"Clickers" by JF Gonzalez.
It’s basically a classic B-movie, gory and a fairly generic set of Stephen King type characters (redneck asshole sheriff, main character is a horror author, slutty druggy chick, etc) fighting prehistoric sea scorpions and eventually Lovecraftian deep ones/fish people.
It might as well be a direct novelization of “Humanoids From The Deep”, honestly.
Not terrible if like schlock, but I hate the cover:
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I feel like this asshole redneck sheriff cliche probably came about naturally from specific sheriffs ruling their counties as fiefdoms/hostile to outsiders, and pissy outsiders upset that they got charged a speeding ticket, but it really bothers me because it feels tied up in the general push towards centralization of power. The Sheriff is an elected official, unlike municipal police chiefs. If the people dislike the sheriff they have the ability to directly remove them. Sheriffs also act much more independent of political pressure, making them (in combination with elections) responsive to public demands. I find the county sheriffs of rural places much more appealing than the corrupt circuses of big Northern police departments (your NYC, Chicago, LA) and god-forbid national gendarmeries (which I think is what the Left is ultimately pushing towards).
Just finished A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr. Fantastic, I was disappointed when I finished it because I could have been reading a story like that for much longer.
It's a wonderful book. The middle section was the weakest but the first and last both struck me emotionally. The first one is incredible for the way it captures the magical worldview of Medieval people and portrays them with a sort of dignity I have never seen anything else capture. The whole concept of the illuminated manuscript - taking something as mundane and dry as technical blueprints and turning it into a work of beautiful art and holy relic - shows a much better faith in people and their intelligence than most apocalyptic fiction (where they would just blindly worship technology as magic) and at the same time a sort of tender, childlike wonder at the world that's inspirational. I've had a strong desire to see an actual physical version of it made (though it would obviously take to long to do for real).
The last section is dark, I'm not Catholic - not even sympathetic to it, though I seem to read a lot of shit with monks in it - and support mercy-killing. The prior is someone who, if I were in the shoes of the authorities there, would just beat down with my truncheon to get him out of the way. But the way it sells the fervor and desperation is compelling, and I could see into the mindset behind that. More haunting now with the MAID epidemic in Canada. The magical realism (which is always coming up throughout the book) with the woman with the inborn twin really sells it. There's a sort of sublime melancholy to the whole book.
I feel you there.
Currently reading "The Iran-Iraq War: A Military and Strategic History." Only at the beginning, but there's a lot of interesting insight into Saddam and the Iraqi state to set the stage for the conflict.
I wish I'd heard of/thought to look up one on that. Modern Middle Eastern history goes surprisingly underappreciated considering how its directly relevant to everything going on. Average American doesn't know jack shit about the history of any of those countries, even the basic governing ideologies (Saddam's Ba'athism being, for all purposes, Sunni Arab Nazism). I root for the Ayatollah in that.
I've got four going since I'm forcing myself back into reading again.
My nonfiction rotation:
Mind Over Matter
- Autobiography (by ghostwriter) of John Urschel, Black NFL mathematician PhD mandingo. Turns out his life was actually pretty boring and he doesn't have a ton of interest to say.
SOG: Something or other
- Book a Kiwi mentioned (many of the best books I've read have been) about commandos in Vietnam, seems okay at first
Furs, Fortune and Empire
- Book of the fur trade in America, starting (technically, from Vikings) with Dutch New York on up. Pretty fun so far.
My fiction:
Essex Dogs
- Book about mercenaries in the Hundred Years War. It's okay. Reads kind of pulpy, like those cheap-ass WW2/Vietnam commando books you see in stores. It's no Pillars of the Earth.