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mikerickson

mikerickson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 7 months ago

Primarily a horror reader, but always down for some historical fiction and gay stuff.

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mikerickson's books

Manuel Arriaga: Rebooting Democracy: A Citizen's Guide to Reinventing Politics (Paperback, Thistle Publishing) 4 stars

Unless you are a banker, by now you must have realized that politicians don’t serve …

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4 stars

You know what? Kudos to this book for actually saying something with its full chest. I frequently come across political books that read like, "everything sucks and here's why," but this goes a step further with tangible and direct suggestions for what to do about it; it really is a guide of sorts.

Of course there's the standard solutions like ranked-choice voting and campaign finance reform, but this also discussed a concept of "citizen deliberation" (think of a souped-up round of jury duty except the results get pushed to a public election as a referendum question) that I'd never even heard of before. It even laid out real-world examples of how these have operated in the (then) recent past. There's also discussions on how to tweak recall election rules to better hold politicians accountable in between elections, and just an overall grab bag of specific things that foreign countries do. …

Rodrigo Rey Rosa, Stephen Henighan: Country of Toó (2023, Biblioasis) 2 stars

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2 stars

I don't tend to have the best luck with translated works, but that doesn't stop me from giving them a chance from time to time. I wasn't able to get past that odd ~extra degree of separation~ feeling though, and reading this book felt like it was resisting me.

There's obviously a ton of local nuances and references that are going to go over my head because I'm not familiar with Guatemala or contemporary Mayan communities, but I could follow the general conflicts and points of contention between the haves and have-nots, indigenous vs. industrialists, etc. What really tripped me up is that multiple characters seemed to have more than one name, and the narration was pretty liberal about switching between them. There were times I thought I was following two different people, only to later realize that it was just one. Maybe that was an intentional stylistic choice that …

Natalie Whittle: Shrink the City (2024, Experiment LLC, The) 3 stars

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3 stars

Gonna be honest, wasn't expecting a book extolling the virtues of the ~15-minute city~ to unintentionally make me wary of the concept. So much time was spent dispelling counterarguments against it that I learned about problems I'd never even considered and didn't know I'd have issue with until I heard about them here.

I've been a lifelong suburbanite (and arguably lived semi-rural for a decade), so no city has ever been a home for me; they've always been someplace I visit for a day or two before leaving. I do have friends that live in big cities though, and I find that they're always uniquely opinionated about the topic. They take pride in city-life things that I pity them for, and they pity me for things I take pride in for living in the suburbs. It all comes out in the wash at the end, but just know that that's …

Simone St. James: The Book of Cold Cases (Hardcover, 2022, Berkley) 4 stars

A true-crime blogger gets more than she bargained for while interviewing the woman acquitted of …

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3 stars

It's kind of impressive how a book that is decidedly adult in tone and prose still manages to feel like a story on training wheels. Like this didn't read as YA and no punches were pulled content-wise, but I couldn't help but feel like I was playing with bumper lanes set up.

This was a book club read, and it was actually my suggestion that won the last round of voting, so maybe that's why I'm as disappointed as I am that I didn't love this book. There is a central mystery and the narrative jumps between two protagonists: Shea, who is a modern-day true crime girlie, and Beth, a hardened old woman who gives us flashbacks to forty years earlier when she was arrested, tried, then acquitted for the murder of two men. The initial draw of, "what really happened back in the seventies?" is there. So far so …

John Judis: Socialist Awakening (2020, Columbia Global Reports) 4 stars

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4 stars

What starts out as a, "here's how Bernie can still win" bit of expired leftist copium soon becomes a cold splash of water to the face for those who need to hear it. Demographic trends are not destiny, and one can never rest on their laurels before the work is done.

This is a good primer on the different sub-types of socialism (of which this book covers nine by my count), with a focus on American politics, save for a single chapter that detours over to the UK to cover what the Labor Party has been up to between WWII through the early days of COVID. There is special care given to showing how socialist policies tend to fare well with the general public, but how once anyone actually says the dreaded S-word out loud, no one wants anything to do with it anymore.

Parts of this haven't aged well, …