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mikerickson@bookwyrm.social

Joined 8 months, 3 weeks ago

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

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The Lovecraft Compendium (2016) 3 stars

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3 stars

By my count, I've already read four different books that either touched on, danced around, or directly referenced Lovecraft's greater mythos, without ever actually giving the source material a shot. Figured it was time to finally rectify that.

This was an interesting collection in that the entries were sorted in chronological order of when they were written, and coincidentally I enjoyed the later pieces better than the earlier ones. It was all pretty uniformly dense to get through however; sentences ran long and used obscure and uncommon vocabulary for seemingly its own sake. Definitely a unique style, but not exactly one that I was a fan of. At times I could see the value of mimicking a character's descent into madness or trying to decipher true meaning from a complicated text (something that characters do a few times), but mostly it just felt like a book that actively resisted being …

Old Man's War Boxed Set I: Old Man's War, The Ghost Brigades, The Last Colony (2014, Tor Science Fiction) 3 stars

Review of "Old Man's War Boxed Set I: Old Man's War, The Ghost Brigades, The Last Colony" on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I don't read many series because I have completionist tendencies (hell, I can barely convince myself to DNF a book I'm actively hating), but I'm slowly coming around to trying a few out. I also wanted to try dipping back into military sci-fi which I read a lot of in my early twenties, so this book was killing two birds with one stone with respect to my reading goals.

The premise alone was enough to get my interest; a space military organization only accepts new recruits that are at least 75-years-old, whisking them away to undergo some mystery medical treatment and then off to the front-lines fighting literal aliens, never to return back to earth. As you progress through the story it kinda feels like the idea of an army made up of old people came first and the (to me, weak) justification came afterwards, but whatever. This book definitely …

At Night All Blood Is Black (Paperback, 2021, Picador) 4 stars

Review of 'At Night All Blood Is Black' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Trench warfare on the Western Front of World War I has gotta be like, at least in the top 5 worst experiences in all of human history. But I think this is the first fictional account I've read that really nailed just how fucking bleak it could be by looking at it directly rather than shunting it to the background or a flashback.

Strangely enough, this book strongly reminded me of [b:Fever Dream|30763882|Fever Dream|Samanta Schweblin|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1471279721l/30763882.SX50.jpg|42701168], in that it's a brief look at a character's descent into madness. A Senegalese soldier who's drafted up by France to fight the Germans watches his best friend die and Does Not Handle It Well™. His white French commanding officers just want the Africans to act savage and scare the opposing Germans, and our protagonist is all too willing to play the part. Problem is, his own side starts becoming afraid of him …

The Croning 2 stars

Review of 'The Croning' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I just had two back-to-back plane flights for a short trip. Were it not for the fact that I didn't bring anything else to read, I don't know that I would've brought myself to finish this book.

This is my second book with this author, and I really enjoyed The Beautiful Thing That Awaits Us All. But whereas I found that to be a very creative and inventive short story collection, this book was a single narrative that felt like an entirely different person wrote it, which is wild considering they were only published a year apart from each other. The Croning also felt very dated, like classic horror literature from the 70's or 80's, so I was surprised to see it came out in 2012.

It's hard to criticize and nail down what I didn't like here, and a large part of that is that there wasn't a …

The Holdout (Paperback, 2021, Random House Trade Paperbacks) 5 stars

Review of 'The Holdout' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

As of the time of my writing this, I've only given a 5-star review to 10% of the 103 books I've rated on here, so I like to think that I'm stingy with handing those out. But honestly, I knew I was going to end up here with this book after just the first chapter.

I don't really read many thrillers, let alone the courtroom procedural variety, and I also don't even remember how this book ended up on my TBR or why I bought a physical copy several months ago. But the simple fact is that I had an unexpectedly good time with this book and literally did not want to stop reading when my lunch breaks were wrapping up.

Chapters alternate back and forth between an extremely high-profile court case that happened in 2009 (think like O.J. Simpson or Casey Anthony-levels of media attention), and forward to 2019, …

This Census-Taker (2017, PICADOR) 3 stars

"For readers of George Saunders, Kelly Link, David Mitchell, and Karen Russell, This Census-Taker is …

Review of 'This Census-Taker' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I feel like such a fake sometimes. I say stuff like, "I like eerie, atmospheric books," and think that there's nothing inherently wrong with an unreliable narrator or open endings. And yet when I read a story like this that has all three I'm just left thinking: wow, this was not for me!

Definitely a unique, lonely, and melancholic book. Kind of gave me James and the Giant Peach/Coraline/Series of Unfortunate Events-kind of vibes with respect to children in strange environments and an innate distrust of adults, especially parents. It's not necessarily a coming-of-age story so much as an adult man reflecting back on an unusual period of his childhood, but it feels like so little dramatic action is actually happening that I never felt unease or tension. It also has a fairly abrupt ending, which really got me because the last twenty pages or so of the physical book …

Prosper's Demon (Paperback, 2020, Tor.com) 4 stars

In a botched demonic extraction, they say the demon feels it ten times worse than …

Review of "Prosper's Demon" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Normally I'd consider it a red flag when a character speaks directly to the reader in first person and says, "You're probably not going to like me." It screams of edginess for its own sake and I feel like I need to settle in for something that's going to try so hard to be jarring and surprising that it fails to do so. And yet, that happens here, and I still managed to be surprised (in a good way!).

