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mikerickson

mikerickson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 8 months ago

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

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mikerickson's books

Jack Carr: Red Sky Mourning (2024, Atria/Emily Bestler Books)

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This must be how straight men feel when they accidentally stumble into a gay bar: just a confusing sense of growing unease culminating in a realization of, "oh, I don't belong here and this isn't for me."

I'll admit up front that this was a blind airport purchase and I did not realize this was the seventh book in a series going into it. And it's not meant to be a standalone; there are tons of references to events and now-deceased characters from previous entries that I knew were going over my head. Throwaway lines like, "just like that time in Israel!" meant nothing to me because I just got here, but I'm sure all the callbacks landed for longtime fans.

The premise of a clandestine plan for China to make a move on invading Taiwan depending on the result of a 2024 U.S. Presidential election intrigued me, and the …

Christopher de Bellaigue: Flying Green (2003, Columbia Global Reports)

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There's a certain irony around reading a book like this shortly before I make a transatlantic flight. Yeah I'm vegetarian, I own an EV, and recycle etc. etc., but I also know that a single long haul trip can completely offset the carbon emissions I'd otherwise save, which doesn't even account for the inevitable flight back.

What I appreciate here is that this book doesn't browbeat you into being a Luddite through guilt tripping (though it does mention and discuss other individuals and organizations that try to). Instead, it does acknowledge the necessities and positives of air travel and how it's made the world more connected and accessible. But that doesn't mean it's not without cost.

So is anyone doing anything about it? Turns out, yes, but the technology isn't there yet, and barring some unforeseeable breakthrough, it might never get there on the scale needed. There's specific foci on …

Thomas Olde Heuvelt: Echo (2022, Doherty Associates, LLC, Tom)

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This is the most conflicted I've felt over a book in a long while: the good bits were really good, and the bad bits were really bad. But I guess if we're measuring success on the metric of "made the reader feel opinionated about the work," this was a A+.

This book was written in English, but by an author who does not speak English as a native language and it shows. I'm not saying this was originally in some other tongue and was then translated into English, I mean someone wrote an entire book in a language they learned later in life. Which is super commendable! And damned if the Dutch don't have flawless English (at least all the ones I met when I was in the Netherlands, where I bought this book). But that does result in some tells and oddities that stuck out to me. Every instance …

Beth Revis: Full Speed to a Crash Landing (2024, DAW)

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Kind of feels unfair to attempt to review this one because I don't feel like I read a book so much as the first third of a book. And it just so happens that this is the first in a trilogy. Go figure.

This was a book club read for when the genre wheel landed on "romance," which feels like a swing and a miss for me in that department because the central relationship here isn't given enough room or time to develop (an arc that almost definitely gets fleshed out in the subsequent books I'm assuming). But if you go into it instead expecting a science fiction environmental/survival heist story set on a hostile planet... it's actually pretty decent! Doubly so if you're like me and enjoy female leads like Ada who are allowed to and not afraid to make mistakes and just be kind of an overall chaotic …

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

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

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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. …