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Word: erickson (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...about a life." In fact, two rather sad lives. Lorena is off to a Virginia mental hospital for a 45-day period of evaluation. She may soon partake of John's life of foolish fame -- book deals, movie offers and the like. At the verdict, his media adviser Paul Erickson said there would be no comment. "He's not into dancing on graves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Now for the Movie | 1/31/1994 | See Source »

...bought or leased for about $2 million a plane. And with so many out-of-work pilots eager to fly, the new carriers have been able to recruit flight crews for less than half the top union scale of $150,000 a year. Says Reno Air president Jeff Erickson: "This is the perfect time for a start...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: You Too Can Run An Airline | 7/19/1993 | See Source »

...Erickson's Jefferson leaves Sally, and the book's pages, with the words "I'm elected." She tries for a year or so to keep his dwindling plantation running, then, roiled with love, passion and implacable hatred, sets out on foot to find him. The journey takes her west to Indian country. But it is longer than that; she and the reader have passed into a region of what, if this were a Latin American novel, would be called magic realism. But here there is no green, sun-shot jungle life force, only the fogged, toxic gray of brutish, dying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liberty's Dark Dream | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

Sally is arrested for murdering a white man, perhaps a lover, perhaps a rapist, with a carving knife (once, Erickson has it, she had tried to stab Jefferson). The cops have a patrol car and a radio, so this is the 20th century. Sally is, or is not, somewhere else, someone else. A huge black cop, Wade, searches obsessively for Mona, a woman he met years ago at a strip joint called the Fleurs d'X. She may be Sally or a daughter, or not. The city is Aeonopolis, and it could be San Francisco, much decayed, if San Francisco...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liberty's Dark Dream | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

Films like Blade Runner handle atmospherics of this kind easily. It takes a gifted sleight-of-mind artist to work such phantasmagorical effects in a novel without fuddling or exasperating the reader. Erickson manages the trick expertly. But why the priestly Gestapo of "Church Central" in this alternate America? Because Jefferson was an anticlerical deist for whom a theocratic nation would have been a shaming defeat? Maybe, but trying to decode word-for- word meaning here won't illuminate much. Aeonopolis, the author tells us, is almost impossible to leave: thus a waking nightmare of reason paralyzed, of civility blood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Liberty's Dark Dream | 5/10/1993 | See Source »

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