Fantasy novellas tend to be sparse, but this has got to be a record for describing the bare minimum of the worldbuilding, if there's even a way to measure that metric. But maybe because I was given the bare minimum to understand what was going on I wanted to know more. Hell, three of the main characters weren't even named and I was still hooked on their dynamics and interactions. But …

Ghost story (2016) 1 star

"What was the worst thing you've ever done? In the sleepy town of Milburn, New …

Review of 'Ghost story' on 'Goodreads'

1 star

Oh wow. What a fundamentally unenjoyable experience reading this book was.

I'll try to keep this short because I hate the idea of giving this book even more time than it's already taken from me, but this really felt like a story that did not want to be told. Thematically I suppose that makes sense because at the center of it all lies an event that happened a long time ago and that five of the main characters would very much like to keep in the past, but you don't even find that out until 3/4s of the way through the book. Every bit of progress felt like pulling teeth and there's just way too much nothing happening on these pages.

It leans very heavily on a Gothic Horror style, being very oppressive and isolated and claustrophobic at times, but I simply... didn't care. Damn near the entire town gets …

2034: A Novel of the Next World War (2022) 2 stars

2034: A Novel of the Next World War is a 2021 novel written by Elliot …

Review of '2034: A Novel of the Next World War' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Not to be one of those girlies who puts GIFs in their reviews, but this one really had me like:


Let's unpack.

I don't consider myself a huge modern war buff who follows the military industrial complex and plays armchair strategist with all the keyboard warriors in the War Thunder forums, but I'm aware of that whole subculture and have dipped my toe into learning more about it from time to time. Hell, the only reason I picked this book up in the first place (besides the cover; I'm a sucker for an orange and black motif) was because I was so fascinated with the 2020 Commission Report that I read last year and thought, "maybe this is a new genre I could get into." Not necessarily military thrillers a la Clancy, but more grounded, near-future "what-if" scenarios written by subject matter experts.

That's what I was expecting given the …

How to Resist Amazon and Why (2021, Microcosm Publishing) No rating

Review of 'How to Resist Amazon and Why' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

Simultaneously surprised and not surprised while reading this. It's hard not to notice how all-encompassing this corporation can be (he types on one of their websites), but this was a succinct argument and look at exactly what's so bad about that. Also, as someone who reads a lot of physical books and almost exclusively buys everything from local small bookshops, I did not realize that Amazon alone accounts for roughly half of all books sold in the US, and small businesses are only between 6-8% of the pie.

Support your local bookstores and libraries!

Universal Harvester (Paperback, 2018, Picador) 2 stars

"The second novel from the author of Wolf in White Van, inspired by his years …

Review of 'Universal Harvester' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Reading this book felt like watching a truck try to get out of a patch of mud; the tires certainly spent a lot of time spinning, but we sure weren't going anywhere.

The setting and inciting incident were promising enough, but they only served to get me in the door and were quickly discarded after the first third or so. I was expecting to get bashed over the head with a nostalgia hammer for the late 90's and go down a sinister path of depraved home videos that lead to some twisted climax. Instead I got a decades-spanning family drama and characters that actively resisted anything interesting.

Which is a shame because the prose was actually good and there were a few lines that impressed me with their wordplay, but that alone doesn't carry a book. There was also a strange choice in narration style; it was some kind of …

She Said Destroy (2017, Word Horde) 4 stars

Review of 'She Said Destroy' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This book was a wonderful companion to me on a recent vacation; who knew fear of oppressive government systems was an effective distraction from a fear of flying?

Pretty much any review of this book might use the word "political" in one way or another, and I won't be an exception, but it might help to understand the context here. The introduction by Paul Tremblay explains that the author has advanced degrees in Political Science and International Politics and partially grew up in Indonesia. That goes a long way in explaining why many of the entries have recurring motifs of jungles, strictly enforced curfews, generals and war criminals, factional disputes, etc. But all of the elements float around the background of any given story and don't distract from the central plot in any instance.

As with any short story collection, some will be better than others (or at least my …

Even Though I Knew The End (Hardcover, 2022, Doherty Associates, Tor) 3 stars

A magical detective dives into the affairs of Chicago's divine monsters to secure a future …

Review of 'Even Though I Knew the End' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

As far as books that I bought simply because I liked the cover/title/quick blurb when I saw it in the store, I've certainly done worse before. Maybe I should've spent a little longer researching it though because this book wasn't at all what I was expecting to be, and that's entirely on me.

I was very into the first third or so of the book: a woman detective in noir Chicago scopes out crime scenes and dips into secret lesbian speakeasies with some loose magical elements floating around the fringes. But then the magic started getting impossible to ignore and went full-blown Constantine with angels vs. demons and Deus ex Machina scenes. Kinda wished the supernatural elements stayed subtle, but that's a personal preference. I also got the sense that the protagonist was just kind of swept along by events happening around her and only made a significant decision at …