Cannonball Read 18

Sticking It to Cancer One Book at a Time

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Emotional Historical YA

Nothing Sung and Nothing Spoken by Nita Tyndall

October 10, 2022 by LB 1 Comment

Yup, I cried, but no one is surprised. Nothing Sung and Nothing Spoken is a story of resistance and making joy during dark times, as well as family and love. It is a story that examines when safety stops being enough and it’s time to resist and push back against harmful regimes. It is also the story of a group of friends navigating their friendship and society when it’s not safe to be Jewish, it’s not safe to be queer, it’s not safe to be […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Young Adult Tagged With: hard of hearing, Nita Tyndall, queer, sapphic, teen friendship, World War Two, WWII, YA, Young Adult

LB's CBR14 Review No:18 · Genres: Fiction, Young Adult · Tags: hard of hearing, Nita Tyndall, queer, sapphic, teen friendship, World War Two, WWII, YA, Young Adult ·
Rating:
· 1 Comment

The Three S-s: spooky, sad, and a little bit sexy

The Wild Hunt by Emma Seckel

August 2, 2022 by andtheIToldYouSos 7 Comments

Honestly, what else could you need? If you are our Heroine Leigh Wells, you need quite a bit. You’ve been called back to your ancestral island home, far flung from the wild shores of Scotland. World War Two did not hit your home directly, but it stole many young men and sent very few back home. The few that returned are not who they once were. The island is not what it once was. The Sluagh (sloo-ah) still return every October, but every year they […]

Filed Under: Fiction, History, Horror, Mystery, Suspense Tagged With: andtheIToldYouSos, ARC, bird, bird square, cbr14bingo, Emma Seckel, folklore, Gaelic legend, galley, galley club, grief, loss, mystery, new release, post-war, pub day, scotland, sluagh, superstition, tin house, tin house galley club, WWII

andtheIToldYouSos's CBR14 Review No:37 · Genres: Fiction, History, Horror, Mystery, Suspense · Tags: andtheIToldYouSos, ARC, bird, bird square, cbr14bingo, Emma Seckel, folklore, Gaelic legend, galley, galley club, grief, loss, mystery, new release, post-war, pub day, scotland, sluagh, superstition, tin house, tin house galley club, WWII ·
Rating:
· 7 Comments

Write and remember

Daughters of the Occupation: A Novel of WWII by Shelly Sanders

June 13, 2022 by ElCicco Leave a Comment

Daughters of the Occupation, published this year, is “inspired by true events” and a real gut-punching piece of historical fiction. Author Shelly Sanders discovered some truths about her family’s past as Jews in Riga when both Soviets and Nazis overran the country and persecuted them. She used this information as a springboard to write a novel about Miriam and Sarah, a grandmother and granddaughter who embark on harrowing journeys in very different time periods to find their family members and preserve their history. Chapters alternate […]

Filed Under: Fiction Tagged With: cbr14, Daughters of the Occupation, ElCicco, Fiction, historical fiction, Holocaust, Shelly Sanders, WWII

ElCicco's CBR14 Review No:19 · Genres: Fiction · Tags: cbr14, Daughters of the Occupation, ElCicco, Fiction, historical fiction, Holocaust, Shelly Sanders, WWII ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Have you heard of Pervitin?

Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich by Norman Ohler

March 10, 2022 by Halbs 2 Comments

One of the weirdest things that’s happened to me as an adult is that I’ve learned how fluid “history” can be. Growing up, my understanding of the concept of history was that smart people figured out what happened, and they told us, and that was it. In college books like Lies My Teacher Told Me and A People’s History of the United States opened up my thinking to the idea that any narrative (historical or otherwise) comes from a point of view and has a […]

Filed Under: History Tagged With: drugs, Nazis, Norman Ohler, WWII

Halbs's CBR14 Review No:9 · Genres: History · Tags: drugs, Nazis, Norman Ohler, WWII ·
Rating:
· 2 Comments

“Winston was the only person Randolph truly loved.”

Churchill & Son by Josh Ireland

February 16, 2022 by GentleRain Leave a Comment

If I say “this book was a lot better than I thought it was going to be,” I definitely run the risk of sounding rude, but I was very pleasantly surprised by Churchill & Son. I’m not a politics book type of person, as I tend to find them too dry, but Ireland has written a very engaging and interesting book that deals with a lot of politics in a readable and nuanced way. I was never bored or forcing myself to push through a section […]

Filed Under: Biography/Memoir, History Tagged With: child abuse, family drama, Josh Ireland, Randolph Churchill, Winston Churchill, WWI, WWII

GentleRain's CBR14 Review No:41 · Genres: Biography/Memoir, History · Tags: child abuse, family drama, Josh Ireland, Randolph Churchill, Winston Churchill, WWI, WWII ·
Rating:
· 0 Comments

Spies Alive

The Torqued Man by Peter Mann

January 22, 2022 by Jake Leave a Comment

The Torqued Man is a very difficult novel to pull off. It has to accurately replicate the atmosphere of Nazi Germany in World War II, introduce two queer heroes enmeshed with each other without the Tragic Homosexual trope, present a novel-within-the-novel that tweaks the story without it losing momentum. become a high wire spy tale in the tradition of Furst and LeCarré, and do all of this in a way that entertains while seamlessly blending multiple genres. And man oh man does Peter Mann do it. […]

Filed Under: Fiction, Mystery, Suspense Tagged With: Berlin, Espinoage, gay fiction, humor, LGBTQIA, Nazi Germany, Peter Mann, The Torqued Man, WWII

Jake's CBR14 Review No:9 · Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Suspense · Tags: Berlin, Espinoage, gay fiction, humor, LGBTQIA, Nazi Germany, Peter Mann, The Torqued Man, WWII ·
· 0 Comments
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Recent Comments

  • Tracy
    on Early Fantasy: Long Stories in Which Not Much Happens
    That almost sounds "so bad it's good," and I might need to check it out.
  • louise
    on High expectations led to disappointment
    I totally agree with what you wrote. I already read this book and found it extremely complicated to understand the...
  • Ashlea
    on This standalone fantasy goes incredibly hard.
    Just finished this amazing story. Eyes are still damp. I had it queued on my Libby app for several weeks...
  • finnyfinfinn
    on Les Amis Des Chats
    It did seem to come a little bit out of nowhere fast but I enjoyed everything else so much I...
  • finnyfinfinn
    on Les Amis Des Chats
    It's very sweet!
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