User Profile

mikerickson

mikerickson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 5 months ago

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

This link opens in a pop-up window

mikerickson's books

Josh Malerman: Bird Box (2014, Ecco) 5 stars

Written with the narrative tension of The Road and the exquisite terror of classic Stephen …

-

5 stars

You ever intentionally shy away from a popular piece of media just to be contrarian for its own sake but then you eventually come back around to it and realized, no, actually it was as good as everyone was saying? That's what I'm feeling right now.

Simply put this was a masterclass in suspense. There were four distinct scenes I'm still thinking about that had me stressing the fuck out as I was reading them, and I'm lucky if I can get one such scene out of most horror books. The entire concept of "you become irrevocably suicidal if you look at this specific thing" was utilized to its fullest extent in a myriad of ways and never came off as a cheap gimmick. This was the epitome of "less is more."

We also got both ends of the Creature Feature/Humans are the Real Monsters spectrum. Like yes, this setting …

reviewed Finder by Suzanne Palmer (Finder Chronicles, #1)

Suzanne Palmer: Finder (2019, DAW) 4 stars

Fergus Ferguson has been called a lot of names: thief, con artist, repo man. He …

-

3 stars

It'd be the easiest thing in the world to just call this "MacGuyver but in space" (and you'd be mostly right to do so!), but that leaves out the sheer, improbable luck this protagonist experiences that really tested my suspension of disbelief.

I don't want to use the term "Mary Sue" too flippantly, but our main character, Fergus Ferguson (yes, that's his real name and yes, other characters have the same knee-jerk reaction I did upon hearing it), is a little too neat of a package for me. Even now having finished the book I struggle to think of a major character flaw beyond, "survivor's guilt, sorta kinda?" He's clearly meant to be likeable, but when you're so much of a nice guy out of the gate and you're pretty much the same at the end of the story, why am I as a reader compelled to follow you?

I'll …

Anne Applebaum: Autocracy Inc (AudiobookFormat, 2024, 23 juli 2024) 4 stars

We think we know what an autocratic state looks like: There is an all-powerful leader …

-

4 stars

Well it's a day that ends in 'Y', which means it's a beautiful day to despise the Russian government with every fiber of my being!

This is a powerful argument for asking Western governments to stop treating powerful heads of state as one-off, case-by-case studies; the Francos and Mugabes of the 20th century no longer provide the model of authoritarianism. Seemingly diverse countries with little in common beyond a desire to stay in power in the face of Western pressure (Venezuela, Iran, Zimbabwe to name a few) are all interconnected now in an effort to provide an air of legitimacy to each other. The overwhelming message they convey to their populaces is, "yes we're bad, but it could be worse, so don't fight to change things."

Rather than acting as a bridge to bring these oppressive regimes into the Western fold, post-Cold War economic overtures have instead acted as a …

Ronald B. Tobias: 20 Master Plots (And How to Build Them) (Hardcover, 1993, Writer's Digest Books) 3 stars

-

3 stars

Trying to consolidate and categorize the entirety of human fiction into a handful of neatly-defined archetypes has been attempted multiple times, but that doesn't mean it's an easy task. Rudyard Kipling thought there were sixty-nine. Carlos Gozzi thought there were thirty-six. Aristotle argued there were only two. Why does this book land on twenty? Well, why not?

The "Master Plots" as they're laid out are logical and defended in a fair manner with lots of examples, both from literature and screenplays and movies. I was well past the halfway point when I noticed that all of the examples being given seemed oddly dated and nothing past the 80's was being referenced, and it was only then that I clocked that this was published in 1993. I think that goes a long way into explaining why a lot of the suggestions and guidelines provided here felt strangely conservative to me.

Nothing …

Dan Simmons: The Terror (Paperback, 2009, Little, Brown and Co.) 4 stars

The men on board The HMS Terror—part of the ill-fated 1845 Franklin Expedition—are entering a …

-

4 stars

I haven't decided if waiting to read this book until I experienced a real life cold snap in the dead of winter was a brilliant move or a bad idea, but I'll be damned that extra bit of immersion didn't heighten my anxiety!

There's always going to be an appeal to doomed narratives where you already know the outcome, but the more bleak and sad that ending is, the more the morbid part of your mind wants to know how things got to that point. The Terror certainly doesn't disappoint here, going into superb (at times maybe too much?) detail outlining the ultimately futile attempts of this expedition's crew to survive in one of the harshest environments on earth. I'm talking descriptions of sailors unable to blink because their eyelids literally froze open, absent-mindedly touching cold metal with an ungloved hand and losing your skin as you pull away, the …