Cannonball Read 18

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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“a hobbastyu was both a turbulent sea and a great difficulty, or dilemma”

Clear by Carys Davies

December 5, 2024 by tiny_bookbot 1 Comment

The idea of a historical fiction novel that sends you repeatedly running to Wikipedia usually sounds like a hefty tome, some kind of sweeping epic like Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries. But Carys Davies’s Clear is a tiny little jewel box of a novel, not even 200 pages long (or just a hair over three hours for the audiobook I listened to). But Davies takes you into the Scottish clearances, the 1843 schism in the Scottish Presbyterian church, Scots dialect, the dying Norse-derived languages of the northernmost […]

Filed Under: Featured, Fiction Tagged With: Carys Davies, historical fiction, scottish fiction

tiny_bookbot's CBR16 Review No:8 · Genres: Featured, Fiction · Tags: Carys Davies, historical fiction, scottish fiction ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

Thanksgiving 2024 Leftovers

Remembrance Day by Henry Porter

Dead Lions by Mick Herron

Zero Days by Ruth Ware

Whisper Down the Lane by Clay McLeod Chapman

Killing Castro by Lawrence Block

Deadly Beloved by Max Allan Collins

Spy Hook by Len Deighton

London Rules by Mick Herron

Real Tigers by Mick Herron

November 27, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

Happy Thanksgiving to all who celebrate. Remembrance Day**** An interesting take on the English-vs-Irish spy novel and while the author telegraphs too many things, he knows how to keep a story moving. Barely clears the 4-star threshold but if I invest time to read something almost 500 pages long, it has to be at least “good” and this was. Dead Lions, Real Tigers, and London Rules**** I had originally meant to do a big long post on my love/grr relationship with Mick Herron’s Slough House […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Bernard Samson, Chicago, Clay McLeod Chapman, Dead Lions, Deadly Beloved, domestic surveillance, England, espionage, hard case crime, Henry Porter, historical fiction, horror, Ireland, Killing Castro, lawrence block, Len Deighton, London Rules, Max Allan Collins, MI-5, MI-6, mick herron, Ms Tree, mystery, Real Tigers, Religion, Remembrance Day, Russia, Ruth Ware, Satan Panic, Slough House, Slow Horses, Spy Hook, terrorism, The Troubles, thriller, Virginia, Whisper down the lane, Zero Days

Jake's CBR16 Review No:186 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Bernard Samson, Chicago, Clay McLeod Chapman, Dead Lions, Deadly Beloved, domestic surveillance, England, espionage, hard case crime, Henry Porter, historical fiction, horror, Ireland, Killing Castro, lawrence block, Len Deighton, London Rules, Max Allan Collins, MI-5, MI-6, mick herron, Ms Tree, mystery, Real Tigers, Religion, Remembrance Day, Russia, Ruth Ware, Satan Panic, Slough House, Slow Horses, Spy Hook, terrorism, The Troubles, thriller, Virginia, Whisper down the lane, Zero Days ·
· 0 Comments

“They wear red bandannas knotted around their necks, as if their throats have already been cut.”

Rednecks by Taylor Brown

November 25, 2024 by Pooja Leave a Comment

When the coal miners of West Virginia attempt to unionize for better working conditions, the resulting conflict escalates close to the level of civil war – and a Lebanese-American doctor caught in between must choose where his allegiance lies. I’ve read about the Battle of Blair Mountain and the West Virginia Mine Wars before, but only in vague detail in high school history courses. Now, of course, I know a lot more – indeed, feel as though I saw it with my own eyes. Though […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: 1920s, historical fiction, Southern, Taylor Brown, United States, West Virginia

Pooja's CBR16 Review No:107 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: 1920s, historical fiction, Southern, Taylor Brown, United States, West Virginia ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Fruit of a Rotted Tree

Sovereign by CJ Sansom

November 21, 2024 by Jake Leave a Comment

Anyone who’s read my reviews knows how much I love reading about the Plantagenets and the Wars of the Roses in general. So when I got to book three in the Shardlake series, I had high hopes for it and it surely did not disappoint. But I have to start with something that nags: I’m not a fan of Shardlake himself. True he cannot help his physical condition and the way people treat him is terrible. But the way he treats everyone else is…also not […]

Filed Under: Mystery Tagged With: #Henry VIII, #Tudors, CJ Sansom, England, historical fiction, Matthew Shardlake, mystery, shardlake series, Sovereign, Tudor Era England

Jake's CBR16 Review No:175 · Genres: Mystery · Tags: #Henry VIII, #Tudors, CJ Sansom, England, historical fiction, Matthew Shardlake, mystery, shardlake series, Sovereign, Tudor Era England ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

A haunting and memorable journey

Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders

November 16, 2024 by genericwhitegirl Leave a Comment

Lincoln in the Bardo is a story that you chew on. You can’t just sip it and multitask and hope to passively absorb it. You have to pay attention and actively read (or listen, in my case). But it’s so rewarding when you finish it, and worth the extra mental effort. If you’re like me and thinking a Bardo is something like a bar, you are completely wrong my friend. In buddhism, a bardo is a liminal space between death and rebirth. So we are […]

Filed Under: Featured, Fiction Tagged With: Fiction, genericwhitegirl, George Saunders, historical fiction, LINCOLN IN THE BARDO, skootchyknees

genericwhitegirl's CBR16 Review No:20 · Genres: Featured, Fiction · Tags: Fiction, genericwhitegirl, George Saunders, historical fiction, LINCOLN IN THE BARDO, skootchyknees ·
· 0 Comments

“This killer was just herself turned inside out. Her fatal inversion.”

Deadly Animals by Marie Tierney

November 15, 2024 by narfna Leave a Comment

Thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the ARC. It hasn’t affected the contents of my review. This is a slow, quiet, dark book. Don’t go in expecting anything in your face. It actually took me a bit to become emotionally into, but this turned out to be worth the wait. I just had to get in the right headspace. That said, it does feel like something is lacking for me, that ineffable thing, that would make this a five star read. I’m not sure […]

Filed Under: Audiobooks, Mystery Tagged With: ARCs, audiobooks, British detective, historical fiction, Marie Tierney, mystery, narfna, serial killers, whodunnit

narfna's CBR16 Review No:63 · Genres: Audiobooks, Mystery · Tags: ARCs, audiobooks, British detective, historical fiction, Marie Tierney, mystery, narfna, serial killers, whodunnit ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments
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Recent Comments

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