never feels more than surface level. This work stands in stark contrast to Homegoing, and while I can see the impulse to go for a different tack there’s such a bare bones approach to the very heavy topics that Transcendent Kingdom attempts to wrangle […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Addiction, faith and science, read harder challenge, Religion, sophomore slump, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

faintingviolet's CBR14 Review No:70 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Addiction, faith and science, read harder challenge, Religion, sophomore slump, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
gift from Ardaigle

Thanks Ardaigle! CBR13 Book Exchange

December 26, 2021 by teresaelectro 2 Comments

Thanks Ashlie/Ardaigle! These arrived on my birthday and totally made my day. 🙂

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Book Exchange, CBR book exchange, CBR13, Duke Actually, Jenny Holiday, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

Genres: Fiction · Tags: Book Exchange, CBR book exchange, CBR13, Duke Actually, Jenny Holiday, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi ·
· 2 Comments

“And it wasn’t fair. That was the thing that was at the heart of my reluctance and my resentment. Some people make it out of their stories unscathed, thriving. Some people don’t.”

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

September 13, 2021 by cheerbrarian 1 Comment

In one word: Grieving Cannonball Read Bingo: Uncannon I picked this for uncannon because Gyasi is giving new life to a story that we’ve seen many times over from the Eurocentric white perspective. There have been plenty of books about drug addiction (even specifically about Oxycontin and the havoc it is wreaking in America), mental illness, the crossroads of science and religion in academia, and an overachieving character trying to fix her heart by using her head. She is taking very familiar tropes and given […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Africa, American South, cbr13bingo, family, Mental Health, modern classic, the opioid epidemic, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

cheerbrarian's CBR13 Review No:33 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Africa, American South, cbr13bingo, family, Mental Health, modern classic, the opioid epidemic, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

I’ve run out of adjectives

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

February 11, 2021 by Manimama 1 Comment

I don’t know if I have enough words to describe the way I love Yaa Gyasi’s writing. I have given copies of her first book,  Homegoing, to every reader that I know. Her second book, Transcendent Kingdom, is at first glance very different but deals with many similar themes. Transcendent Kingdom is told by Gifty, a neuroscientist researching addictive behavior in mice. She’s brilliant, a dedicated scientist at a world class institution, but also a loner who wants human connection but pushes it away at every […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Fiction, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

Manimama's CBR13 Review No:9 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Fiction, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

Thoughtful meditation on science, faith and family

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

December 30, 2020 by Wanderlustful Leave a Comment

Yaa Gyasi is best known for her critically acclaimed first novel, Homegoing.  Unlike Homegoing, which I gather has a broad sweep in terms in geography and time (its in my TBR pile!), Transcendent Kingdom is narrowly focused on one woman, Gifty, in her adolescent to early adult years.  Although the scope of the novel expands a little to include Gifty’s immediate family and a few friends, the novel remains focused on her experiences with these additional cast members- we see them through her eyes. We […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: faith, Race, science, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

Wanderlustful's CBR12 Review No:63 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: faith, Race, science, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

“The truth is we don’t know what we don’t know. We don’t even know the questions we need to ask in order to find out, but when we learn one tiny little thing, a dim light comes on in a dark hallway, and suddenly a new question appears.”

Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi

December 16, 2020 by narfna 1 Comment

We all lost our collective minds over Yaa Gyasi’s debut novel, Homegoing, which was a century-spanning epic about race and family, so the pressure was on for her sophomore effort. I think she’s made the smart choice to try for something completely different. Where Homegoing had buckets of characters, narrated in the third person, and a new setting and time period every fifty or so pages, Transcendent Kingdom is a smaller, more intimate portrait of one woman thinking about her life, and thinking about her […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Fiction, lit-fic, literary fiction, narfna, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi

narfna's CBR12 Review No:177 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Fiction, lit-fic, literary fiction, narfna, transcendent kingdom, Yaa Gyasi ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment


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