Mockingbird (2) (Miriam Black)
Mockingbird (2) (Miriam Black) book cover

Mockingbird (2) (Miriam Black)

Paperback – October 20, 2015

Price
$16.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
368
Publisher
Gallery / Saga Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1481448673
Dimensions
5.5 x 1.3 x 8.25 inches
Weight
11.2 ounces

Description

Chuck Wendig is a novelist, screenwriter and game designer. He's the author of many novels, including but not limited to: Blackbirds, Atlanta Burns, Zer0es, and the YA Heartland series. He is the author of the upcoming Star Wars: Aftermath, and is co-writer of the the Emmy-nominated digital narrative Collapsus. He was a finalist for the John W. Campbell award for Best New Writer. He currently lives in the forests of Pennsyltucky with wife, son, and red dog. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Mockingbird ONE SHIP BOTTOM Boop. Suntan lotion. Boop. Pecan sandies. Boop. Tampons, beach towel, postcards, and, mysteriously, a can of green beans. Miriam grabs each item with a black-gloved hand. Runs the item over the scanner. Sometimes, she looks down and stares into the winking red laser. She’s not supposed to do that. But she does it anyway, a meager act of rebellion in her brand-new life. Maybe, she thinks, the ruby beam will burn away that part of her brain that makes her who she is. Turn her into a mule-kicked window-licker, happy in oblivion, pressed up against the walls of her Plexiglas enclosure. “Miss?” The word drags her out of the mind’s eye theater and back to checkout. “Jesus, what?” she asks. “Well, are you going to scan that?” Miriam looks down. Sees she’s still holding the can of green beans. Del Monte. She idly considers braining the woman standing there in her beachy muumuu, the worn pattern of hibiscus flowers barely covering a sludgy bosom that’s half lobster red and half wood-grub white. Two halves marked by the Rubicon of a terrible tan line. Instead, Miriam swipes the can across the scanner with a too-sweet smile. Boop. “Is something wrong with your hands?” the woman asks. She sounds concerned. Miriam waggles one finger— a jumping inchworm dance. The black leather creaks and squeaks. “Oh, these? I have to wear these. You know how women at restaurants have to wear hairnets? For public health safety? I gotta wear these gloves if I’m going to work here. Rules and regulations. Last thing I want to do is cause a hepatitis outbreak, am I right? I got hep A, B, C, and the really bad one, X.” Then, just to sell it, Miriam holds up her hand for a high five. The woman does not seize the high-five opportunity. Rather, the blood drains from her face, her sunburned skin gone swiftly pale. Miriam wonders what would happen if she told the truth: Oh, it’s no big deal, but when I touch people, this little psychic movie plays in my head and I witness how and when they’re going to die. So I’ve been wearing these gloves so I don’t have to see that kind of crazy shit anymore. Or the deeper truth behind even that: I wear them because Louis wants me to wear them. Not that the gloves provide perfect protection against the visions. Nobody but Louis is touching her anywhere else, though. She keeps covered up. Even in the heat. Behind the woman is a line seven, eight people deep. They all hear what Miriam says. She’s not quiet. Two of the customers— a doughy gentleman in a parrot-laden shirt and a young girl with an ill-contained rack of softball-sized fake tits— shimmy out of the queue and leave their goods on the empty checkout two rows down. Still, the woman hangs tough. With a sour face, she pulls a credit card out of nowhere—Miriam imagines she withdraws it from her sand-encrusted vagina— and flips it onto the counter like it’s a hot potato. Miriam’s about to grab it and scan it when a hand falls on her shoulder. She already knows to whom the hand belongs. She wheels on Peggy, manager here at Ship Bottom Sundries in Long Beach Island, New Jersey. Peggy, whose nose must possess powerful gravity given the way it looks like the rest of her face is being dragged toward it. Peggy, whose giant sunglasses call to mind the eyes of a praying mantis. Peggy with her gray hair dyed orange and left in a curly, clumsy tangle. Fucking Peggy. “You mind telling me what you’re doing?” The way Peggy begins every conversation, it seems. All in that Joisey accent. Ya mind tellin’ me what y’doin’? The lost Rs, the dropped Gs, wooter instead of water, caw-fee instead of coffee. “Helping this fine citizen check out of our fine establishment.” Miriam thinks but does not say, Ship Bottom Sundries, where you can buy a pack of hot dogs, a pack of generic-brand tampons, or a handful of squirming hermit crabs for your screaming shitbird children. “Sounds like you’re giving her trouble.” Miriam offers a strained smile. “Was I? Not my intention.” Totally her intention. “You know, I hired you as a favor.” “I do know that. Because you remind me frequently.” “Well, it’s true.” “Yes. We just established that.” Peggy’s puckered eyes tighten to fleshy slits. “You got a smart mouth.” “Some might argue my mouth is actually quite foolish.” By now, the line is building up. The woman in the floral muumuu is holding the green beans to her chest, as though the can will protect her from the awkwardness that has been thrust upon her day. The other customers watch with wide eyes and uncomfortable scowls. “You think you’re funny,” Peggy says. Miriam doesn’t hesitate. “I really do.” “Well, I don’t.” “Agree to disagree?” Peggy’s face twists up like a rag about to be wrung out. It takes a moment for Miriam to realize that this is Peggy’s happy face. “You’re fired,” Peggy says. Mouth twisted up at the corners in some crass facsimile of a human smile. “Oh, fuck you,” Miriam says. “You’re not going to fire me.” It occurs to her too late that saying fuck you is not the best way to retain one’s job, but frankly, the horse is already out of the stable on that one. “Fuck me?” Peggy asks. “Fuck you. You bring me nothing but grief. Come in here day after day, moping about like someone pissed in your Wheaties—” “Do people even eat Wheaties anymore? I mean, seriously.” “— and I don’t need a grumpy little slut like you working in my store. Season’s over after this weekend anyway, and you’re done. Kaput. Pack up your crap and get out. I’ll send you your last paycheck.” This is real, Miriam thinks. She just got let go. Pink-slipped. Shit-canned. She should be happy. Her heart should be a cage of doves newly opened, the free birds flying high, fleeing far and away. This should be a real the-hills-are-alive-with-the-sound-of-music moment, all twirling skirts and wind in her hair. But all she feels is the battery-acid burn of rage and bile and incredulity mingling at the back of her throat. A rising tide of snake venom. Louis always tells her to keep it together. She is tired of keeping it together. Miriam yanks her nametag off her chest— a nametag that says “Maryann” because they fucked it up and didn’t want to reprint it— and chucks it over her shoulder. The muumuu lady dodges it. She goes with an old standby—her middle finger thrust up in Peggy’s juiced lemon of a face— and then storms outside. She stops. Stands in the parking lot. Hands shaking. An ocean breeze kicks up. The air brings with it the smell of brine and fish and a lingering hint of coconut oil. Serpents of sand whisper across the cracked parking lot. A dozen gulls fight over bread scraps. Ducking and diving. Squawking and squalling. Drunk on bread crust and victory. It’s hot. The breeze does little for that. People everywhere. The fwip-fwip-fwip of flip-flop sandals. The miserable sob of somebody’s child. The murmur and cackle of endless vacationers smelling a season drawing to a close. A thudding bass line booms from a car sliding down the slow traffic of Long Beach Boulevard, and she can’t help but think how the beat sounds like douche-douche-douche-douche and how it echoes her hammer-fist heartbeat dully punching against the inside of her breastbone. And Walt the “cart boy,” who’s not really a boy but in fact a developmentally handicapped fifty-year-old man, gives her a wave and she waves back and thinks, He’s the only one here who was ever nice to me. And probably the only one she was ever nice to, too. She thinks, Fuck it. She peels off one of her gloves. Then comes the other. Miriam pitches both over her shoulder—her hands are freakishly pale, paler than the rest of her body, the fingertips wrinkled as though she’s been in a long bath. If Louis wanted her to keep it together, he’d be here. And he’s not. Miriam goes back inside the store, cracking her knuckles.

