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mikerickson

mikerickson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 3 months ago

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

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mikerickson's books

Ross King: Shortest History of Italy (2024, Experiment LLC, The) 3 stars

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3 stars

Damn, they weren't kidding, that really was a short history of Italy. When we were already onto Attila the Hun in Chapter Three I was like, "oh, so we're gonna be zooming zooming through this, okay!"

As advertised, this was a very broad, very light skimming through multiple centuries of a specific geographic area. It served as a refresher of time periods I've learned about before (Roman Republic, Italian Renaissance), and offered an introduction to others I'm unfamiliar with (Napoleonic era, Years of Lead). Also learned some fun trivia bits, like how cannolis were an Arab-inspired invention from when Sicily was under Muslim control and that the car company Fiat is actually an acronym for Fabbrica Italiana Automobili di Torino. I wish the more recent content was fleshed out a little more, but at least it went up to the COVID lockdowns and how Italy was uniquely hard-hit.

All in …

Nicholas Binge: Ascension (2023, Penguin Publishing Group) 3 stars

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3 stars

Not that this is something I've ever done myself, but you know how timeshare companies will be like, "hey, we'll fly you out to Vegas for a weekend on our dime, all you have to do is sit in on a presentation we'll give you"? Reading this book felt like that, except the sales pitch went on way longer than I agreed to and we never got to the fun stuff that drew me in in the first place.

This book has a fantastic premise that hooked me just from the back-of-the-cover blurb: we got a mountain taller than Everest appearing in the middle of the ocean overnight, we got secret organizations trying to send people to the top, we got environmental survival horror, we got people showing up after being missing for 20 years, we got epistolary, etc., etc. This felt like half The White Vault, half The Left-Right …

reviewed Zoe's Tale by John Scalzi (Old Man's War, #4)

John Scalzi: Zoe's Tale (2008) 4 stars

How do you tell your part in the biggest tale in history?

I ask because …

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3 stars

I'm not big on re-reading books because my TBR pile is big enough as it is, but I feel like I just got tricked into doing so with this one. This fourth book in this series... just re-tells the same story from the third book, almost scene-for-scene, just from a different character's perspective. Maybe it's just because I don't tend to read book series in general, but this feels like a strange approach to me?

Granted, there was a suspiciously convenient deus ex machina moment towards the end of the previous book, and now we finally get an explanation on exactly what happened because we follow the character responsible for it. Kinda wish we didn't need to re-hash all the previous events from the same starting point to learn all that though. Maybe it's for the best that it's been several real-world months since I've read the previous book because …

Russell Wild: Bond investing for dummies (2007, Wiley) 4 stars

Bonds and bond funds are among the safest and most reliable investments you can make …

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4 stars

Ironically this book convinced me not to invest in bonds, BUT I am much more informed about the topic than I was going into it.

This book felt like it was maybe targeted at an older age bracket than mine, say in the late 50's through retirement age, and meant more as a primer on how to transition a stock-heavy equities portfolio into more of a fixed income kind of situation. I'm not quite at that point yet, and I'm sitting on a more aggressive allotment because I still have the bulk of my wealth-generating years ahead of me. But I'm still glad I read this book so that I'm not caught completely blindsided when it's time to pivot strategies in the future.

Jenny Kiefer: This wretched valley (Paperback, 2024, Quirk Books) 4 stars

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3 stars

I suck at tying knots and I have a fear of heights, so naturally rock climbing - which combines both those things - is one of my least favorite activities. I do enjoy horror novels however, and seeing a bunch of characters doing something I hate and getting punished for it piqued my interest in a sick sort of way.

The first chapter is kind of a grim after-the-fact postmortem, so we know not to expect any victories from the very beginning. I'm still on the fence about whether or not I respect the book setting the expectation up front, or if I would've preferred the illusion of someone making it out of this story alive, only to have my hopes dashed one by one. If nothing else we get an intriguing narrative question in literally the first sentence the serves to pull the reader in.

I wanna say this …