Antony Jones

Books reviewed by Ant (858)

  • The Long CosmosTerry Pratchett
    The Long Cosmos
    by Terry Pratchett
    Science Fiction

    And so we come at last to the final volume in the remarkable journey that is The Long Earth . It also happens to be the swansong of that singular author Sir Terry Pratchett. And what a finale it is. The Long Cosmos lives up to the promise the authors have been building with this series, it is quite...

  • The Kings JusticeStephen Donaldson
    The Kings Justice
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    The Kings Justice is one of two new stories released this month from one of the veterans of the Fantasy scene - Stephen Donaldson. It's a tale of an enigmatic figure known only as Black who goes in search of evil deeds. He has powers that help him route out evil, not least the ability to manipulate...

  • The Sudden Appearance of HopeClaire North
    Science Fiction

    Reading The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August got me hooked into Claire North's (also known as Kate Griffin and Catherine Webb) wonderfully rich, clever and entertaining stories. As such I've been eagerly awaiting The Sudden Appearance of Hope for some time. One of the things that really draws you...

  • MongrelsStephen Graham Jones
    Mongrels
    by Stephen Graham Jones
    Horror

    Mongrels is a book that grips you by the jugular right from the start, a bit like the way a werewolf might. Funny enough that's what Mongrels is all about - a family of werewolves who are forced to travel around the USA avoiding the authorities and others who take a dislike their kind. It's a countr...

  • Night ShiftCharlaine Harris
    Night Shift
    by Charlaine Harris
    Fantasy

    Night Shift continues the story of the rich and rewarding urban fantasy series Midnight Texas by Charlaine Harris. Harris writes fiction that is comforting, warm and relaxing with a feeling of the familiar. Her characters are people you want to meet and (mostly) befriend. Those who frequent the litt...

  • The MalicePeter Newman
    The Malice
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Malice is the follow-up to one of my favourite fantasy reads last year, Peter Newmans The Vagrant . It's a story set in a post-apocalyptic future where forgotten technology intermingles with demonspawn and twisted lands full of twisted mutants. It had the dark, haunted flavour of Stephen Kings D...

  • The FiremanJoe Hill
    The Fireman
    by Joe Hill
    Fantasy

    Joe Hill is one of those authors who improve with each book ,and The Fireman is nothing short of spectacular. A highly contagious spore has begun to spread across the World, a pandemic that sees people break out in beautiful gold and black marks before spontaneously self-combusting. Draco Incendia T...

  • HexThomas Olde Heuvelt
    Hex
    by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
    Horror

    Thomas Olde Heuvelt won last years Hugo award for his novelette The Day the World Turned Upside Down . Reading Hex I can see why. The idea is incredible — A woman named Katharine is killed as a witch in the 16 th Century and then begins haunting the woods around the village of Black Spring where she...

  • Bigfoot Loose and Fin Fancy FreeRandy Henderson
    Fantasy

    Phineas (Finn) Gramayare has an unusual occupation. He's a part-trained necromancer, returned to the mortal world after being exiled to the Fairy realm for 25 years for a crime he didn't commit. Along with his Necromancy ability, Finn has decided to use his connections to offer a match-making servic...

  • The Year of the FloodMargaret Atwood
    The Year of the Flood
    by Margaret Atwood
    Science Fiction

    The Year of the Flood is the second novel in Margaret Atwood's post-apocalyptic series and follows the viewpoints of Toby and Ren, members of a religious cult. The book tells the story of some of the events leading up to the cataclysm mentioned in the previous novel Oryx and Crake and there is a goo...

  • NodAdrian Barnes
    Nod
    by Adrian Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Like all the best novels, Nod develops from a simple premise. Imagine that the vast majority of people around the world suddenly stopped being able to sleep. No deep sleep, no cat-naps and no snoozing at all. It's only a matter of time before society collapses. How many times have we had a bad night...

  • The Snow LeopardPeter Matthiessen
    The Snow Leopard
    by Peter Matthiessen
    General Fiction

    Every so often I like to lift my head above the science fiction and fantasy world and read something unconnected. The Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen was the choice this time, a classic novel of discovery. Matthiessen was a literary giant, the only writer to win the National Book Award for both fi...

  • Dead ThingsStephen Blackmoore
    Dead Things
    by Stephen Blackmoore
    Fantasy

    Dead Things was one of the few books I bought with post-christmas vouchers, after first seeing the author on twitter where he regularly trades jokes with Chuck Wendig. It's an urban fantasy adventure that follows the life of Eric Carter. Eric's a necromancer, an angry young necromancer who finds the...

