Synopsis:
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is a collection of three-act short stories from a variety of genres, plus two bonus stories.
STORY ONE: THE QUIET ONES (Thriller) – Neighbors grow together with the help of their friendly local serial killer.
STORY TWO: OPERATION DRAGONHEAD (Satire) – Mistaking experimental communication helmets for alien antennae, townsfolk launch an improvised defense. Based on a true story.
STORY THREE: HIGH DESERT (Western) – A rotten Sheriff and reluctant hero clash beyond the reach of the law, with cars for horses.
STORY FOUR: PAGANINI (Biography) – The wicked life of an actual nineteenth-century Italian violinist, who played so beautifully they thought he was the devil.
STORY FIVE: YARDLEY COUNTY (Drama) – A dead convict finds himself, and his redemption, at the hometown robbery where a gunshot began his career.
BONUS STORY: VALLEY FOOTBALL (Comedy) – Existentially lost grownups start a secret tackle football fight club in the suburbs.
BONUS STORY: THE TROP (Farce) – This aging, and somewhat haunted, East Hollywood motel has rooms at reasonable rates for struggling stock characters on the down-and-out.
Reading. Why not do it for fun sometimes?
Favorite Lines:
As always with any short story collection that I read, rather than providing direct quotes from the book, I am sharing which stories were my favorite from the collection: The Quiet Ones and Operation Dragonhead.
My Opinion:
I received a copy of this book from the author in exchange for my honest opinion.
PEOPLE MAKING DANGER surprised me with how many different layers it manages to hold at once. At first glance, it’s a collection of short stories but the deeper I read, the more it came together into a reflection on what it means to live with risk, to carry trauma, and to wrestle with the edges of survival.
Fike writes about ordinary people under extraordinary pressure. Each story feels like a small explosion—characters pushed to the edge, not by dramatic fantasy but by the sharp, recognizable challenges of real life. That immediacy made the book difficult to put down; I always wanted to see what would happen when danger inevitably arrived, and how the characters would react to it.
One of the things I appreciated was how different the voices and settings felt across the collection. Some stories simmer quietly before snapping into violence or heartbreak, while others throw you into conflict from the first page. Yet even with these shifts in style, the book has a cohesion—it keeps circling back to questions about survival, choices, and the thin line between safety and chaos. The repetition of these themes gave the collection weight without making it feel repetitive.
The characters themselves are what lingered with me. They’re not perfect; often they’re messy, flawed, even unlikeable at times. But they’re always believable. Fike has a way of sketching just enough detail—a gesture, a memory, a bitter aside—that makes you recognize these people instantly. In some cases, I felt like I had met them before in real life, which made their downfalls and small victories all the more striking.
By the end, I came to see the title, PEOPLE MAKING DANGER, as more than just a clever phrase. These aren’t just stories about danger happening to people—they’re about how people create, provoke, or invite danger into their lives, often without meaning to. That nuance—danger as something we stumble into, sometimes through love, sometimes through pride, sometimes through desperation—is what makes the book feel bigger than the sum of its parts.
Summary:
Overall, PEOPLE MAKING DANGER is an unsettling and varied short story collection where the everyday collides with the extraordinary. What makes it powerful is not just the danger itself, but how ordinary people create or invite it into their lives. Fike’s ability to shift between tones—grim, satirical, surreal—keeps the collection fresh while always grounding the stories in authentic human choices. It’s a book that lingers, leaving you to wrestle with what danger really means in the context of family, community, and survival. If you enjoy short story collections that reflect on what it means to be human, than this book could be for you. Happy reading!
Check out PEOPLE MAKING DANGER here!