Cannonball Read 18

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time

Search

| Log in
  1. Follow us on Facebook
  2. Follow us on Instagram
  3. Follow us on Bluesky
  4. Follow us on Goodreads
  5. RSS Feeds

  • Home
  • About
    • Getting Started in CBR18
    • Rules of Respect
    • Cannon Book Club
    • Diversions
    • Fan Mail
    • Holiday Book Exchange
    • Book Bingo Reading Challenge
    • Participation Badges
    • AlabamaPink
    • About Cannonball Read
  • Our Team
    • The CBR Team
    • Leaderboard
    • Recent Comments
    • Participant Interviews
    • Cannonballer Location Maps
    • Our Volunteers
    • Meet MsWas
  • Categories
    • Review Genres
    • Tags
    • Star Ratings
    • Featured Review Archive
  • Fight Cancer
    • How We Fight Cancer
    • Donate
    • CBR Merchandise
  • FAQ
  • Contact
    • Contact Form
    • 2026 Registration
    • Suggest a Review
    • Newsletter Sign Up
    • Newsletter Archive
    • Social Media

Hard Times for These Times

Hard Times by Charles Dickens

November 30, 2020 by elderberrywine Leave a Comment

So, Hard Times.  Or to give the book its full title, Hard Times for These Times.  And has there ever been a more perfect title for These Days? If you are unfamiliar with Charles Dickens, besides, perhaps, A Christmas Carol, there are a few things you ought to know about the man.  The man is, nearly always, On A Mission.  (OK, the Pickwick Papers is just plain fun.)  He’s from the Victorian era, newspapers have just been, more or less, invented, and his books are […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History, Romance Tagged With: Charles Dickens, Dickens, historic, industrial revolution

elderberrywine's CBR12 Review No:14 · Genres: Fiction, History, Romance · Tags: Charles Dickens, Dickens, historic, industrial revolution ·
· 0 Comments

It turns out that sometimes having a background in English literature pays off

The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep by H.G. Parry

November 22, 2020 by Malin 3 Comments

Official book description: For his entire life, Charley Sutherland has concealed a magical ability he can’t quite control: he can bring characters from books into the real world. His older brother, Rob – a young lawyer with an utterly normal life – hopes that this strange family secret will disappear with disuse, and he will be discharged from his duty of protecting Charley and the real world from each other.   But then, literary characters start causing trouble in their city, making threats about destroying […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, Mystery Tagged With: #fantasy, cbr12, Charles Dickens, classical literature, h.g. parry, Malin, meta fiction, New Zealand, the unlikely escape of uriah heep

Malin's CBR12 Review No:78 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Mystery · Tags: #fantasy, cbr12, Charles Dickens, classical literature, h.g. parry, Malin, meta fiction, New Zealand, the unlikely escape of uriah heep ·
Rating:
· 3 Comments

Somehow this all seems familiar

The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep by H.G. Parry

March 7, 2020 by CoffeeShopReader Leave a Comment

I don’t remember how I heard about The Unlikely Escape of Uriah Heep, but I saw it on a library shelf not long after I heard about it, so of course I had to check it out (pun intended). The story concentrates on two brothers, Rob the older from whose perspective the story comes, and Charley the younger, genius of the sort who finished a PhD and publishes an academic book on Dickens at the age of nineteen. There is the usual kind of brotherly […]

Filed Under: Fantasy, Fiction, Mystery, Speculative Fiction Tagged With: #fantasy, Books, Charles Dickens, David Copperfield, dorian gray, h.g. parry, the unlikely escape of uriah heep, Victorian

CoffeeShopReader's CBR12 Review No:18 · Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Mystery, Speculative Fiction · Tags: #fantasy, Books, Charles Dickens, David Copperfield, dorian gray, h.g. parry, the unlikely escape of uriah heep, Victorian ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Marley was dead.

A Christmas Carol by Jim Dale

December 18, 2019 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

If you’re like me and you’ve listened to a lot of audiobooks, you might transpose your sense and understanding of one narrator associated with a particular author onto other authors when that narrator shows up later. So maybe John Lee’s presence on an audio addition of Lord Jim makes it feel like Jo Nesbo has just written that novel. Or maybe Simon Vance reading a contemporary British novel makes you feel like it’s written by Patrick O’Brien, Anne Rice, or Naomi Novik. And of course Frank […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens, Jim Dale

vel veeter's CBR11 Review No:703 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: A Christmas Carol, Charles Dickens, Jim Dale ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Bad blood carries. Bad blood comes out.

October 7, 2018 by Dusty Highway Leave a Comment

CBR10Bingo: The Book Was Better? This was another square I struggled to fill, until a flash of inspiration hit me. I remembered that I had bought Park Chan-wook’s The Handmaiden on a whim several months ago but never actually watched it, giving me the perfect excuse to buy and read Fingersmith by Sarah Waters and then finally watch the film. Done and done.  Sue was born in a cramped house of thieves and orphaned when her mother was hanged for murder. Mrs. Sucksby has raised […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Suspense Tagged With: #CBR10, cbr10bingo, Charles Dickens, costume drama, crime, Fingersmith, LGBT fiction, Sarah Waters, Suspense

Dusty Highway's CBR10 Review No:56 · Genres: Fiction, Suspense · Tags: #CBR10, cbr10bingo, Charles Dickens, costume drama, crime, Fingersmith, LGBT fiction, Sarah Waters, Suspense ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Annual income twenty pounds, annual expenditure nineteen six, result happiness.

May 17, 2018 by vel veeter Leave a Comment

We are coming to the end of the school year. It might not seem that way because it’s still April, but the last day of school is June 15. Graduation is June 5th, Senior exam week is the previous week, and because Seniors can be exempt from exams, their last day is May 25. AND! because we’re about to enter into the weeks of AP tests and state-wide tests (NONE of which I have to prepare for this year–mine were back in January) I have […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Charles Dickens, David Copperfield

vel veeter's CBR10 Review No:148 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Charles Dickens, David Copperfield ·
· 0 Comments
  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • Next Page »


Recent Comments

  • Ellie Fitz-Gerald
    on Trent Dalton’s Latest is Not What I Expected
    Never mind the critics, I hugely enjoyed this book. Hilarious in places, stressful in others and a great advertisement for...
  • ElCicco
    on The Outsiders
    I started the second book the other day and I’m riveted!
  • beereadsbooks
    on The Outsiders
    Such a detailed review! I read this one a few years ago and was similarly captivated. I keep meaning to...
  • Andy Glaze
    on Do Hard Things
    Thanks so much for reading the book and taking the time to write such a thoughtful review. I originally wrote...
  • Zirza
    on “Hell is a campus.”
    I felt the same way. Interesting concept, but the execution was lacking.
See More Recent Comments »

Support Our Mission

  • Support Our Mission, Donate Today!
  • FAQ
  • Shop
  • Volunteers
  • Leaderboard
  • AlabamaPink
  • Contact

Help Our Mission

You can donate to CBR via:

  1. PayPal
  2. Venmo

The reviews and comments posted on this site reflect the opinions of individual posters and do not reflect the views of Cannonball Read.

© 2026 Cannonball Read Inc., a registered 501(c)(3) | Log in