  • Down StationSimon Morden
    Down Station
    by Simon Morden
    Fantasy

    Down Station is actually a real station on the London Underground. You can't however visit this place though, the Trains don't stop there and if you're lucky you can but catch a glimpse of it between Green Park and Hyde Park Corner on the Piccadilly Line. You can see the outside of this abandoned st...

  • The United States of JapanPeter Tieryas
    The United States of Japan
    by Peter Tieryas
    Science Fiction

    Philip K Dick's novel The Man in the High Castle is one of my favourite all time reads. An alternative history novel that sees the Axis winning the second World War and splitting the USA between Germany on the East coast,Japan on the West and a small neutral zone in the middle. There is an author wh...

  • Behold the ManMichael Moorcock
    Behold the Man
    by Michael Moorcock
    Science Fiction

    Behold the Man was originally written as a novella in 1966 and won the Nebula award for best novella. It was later expanded into a very slim novel in 1969 — although at 128 pages it could still be considered novella length. Gollancz has quite rightly chosen to include it in their SF Masterworks Coll...

  • All the Birds in the SkyCharlie Jane Anders
    All the Birds in the Sky
    by Charlie Jane Anders
    Science Fiction

    Just a month into the New Year and already I've found a must read book. All the Birds in the Sky is the debut novel of Charlie Jane Anders who has been editor-in-chief of the popular SF site IO9.com for quite some time. All the Birds in the Sky follows the paths of two very different people who find...

  • CrossedEvelyn Blackwell
    Crossed
    by Evelyn Blackwell
    Science Fiction

    Crossed is riding the heights of topical subjects, that of environment, ecology and global warming. In the very near future a cartoon is created that will ultimately change the world. It follows the adventures of a sea turtle who crosses the ocean and encounters other marine life struggling within a...

  • Time and Time AgainBen Elton
    Time and Time Again
    by Ben Elton
    Science Fiction

    Ben Elton is a talented fellow. I've loved most of the TV programs he's been involved in from the Young Ones and Blackadder to Blessed and the Thin Blue Line . His humour is often satirical, off-the-wall and almost always makes me laugh. The only novel I've read of his prior to Time and Time Again i...

  • The Thing ItselfAdam Roberts
    The Thing Itself
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    I've said a number of times now that Adam Roberts is a gifted author and this is increasingly evident with each new book he writes. His work overflows with ideas and at the same time he seems to delight in using different structures, to experiment in forming his narrative. This time he's turned his...

  • The Gun SellerHugh Laurie
    The Gun Seller
    by Hugh Laurie
    Fantasy

    I've been a fan of Hugh Laurie since he first made an appearance on Blackadder (series 2 and onwards) in the early 80's along with "A bit of Fry and Laurie" and the the TV adaption of PG Wodehouse' "Jeeves and Wooster". He is a talented comedian but it took me years to finally watch his long running...

  • God rest ye merry GentlepigTad Williams
    God rest ye merry Gentlepig
    by Tad Williams
    Fantasy

    I meant to read this festive novella last year however time got the better of me (as it often does). God rest ye merry Gentlepig is a festive tale featuring the angel Bobby Dollar who acts as an advocate for souls sitting in judgement after death. And so on Christmas Eve night he is summoned to act...

  • Earthquake WeatherTim Powers
    Earthquake Weather
    by Tim Powers
    Fantasy

    Tim's middle names should be has super because there just isn't really any other explanation as to how someone can write the way he does. This is nowhere more evident than in his Fault Lines Trilogy and in particular the finale of the story — Earthquake Weather . The book is set within the San Frans...

  • The Book of Strange New ThingsMichel Faber
    Science Fiction

    The Book of Strange New Things , is itself quite strange. It's one of those genre books that have managed to convince the mainstream that it's more mainstream literature. I must admit that it's also not a bad example and will certainly not do the reputation of science fiction any harm. It is however...

  • Made to KillAdam Christopher
    Made to Kill
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

    If you can imagine what a science fiction novel written by Raymond Chandler might be like (while Chandler is known to have hated Science Fiction stories rumours persist he did write one) then Made to Kill is about as close as you will likely ever get (short of resurrecting the late author). It pays...

  • Oryx and CrakeMargaret Atwood
    Oryx and Crake
    by Margaret Atwood
    Science Fiction

    I've been meaning to grab this series for quite some time — the combination of Atwood's evocative prose and a post-apocalyptic setting is a highly promising one. Oryx and Crake tells the story of an altered world through the eyes of a man once known as Jimmy. Now known as Snowman and clothed in dete...

  • Europe at MidnightDave Hutchinson
    Europe at Midnight
    by Dave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

    Europe in Autumn was my first experience of Dave Hutchinson's unique and astonishing voice. It is simply sublime fiction, a deep and intelligent story and one of my favourite reads of recent times. It was impressive enough to win SFBook Book of the Year in 2014. Europe at Midnight is the much sought...