Features & Highlights

  • Miriam Black is trying to live an ordinary life, keeping her ability to see how someone dies hidden...until a serial killer crosses her path. This is the second book in the Miriam Black series. “Visceral and often brutal, this tale vibrates with emotional rawness that helps to paint a bleak, unrelenting picture of life on the edge.” —
  • Publishers Weekly
  • Miriam is trying. Really, she is. But this whole “settling down thing” just isn’t working out. She lives on Long Beach Island all year in a run-down, double-wide trailer. She works at a grocery store as a checkout girl. And her relationship with Louis—who’s on the road half the time in his truck—is subject to the mood swings Miriam brings to everything she does. It just isn’t going well. Still, she’s keeping her psychic ability—to see when and how someone is going to die just by touching them—in check. But even that feels wrong somehow. Like she’s keeping a tornado stopped up in a tiny bottle. Then comes the one bad day that turns it all on her ear.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(196)
★★★★
25%
(164)
★★★
15%
(98)
★★
7%
(46)
23%
(150)

Most Helpful Reviews

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This is really lousy

I thought this guy was supposed to be able to write. He's got a book on how to write. Maybe he should read it.
1 people found this helpful
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Fascinating Flawed Protagonist

Miriam is damaged goods, trying desperately to come to terms with her psychic "gift." She's rough and violent and profane, and she hurts everyone who gets close to her. Every day is a struggle for her -- as she witnesses death with every touch. Just when the viciousness and pain are too much for the reader, Wendig gives a glimpse into the good and hurting soul of Miriam. Always enough to keep the reader hurting with her and rooting for her as she struggles to reconcile her desire for peace with the reality of her "gift."
1 people found this helpful
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Arrived sooner than expected

Received sooner than expected, great price for this product, thank you!
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Great Read

Loved this book and find Chuck Wendig's writing very easy to read as it flows so well. Book was in great condition and was delivered on time, Happy with my purchase and my seller: Good Will of Silicon Valley.
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Brand new condition

LOVE THESE BOOKS! Brand new condition
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Where to start?

