SFBook - 20+ Years of Reviews

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The Captive by  by Kit Burgoyne
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Horror
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I enjoy genre books of all kinds. I love a good kidnapping story as a well-oiled plan starts to unravel. I also like a horror story about the Old Gods, of human sacrifices and bloody gore. What you don’t normally get is a story that is both. The kidnapping crew in Kit Burgoyne’s The...

Article by Sam Tyler on 3rd October 2025
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Horror
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If pop culture has only taught me one thing it is that siding with the creatures from other realms is not a great idea. They tend to renege on contracts once they have what they want, usually via sucking your brain out through your nose. Also, the partnerships are not normally people you would...

Article by Sam Tyler on 30th September 2025
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Fiend by  by Alma Katsu
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Horror
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Being successful and superrich would be great to allow you to do what you want, but it also comes with limitations. My mother never wanted to be too rich as she thought one of us would get kidnapped. She needn’t have worried had she made a deal with a demon, if anyone had tried to take one...

Article by Sam Tyler on 29th September 2025
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Science Fiction
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Terms of Service by  by Ciel Pierlot
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Science Fiction
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I love a good magic system in a fantasy novel, one that sets the rules in an interesting way and is still able to amaze. It is one of the reasons that I am not a huge fan of Fae magic with all its side clauses and tricks. You never know what you are really going to get or what you can trust,...

Article by Sam Tyler on 26th September 2025
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The safest road to hell is the gradual one-the gentle slope, soft underfoot, without sudden turnings, without milestones, without signposts
- CS Lewis
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General Fiction
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Caesar's Spy by  by Jean-Pierre Pecau
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General Fiction
review

There are certain historic events that I return to in fiction as no matter how many times I have read about them, authors have found new ways of exploring the past. I must have read about Caesar’s rise and fall twenty times or more, but there is room for more retellings. Caesar’s Spy...

Article by Sam Tyler on 25th September 2025
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System Preference by  by Ugo Bienvenu
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Science Fiction
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As a Librarian I deal regularly with some of the topics raised in Ugo Bienvenu’s System Preference. I do not have firsthand experience of a robot bringing up my children, but I do know about data; what needs to be stored and what needs to be deleted. Do we just keep it all in the hopes...

Article by Sam Tyler on 23rd September 2025
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Wings of Steel and Fury by  by Sarah Daley
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Science Fiction
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If you read about the gods, most of them are a little messed up. If they are not descending to pretend to be a swan so they can sleep with woman, they are basically ignoring all the human suffering going on. Are gods omnipotent or just much more powerful than humans? Everything feels like...

Article by Sam Tyler on 19th September 2025
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Death in the Aviary by  by Victoria Dowd
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General Fiction
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There is something deeply pleasant about reading a classic whodunnit from the Golden Age of crime writing. Back in the day it felt that there was a proper set of rules to a crime and solving it. Set so long ago that people call these cases cozy but is there anything cozy about murder? I may have...

Article by Sam Tyler on 15th September 2025
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Horror
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What do you want from a collection of horror short stories? A complex mix of different styles and authors, or a single voice? When it comes to horror, I want them to feel like a quick punch to the guts, only for you to look down and find that the punch was more of a stab. Clay McLeod Chapman...

Article by Sam Tyler on 10th September 2025
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General Fiction
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Murder is in the eye of the beholder and Brandi Bradley’s Pretty Girls Get Away with Murder is the perfect example of how different people can see the same events. The police are always suspicious, open to any leads, until they find the person they think is the prime suspect. This suspect...

Article by Sam Tyler on 5th September 2025
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General Fiction
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Lies and Dolls by  by Nev Fountain
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General Fiction
review

I try not to collect too much stuff, choosing to live in the now. If I kept every book that I ever read, every toy that I ever played with, or birthday card I received, I would have no room in my house. I certainly do not keep things “mint in box.” You could have an attic full...

Article by Sam Tyler on 2nd September 2025
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Lucky Day by  by Chuck Tingle
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Horror
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Do you believe in luck? Gambling sites and Casinos hope you do as you believe there is a chance that you will win big. You may just do that, but there is a reason some of the richest people in the UK own gambling websites, the house always wins. You may win big, but elsewhere someone is losing...

Article by Sam Tyler on 28th August 2025
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Life... is like a grapefruit. It?s orange and squishy, and has a few pips in it, and some folks have half a one for breakfast.
- Douglas Adams
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Science Fiction
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Star Wars: Sanctuary by  by Lamar Giles
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Science Fiction
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I have always appeciated the rich tapestry that the extended Star Wars Universe has given the reader. Whilst the films are few and far between, and the TV shows more abundant but still limited, it is the books that allow fans to deep dive into characters and places that may not get as much love...

Article by Sam Tyler on 27th August 2025
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Fantasy
review

Conan was a character that had a rich and long life. You may be a fan of the films and only imagine the man as a loincloth wearing barbarian, cleaving the heads of various cult leaders. That is a large part of his appeal, but he was also a bandit leader, pirate and eventually a King. In fact, he...

Article by Sam Tyler on 21st August 2025
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Fantasy
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I love programming because I find it the opposite of magic. I find it logic. I know that if I tackle a problem using certain rules I will finally get it to work. When I show a person the finalised product, they often comment that it seems like magic, but it is not. It is just hardwork,...

Article by Sam Tyler on 19th August 2025
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Horror
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I enjoy reading about the occult in contrasting times in history. If someone came up to a modern person and said there was a witch in the woods stealing children, they would raise an eyebrow and swiftly walk in the opposite direction. A couple of hundred years earlier around the same woods the...

Article by Sam Tyler on 8th August 2025
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Fantasy
review

The fantasy genre is a form of comfort reading for me. The genre often follows similar tropes, and you can get into the rhythm of the story quickly. However, increasingly often in modern fantasy, authors are creating new and challenging ideas to shake up the genre. Magical systems are an area...

Article by Sam Tyler on 30th July 2025
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Third Loch from the sun by  by Rex Burke
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Science Fiction
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 I stumbled across this one at WorldCon in Glasgow last year. You know how it is, wandering the dealer's room, picking up flyers, trying to avoid eye contact with anyone who looks like they want to talk about their self-published epic. But I’d previously attended a panel about...

Article by Ant on 26th July 2025
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Science fiction, fantasy & horror book reviews

SFBook.com is one of the oldest book review sites on the internet, founded back in 1999 in an age before phones became smart and when the leading figure of the free world was respected and even occasionally admired. A non profit site primarily aimed at the Science fiction, fantasy and horror genres (although we do have a growing list of general fiction). We strive to feature only the very best in Science fiction, fantasy, horror and speculative novels. We like to think we write personal, unique and constructive reviews.

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