  • The Shepherds CrownTerry Pratchett
    The Shepherds Crown
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    I've been reading Pratchett books for such a large part of my life. Knowing there will be no more Discworld, no more cheerful yet insightful adventures from the colourful inhabitents of that world on the back of four giant elephants — propelled through space by the Great A'Tuin, is a sad and soberin...

  • As Wonderland Goes ByLaszlo Mohacsi
    As Wonderland Goes By
    by Laszlo Mohacsi
    Fantasy

    As Wonders Go By a wildly different book to most I've read. For a start it's narrated in the second person, there aren't many I've read that take this approach. The protagonist is a woman of "loose morals", at large in Europe and looking for "adventure". She finds more adventure even she can handle...

  • Poseidon's WakeAlastair Reynolds
    Poseidon's Wake
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Poseidon's Wake is set in the same universe as Reynolds previous two Poseidon's Children novels ( Blue Rembered Earth and On the Steel Breeze ) but is written as an informal conclusion to the trilogy, a book that works equally well as a stand-alone story. The story begins on Crucible, a distant plan...

  • The Autobiography of James T KirkDavid A Goodman
    Science Fiction

    The genuine autobiography of one of the bravest, most dashing and heroic starship captains to ever bodly-go into the depths of space. You may be pleased to know that this Kirk is the real one, not the imposter who has more recently been seen in the latest films. This Kirk doesn't get command of the...

  • MoonFallAG Wyatt
    MoonFall
    by AG Wyatt
    Science Fiction

    While most post-apocalyptic novels focus on destruction brought on humankind (or occasionally robotkind), the disaster in Moonfall is much more natural. The Moon has indeed fallen and caused widespread destruction across the globe. The book picks up 20 years after this earth-shattering event and fol...

  • Star Wars AftermathChuck Wendig
    Star Wars Aftermath
    by Chuck Wendig
    Science Fiction

    Star Wars was a huge part of my childhood, the original was the first film I ever saw at the Cinema and for a period I watched the film (and the two proceeding) pretty much every day - at one point I could recite the whole script if you'd asked me to. Must have driven my poor mother to distraction....

  • Twelve KingsBradley Beaulieu
    Twelve Kings
    by Bradley Beaulieu
    Fantasy

    Ceda fights in the pits of Sharakhai, scraping a living like so many in the city known as "the amber jewel of the desert". She, like most, pray for an end to the tyrannical and cruel rule of the city by it's immortal Kings. She has, until now never been in a position to do anything about it. That al...

  • SteepleJon Wallace
    Steeple
    by Jon Wallace
    Science Fiction

    Steeple is the sequel to the quite brilliant novel Barricade which we reviewed back in June last year. It describes a post-apocalyptic world torn apart by a war of human against their artificial, super-human constructs, the "fiscials". As you can imagine, fighting against a superior force of artific...

  • Prince of FoolsMark Lawrence
    Prince of Fools
    by Mark Lawrence
    Fantasy

    Prince of Fools is the first in a new series (called the Red Queen's War) set within the same world as the authors acclaimed Prince of Thorns series. It is a slight departure in style and yet retains the wit and light-heartedness that those who have read the authors work will be familiar with. Princ...

  • The Three-body ProblemLiu Cixin
    The Three-body Problem
    by Liu Cixin
    Science Fiction

    The Three-body Problem was originally written in Chinese by Liu Cixin. Launched to great acclaim within China, it became one of the most popular science fiction novels within the country and won the 2006 Chinese Science Fiction Galaxy Award. Thankfully it has now been translated by the talented auth...

  • Humpty Dumpty in OaklandPhilip K Dick
    Humpty Dumpty in Oakland
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    I'd probably be best beginning this review by mentioning that Humpty Dumpty in Oakland isn't actually science fiction. It's a realist work of dark comedy. For some reason whatever miss-guided fool wrote the wikipedia entry for this book called it "non-science-fiction". Surely "non-science-fiction" i...

  • The Supernatural EnchancementsEdgar Cantero
    Fantasy

    Quirky, accomplished and a great deal of fun, The Supernatural Enchancements is a solid, unusual novel. The premise of the story is the protagonist (known only as A) inherits the American estate "Axton House" following the death of his second cousin "Uncle" Ambrose, whom A had never met or even knew...

  • ArmadaErnest Cline
    Armada
    by Ernest Cline
    Science Fiction

    I've been a gamer and science fiction fan since the very first home computers become popular. From the days of the ZX81 and even before that with the Intellivision and Atari 2600. I've been playing games ever since. Like the authors first novel, Armada seems to speak to the older gamers out there. T...