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Michael Gouker Locked account

mgouker@wyrms.de

Joined 2 years, 7 months ago

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Michael Gouker's books

Currently Reading

Gail Dines: Pornland (2010, Beacon Press)

This book takes an unflinching and intimate look at porn -- its hard-core and racist …

Review of 'Pornland' on 'Goodreads'

Dines's book is an excursion into the destructive nature of pornography on our society. It hits some of the problem on the head, especially the violence of the gonzo olympics. However, the book is flawed in that Dines enters the discussion with a set of beliefs about what is normal/anormal, right/wrong, and acceptable/unacceptable. Sex is fuzzy and illogical, and there is no one qualified to set moral standards. Also, part of the problem is how society treats people that pass through the mill, and, honestly, this book doesn't help. I would prefer the judgmental aspects about which acts are barbaric or not to have been left out, because it gets preachy fast, and who am I (and who is Gail Dines?) to tell someone about their sexuality? When the book discusses the violence, the exploitation, and the capitalistic drive of the industry, it does a lot better.

I took a …

H.P. Lovecraft: L'appel de cthulhu - the call of cthulhu (French language, 2013)

"The Call of Cthulhu" is a short story by American writer H. P. Lovecraft. Written …

Review of "L'appel de cthulhu - the call of cthulhu" on 'Goodreads'

"That is not dead which can eternal lie,
And with strange aeons even death may die."

The Call of Cthulhu is a feast of creepiness told in colorful language, which is only flawed by Lovecraft's primitive obsession with physiognomy and base racism. I view it as funny, because they are (to quote HP himself) "obsolete and ridiculous," but I sympathize with people of color who read this and have to deal with dismissive references to such things as Negro fetishism. The story itself is almost without a plot, just a report of a horror of the odious being that the sailors rouse from its sleep. The prose is circuitous and leisurely, but Lovecraft's imagination is perturbing and vision resolves clear in the end, and it's scary. Really scary.

John Scalzi: The Ghost Brigades (2007)

The Ghost Brigades is a science fiction novel by American writer John Scalzi, the second …

Review of 'The Ghost Brigades' on 'Goodreads'

The sequel of Old Man's War is better than The Ghost Brigades. I believe Boutin about the colonials but soon I will know whether he was right, since I'm reading book 3 now. :-)

Louis L'Amour: Hondo (2004, Bantam Books)

Review of 'Hondo' on 'Goodreads'

L'Amour has a professional style. He uses the Western as a backdrop to a character driven story. As in most Westerns there is quite a lot of violence. The romance is a wet dream where women live in function of men, but there is never a hint of explicitness. Angie is a terribly paper-thin character.

I worried about the representations of First Peoples but Vittoro comes of quite good. He is a noble leader who loves children and is honest. Silva is terrible, but what is most awful are the whites' opinion of Native Americans. I give it a full star for showing their hypocrisy and racism.

Dorothy M. Johnson: The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (Paperback, 2005, Riverbend Publishing)

Review of 'The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance' on 'Goodreads'

I actually only read "The Hanging Tree" so far. I'm not very impressed with the writing, which features so much head hopping there is no mystery at all. The characters are essentially a doctor haunted by his past, a man he presses into servitude to take him down a notch, and an impulsive child-like woman incapable of any agency until the end of the story when she buys his life with all her gold. It was not an awful story, but it does have everything bad about bad genre fiction: stereotypes, on-the-nose dialogue, tropes (especially the damsel-in-distress), and the diction isn't great either.

Denis Johnson: Train Dreams (2012, Picador)

Review of 'Train Dreams' on 'Goodreads'

An odd story that happens more outside its pages. Grainier represents a man whose world has passed. He lives apart, alone with his wild things, and waits for his life to expire and join everything he ever cared about. Johnson writes pretty prose from an informed perspective (the information about logging jobs is so natural it doesn't come off as an info dump, but as a way of cementing authenticity), but what I like most is how he defies the stereotypes. I also love the subdued romance, perfect for the character. It's a good story too, though not full of heavy scenes. Subtlety weighs more.

True Grit is Charles Portis' most famous novel--first published in 1968. It tells the story …

Review of 'True grit' on 'Goodreads'

Better than I expected though loaded with stereotypical characters. Mattie's response to LeBeouf (paraphrasing) "one's as good as another" is worth a star by itself. Snake scene is great too.

reviewed Ancillary Mercy by Ann Leckie (Imperial Radch, #3)

Ann Leckie: Ancillary Mercy (Paperback, 2015, Orbit)

For just a moment, things seem to be under control for the soldier known as …

Review of 'Ancillary Mercy' on 'Goodreads'

Wow! What a great finish. Now I understand the reason Leckie delved so deeply into the colonialist theme, especially the conflict between the Xhai and Ychana. She established a template for fairness she later applies to the AIs themselves. Really smart worldbuilding and narrative development! My favorite characters were Translator Zeiat, Leftenant Tisarwat, and (best of all) Seivarden!

Ann Leckie: Ancillary Sword (Paperback, 2014, Orbit)

Seeking atonement for past crimes, Breq takes on a mission as captain of a troublesome …

Review of 'Ancillary Sword' on 'Goodreads'

I really enjoyed the ending but it took a long time to heat up. Also, the villains were a bit too one-dimensional, especially on the tea plantation. Still, Leckie has written a very good post-colonial piece. It's just not as strong as the first book (one of the best I've read in years.)

I love Seivarden. Great character arc!