Dennard Dayel's How to Dodge a Cannonball reads like a satirical fever dream of the American Civil War, written in a cadence that recalls Neil Gaiman's gothic whimsy but channeled through battlefield smoke and absurdist humor. The novel brims with clever aphorisms and meticulously crafted ironies, some of which prompted genuine laughter. Yet the eccentric characters, designed more as allegorical figures than as psychologically convincing agents, never acquire sufficient depth to sustain real attachment. Their stories, while inventive, feel ornamental rather than compelling. The brilliance lies in the tonal play—where tragedy keeps colliding with farce—yet the narrative lacks the gravitational pull of characters worth following. For all its wit and audacity, the book remains more a satirical spectacle than a work of lasting emotional force. 3/5
Wednesday, September 10, 2025
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