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mikerickson

mikerickson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 2 years ago

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

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mikerickson's books

Becky Chambers: The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Paperback, 2015, Hodder & Stoughton)

When Rosemary Harper joins the crew of the Wayfarer, she isn't expecting much. The Wayfarer, …

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Went in expecting a cozy, low-stakes sci-fi romp with Found Family tropes abound, and I got... something that was all that but also something that was occasionally darker and threatening? Not in a, "this was two completely separate books poorly smashed together" kind of way but more like a work that isn't afraid to hold the good with the bad at the same time. I don't know if this makes sense, but what I'm getting at is that it surpassed my expectations.

There's a big cast of characters here and while I was originally afraid we'd only be tied to two of the main protagonists for most of the book, we actually get a fair amount of separate POV chapters, and I think the book benefited from that. As with any new speculative fiction setting, there's going to be some worldbuilding, but most of it here was handled in-fiction through …

Paul Greenberg: The Climate Diet (Paperback, 2021, Penguin Books)

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A quick read that I unexpectedly read in one sitting. If you're even remotely aware about the climate movement, nothing in here will be new, but it does read like an inoffensive way to dip your toe into thinking about making lifestyle choices. This isn't a maximalist, "go 100% vegan immediately and sell your car for a bike" approach that would turn away 90% of Americans, but more a series of gentle suggestions that won't be terribly inconvenient but would be ultimately beneficial if everyone followed. Consider this more of a stocking stuffer pamphlet for the green-curious and less of a shout-it-from-the-rooftops manifesto for green living.

Callan Wink: Beartooth (2025, Granta Books)

In the Montana backcountry live two brothers who run a saw mill and do a …

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Reading this made me feel like I was walking up a flight of stairs and then had a misstep at the top; I thought there was going to be one or two more steps, but I was actually at the top landing unexpectedly early. The walk up was enjoyable, but I am left feeling a little confused as to how I got here.

What this book does well it does very well, and that's mostly character interactions, environmental descriptions, and conveying just how oppressive a presence poverty can be in every decision and action. Our protagonist ultimately is forced to cave on his principles and do something he doesn't want to not because he has a change of heart or is deceived or momentarily acts out of character but simply because of money. And after seeing the situation he's in, you can't really blame him. Unfortunately, everyone involved would have …

Agatha Christie, Agatha Christie: Poirot Investigates (2011, HarperCollins Publishers)

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This is gonna sound derivative, but this book felt like someone asked, "What if Knives Out was a serialized TV show with 30-minute episodes and no continuity?" The short story format just did not work for me from what I've come to expect from a Christie mystery.

We do the whole thing where our protagonist Captain Hastings is kind of a sidekick to Detective Poirot, who is the real reason why we're here. They call each other friends, but they're way more rude to each other here than in the previous two books I've read, and Hastings seems downright mad at Poirot's infallibility at times, but that never develops into a plot point or anything.

Each chapter is a new mystery with new characters, which, fine. And the nature of the mysteries are pretty varied between murders, kidnappings, thefts, and even a clever one towards the end involving a missing …

Annie Proulx: Brokeback Mountain (Paperback, Spanish language, 2006, Siglo XXI Ediciones)

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning and bestselling author of The Shipping News and Accordion Crimes comes …

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I was a confused, closeted, and in-denial 16-year-old when this movie came out, and didn't allow myself to come anywhere near it for a multitude of illogical and self-destructive reasons. I still haven't seen it, and everything I knew about it was just ascertained over the years through general pop culture and social media osmosis. Now that I'm a fully self-realized adult who isn't at war with himself and seeing that this year was the 20-year anniversary, I figured I'd finally see what the fuss was about. And oof... This got me good.

I had no idea the original source material was so short, not even a hundred pages long, but the author manages to fit an entire lifetime into those pages. The prose is pretty minimal and leaves space for a majority of the text to be direct dialogue between characters, which I'm always a fan of. These western …