Cannonball Read 18

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time
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Half Blood Blues by Esi Edugyan

Sid is a Jerk

February 24, 2017 by G.D. Giant 2 Comments

As a person of mixed race (White mother, Black father) who loves the blues, I thought that a book like Half-Blood Blues (featuring several mixed race characters and blues) would be right up my alley.  It was not.  In fact, it took me nearly a week to read the first 50 pages and I was bored to death almost the whole time.  On page 54 things finally (finally!) got interesting from a story standpoint, but I still had to contend with the writing, which never […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: Biracial, Esi Edugyan, Germany, historical fiction, music, musicians, paris, People of Color, slang, Vernacular, WWII

G.D. Giant's CBR9 Review No:6 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: Biracial, Esi Edugyan, Germany, historical fiction, music, musicians, paris, People of Color, slang, Vernacular, WWII ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

Give Me ANY Word, and I’ll Tell You How It’s Irish

October 15, 2015 by Ale 16 Comments

Faintingviolet is awesome and always on the hunt for research books for me. She sent along “How the Irish Invented Slang: The Secret Language of the Crossroads” and I was excited to read this since etymology is something I really enjoy. I was not disappointed. Daniel Cassidy began his interest of the Irish influence on the American language after inheriting a Gaelic dictionary from a deceased relative and realizing how many American words in modern language link back closely to the Gaelic. The book is […]

Filed Under: Non-Fiction Tagged With: English, etymology, Immigration, Irish, language, slang

Ale's CBR7 Review No:27 · Genres: Non-Fiction · Tags: English, etymology, Immigration, Irish, language, slang ·
Rating:
· 16 Comments


Recent Comments

  • Ellesfena
    on Rethinking Assumptions About Adoption
    Ooh, that sounds really interesting! I’m adding it to my list.
  • faintingviolet
    on “…the glorious Republic cannot rise unless the monarchy falls and the monarchy cannot fall unless two women bring it down.”
    I think this one will be better for you on the sheer amount of data front. Since Southon focuses on...
  • Tracy
    on “Maple thought optimistically that human beings, on their good days, weren’t much dimmer than sheep.”
    I just DNF’ed at about 50% because it was dragging and just kind of too sheep-y. Which is a shame....
  • jeverett15
    on Diary of a Mad Tradwife
    As written, the book would be very tricky to adapt. I imagine they'd have to really rework the story. I...
  • wicherwill
    on Comforting message but … (it’s definitely me, not you, novellas)
    I haven't re-read this since originally reading them but I remember being in a state of change (temporarily living in...
See More Recent Comments »

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