Where do I begin about this book? First, I'm rather surprised I've like the first two books in the Miriam Black series. I normally don't read thrillers or dark(ish) fiction but, once I picked this book up I did not put it down until I finished it. Devoured it, really. And I ordered the next one up in the series as soon as I finished Mockingbird.

I've sat here trying to put into words what I think about this book for too long. JUST READ IT!
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Dark and sassy

Miriam Black is a fly-by-the-seat, take no crap heroine whose life is a rolling disaster, partly because of her untamed mouth and willingness to take a knife fight to anyone. The main reason she walks on the ultra wild side results from her freakish power. Any time she touches someone — skin on skin — she has a front row seat to the moment of that person's death.
That kind of horror means Miriam isn't the touchy feely type. She wears gloves at her job as a cashier to prevent accidental flashes of the death of customers whose fingers would otherwise meet hers. That doesn't mean she isn't above seeking smug, internal revenge against the unpleasant storeowner who fires her at the start of Mockingbird, partly because of the gloves but mostly because of our heroine's attitude in Chuck Wendig's second book in the Miriam Black series.
Miriam reaches out to touch the dragon lady who employed her seconds earlier. "Let it be ass cancer."
It's not. The touch reveals her boss has only minutes to live as one of the victims of a crazed gunman who hears voices.
As much as Miriam tries to project a, I-don't-give-a-sh*t attitude, she does care about people. When a touch reveals an agonizing, five-years-in-the-future death of a girl she meets at a private school for misfits, she sets her sights on hunting down the unknown sadist/serial killer to prevent the torture and death of the girl and others.
I'm sure Miriam and I could never be friends. But as a dark heroine, Miriam has me head over heels in love with her spirit and cheering madly for her victory over the bad guy. Perversely, I even like her smart mouth.
If you like dark, gritty characters, Miriam Black is sassy/sensational and well worth of your time.
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Fast, gritty, raw

Love his writing advice. The novel is fun. Writing is efficient, frantic. Dialogue is a little weak (especially some of the "I'm a bad girl" repetition), but the pace and description make up for it.

Note: AVOID the Angry robot version. I've never seen so many typos and flat out mistakes in a book before. That publisher should be embarrassed. (Although the cover art is perfect.)
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A sort of weird gritty existentialist noir that's remarkably satisfying.

Mockingbird is the second entry into Chuck Wendig's Miriam Black series, and it does not disappoint. The book is dripping with Wendig's signature frenzied pacing, wry humor, and kinetic descriptions. While continuing to play with ideas of fatalism and morality, this book begins a more earnest exploration of Miriam's relationships with others in her world, and casts her as more dynamic character than the first book. The result is a sort of weird gritty existentialist noir that's remarkably satisfying.

This book feels a little more grounded than the first novel, if a book whose central plot involved psychic abilities and personified elements of fate can be said to have any grounding. Miriam feels less superhuman in this book - no longer is she walking off injuries that should permanently cripple a mere mortal. This isn't to say that Wendig has eschewed violence, but that it feels a little more real in it's portrayal. The same can be said about how Wendig presents the world around Miriam - issues like police response and healthcare workers feel more real in this novel.

I find that the more I read Wendig's writing, the more I enjoy his overall style. While I've seen others describe it as cinematic (and, have myself said such things), it almost feels more like having an excited friend tell you a story. The wordplay and meta-commentary that are interspersed throughout the book are a great treat. It's disappointing that there isn't going to be a TV series.

Perhaps the best new addition in this novel is the addition of new characters. In the first novel, I found that several of the villains and henchmen types were interesting but not engaging; they operated kind of like the quirky sub-villains you often encounter in Tarantino films that are both memorable and not. In this novel, the smaller cast of characters means that they are developed more thoroughly, which draws the reader further in. I'm hopeful we'll see at least some of these characters in future Miriam Black novels.

If you're looking for a fun ride that's not to serious, not too silly, and that's both brilliant and crude, you could do worse than to read this book. I'm looking forward to book #3.
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Normal is not in the cards

Miriam Black lives a dark and dangerous life. As this book opens, she is giving normal a try but its not going well. Miriam is living in a rundown trailer in a rundown trailer park while working a dreary retail job in a rundown store. And this is as good as things get for our heroine. Miriam's gift (or curse) is the ability to see the moment of a person's death if she touches their skin. Even wearing gloves won't spare her from horrific visions and hallucinations. Miriam has recently decided to use her ability to try to change fate and save the innocents. That might mean killing the guilty but the piper must be paid. In this book, Miriam is hunting a serial killer who kidnaps, tortures and murders teenage girls. This puts her in many a perilous situation and I lost count of how many times she herself is beaten and abused by sadistic attackers. If one thing is certain, its that normal is not in the cards for Miriam Black.