Cannonball Read 18

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Cooking my way through this one

East by Meera Sodha

May 23, 2021 by CoffeeShopReader Leave a Comment

I have started to really make an effort to cook my way through a cookbook before looking for a new one; problem is, the cookbook I had planned to start the year with turns out to not be much to my taste. Library browse to the rescue, I think. I picked up East by Meera Sodha, which features both vegan and vegetarian which isn’t a mix you usually see. It focuses on Asia in general, but with a mix of Japanese, Indian, and Chinese cuisines […]

Filed Under: Cooking/Food Tagged With: Asian, Chinese, cookbook, East, indian, japanese, Meera Sodha, vegan, vegetarian

CoffeeShopReader's CBR13 Review No:44 · Genres: Cooking/Food · Tags: Asian, Chinese, cookbook, East, indian, japanese, Meera Sodha, vegan, vegetarian ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Memories of forgetting disappear

The Memory Police by Yoko Ogawa

December 5, 2020 by Merryn Leave a Comment

“People – and I’m no exception – seem capable of forgetting almost anything, much as if our island were unable to float in anything but an expanse of totally empty sea.” The Memory Police enforce the forgetting of the things that are disappeared from an unnamed island inhabited by an unnamed author.  From time to time, the people of the island wake up with the restless knowledge that something else is gone and banish any contrary evidence from their homes, towns and minds.  Things disappear, […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: cbr12, dystopia, japanese, yoko ogawa

Merryn's CBR12 Review No:15 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: cbr12, dystopia, japanese, yoko ogawa ·
· 0 Comments

When History Repeats itself

They Called Us Enemy by George Takei

July 24, 2019 by BlackRaven Leave a Comment

#crb11bingo #TrueStory I am going to write WOW 200 times and OMG for the other 50 words. I am also going to say this the second draft of my review. I found myself just going on about all the little, amazing details to the story. I was near 500 words and could have written another 500. They Called Us Enemy is George Takei’s story in a graphic novel format. Along with Justin Eisinger, Steven Scott and Harmony Becker the reader sees the years from early/mid-1940s […]

Filed Under: Children's Books, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, History, Non-Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: American History, Biography & Memoir, cbr11bingo, george takei, Harmony Becker, japanese, Justin Eisinger, lgbt, Steven Scott, World War Two, ww2

BlackRaven's CBR11 Review No:283 · Genres: Children's Books, Graphic Novels/Comic Books, History, Non-Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: American History, Biography & Memoir, cbr11bingo, george takei, Harmony Becker, japanese, Justin Eisinger, lgbt, Steven Scott, World War Two, ww2 ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Very skeptical going in to this, but I quite enjoyed myself. Thanks, Read Harder!

Orange: The Complete Collection, Vol. 1 by Ichigo Takano

June 24, 2019 by narfna Leave a Comment

This wasn’t my first manga, but it was the first I enjoyed. I tried Sailor Moon years ago, and was super not into it. In hindsight, I may have been unfair to it, and being unfamiliar with the conventions of manga and anime probably contributed, but still. Not a fan. But I was into this right away! I probably wouldn’t have ever picked it up, despite several friends having read and enjoyed it, except for the Read Harder Challenge this year (thanks Read Harder, doing […]

Filed Under: Graphic Novels/Comic Books Tagged With: ichigo takano, japanese, manga, narfna, orange, orange vol. 1, orange: the complete collection, read harder challenge 2019, time travel, translated, Young Adult

narfna's CBR11 Review No:61 · Genres: Graphic Novels/Comic Books · Tags: ichigo takano, japanese, manga, narfna, orange, orange vol. 1, orange: the complete collection, read harder challenge 2019, time travel, translated, Young Adult ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

The Convenience of Individuality

Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

May 26, 2019 by Claire Badger Leave a Comment

This is one of those strange little books that I found reaffirmed my belief in the idea of being true to yourself. There are a lot of platitudes about that concept, mostly Disney-fied or Rom-Comish in execution, and those platitudes always ring hollow to me. They seem sacharine, or manipulative, or frustratingly narrow in execution. What Sayaka Murata offers in Convenience Store Woman is a character so out of synch with the rest of her society, but so in synch with the world of her […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Asperger's, autism, convenience store woman, Japan, japanese, Murata, Spectrum

Claire Badger's CBR11 Review No:10 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Asperger's, autism, convenience store woman, Japan, japanese, Murata, Spectrum ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Historical Fluffiness from the Forties

February 16, 2017 by Mim 2 Comments

Lisa See, the author of [i]Snow Flower and the Secret Fan[/i], which was a really good book, has delivered a less interesting and slightly faded remix of the same themes Snow Flower had – namely, friendship and Chinese culture. The characters are wooden: good-girl Grace, scandalous Ruby, cantankerous Helen. The story limps along like a wounded homing pigeon, following the “glamour” of the Forties while skipping any of the realities of the second World War. (It does make an appearance, as do the Japanese internment […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History Tagged With: burlesque, Chinese, historical fiction, japanese, Lisa See, nightclubs, San Francisco, World War 2

Mim's CBR9 Review No:1 · Genres: Fiction, History · Tags: burlesque, Chinese, historical fiction, japanese, Lisa See, nightclubs, San Francisco, World War 2 ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments
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