Contemporary Fantasy

Contemporary Fantasy is also known as "modern fantasy" and describes a genre where the story is set in contemporary times but where magic or fantastic creatures exist. Urban fantasy is essential a sub genre of contemporary fantasy.

Books Reviewed

  • The Cottingley CuckooA J Elwood
    The Cottingley Cuckoo
    by A J Elwood
    Horror

    Fairies are not real. If they   were  we would have more evidence of them than a  suspect  looking photo taken by a couple of Victorian School Girls. However,  Fairies  are just brighter than you   think. Why would they risk being seen by humans who have in recent years proven to have a poor  track...

  • The Generation KillerAdam Simcox
    The Generation Killer
    by Adam Simcox
    Fantasy

    The supernatural has always worked well with noir as they are both genres of the night. It is only an undead hop and skip between a detective finding a corpse in the alley and that corpse waking up. Conan Doyle walked the line between the supernatural and the super-real, Holmes always discovered tha...

  • Spells for ForgettingAdrienne Young
    Spells for Forgetting
    by Adrienne Young
    Fantasy

    Having grown up in a village, life there had its pros and its cons. There is a real sense of community, and everyone knows each other. Great, but also not so great. Any small incident can become gossip, no matter how benign, so I can only imagine what would happen should a fire break out and a body...

  • The Unmaking of June FarrowAdrienne Young
    The Unmaking of June Farrow
    by Adrienne Young
    Science Fiction

    I love time travel stories, but the entire concept is a paradox. It just cannot happen. What happens to the version of you that was in the past/present once you have travelled? It can be hard to even think about it, but what happens if you live this paradox? The Farrow woman have all been cursed wit...

  • The Ballad of Perilous GravesAlex Jennings
    Fantasy

    The genre of Urban Fantasy is pathed with perils, which means that it should be perfect for Alex Jennings’ The Ballad of Perilous Graves . How do you make your modern fantasy stand out from the others without making it impenetrable for the reader? A unique location or voice works well. An author who...

  • SmothermossAlisa Alering
    Smothermoss
    by Alisa Alering
    Fantasy

    There is a long tradition of Folk Horror in the UK, but plenty of other countries bring their own flavour to the genre. American Gothic has all the trappings of classic Folk Horror, but has that distinct US flavour. The woods out there seem different, ancient landscapes unused to the people that roc...

  • FiendAlma Katsu
    Fiend
    by Alma Katsu
    Horror

    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 of us, th...

  • Amongst Our WeaponsBen Aaronovitch
    Amongst Our Weapons
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    A long running series is a mixed blessing. You can return to the same characters over the books, but too often a series becomes stale quickly and the characters seem to live in statis were they never change. This can never be said of the excellent Rivers of London novels by Ben Aaronovitch and the n...

  • Terms of ServiceCiel Pierlot
    Terms of Service
    by Ciel Pierlot
    Science Fiction

    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, therefo...

  • IsolationDan Coxon
    Isolation
    by Dan Coxon
    Horror

    Placing a restriction on yourself should not be a freeing experience, but the opposite can be true, especially in the arts. Making films under strict rules can lead to innovation as film makers struggle to achieve their vision under restraints. Creating an anthology about one subject matter limits m...

  • SwashbucklersDan Hanks
    Swashbucklers
    by Dan Hanks
    Fantasy

    Nostalgia is a dangerous tool to use in a novel as what people think happened is not always the case. They prefer to see the past through rose tinted glasses. The 1980s can be seen as an era of Nintendo playing and Bermuda shorts, but that was not my 80s. I remember the Spectrum, my milk being stole...

  • The Way Up Is DeathDan Hanks
    The Way Up Is Death
    by Dan Hanks
    Science Fiction

    When I imagine the aliens coming, I always imagine that they would pick somewhere amazing to land their ship. Probably America as all the movies have trained my brain to think that way. The place I do not jump straight to is Manchester, or at least the hills around the city. I know those hills well...

  • Once Upon a Time LordDan Slott
    Once Upon a Time Lord
    by Dan Slott
    Science Fiction

    Any Doctor Who fan knows that this year is a big anniversary for the series and there is so much content coming that even the wider community may be aware that the Doc is turning 60. How do you stand out from the new books, audio series and episodes all incoming around the festive period? Perhaps a...

  • Marchs EndDaniel Polansky
    Marchs End
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    Keeping it in the family sounds like a wonderful idea. Surround yourself with people you can trust, blood is thicker than water, but do family businesses work? Why do so many fail by the third generation? The first generation build the company from nothing, the second grow it further, the third – sq...

  • This Book is Full of SpidersDavid Wong
    Horror

    Spiders seem to tap into a primeval fear inside humans. Perhaps in the days of cavemen there were 20 foot spiders that ate those that travelled at night? What I do know is that the average domestic spider in the UK is unlikely to spring off the wall and eat through your skull. This set of events is...

  • Shark HeartEmily Habeck
    Shark Heart
    by Emily Habeck
    Science Fiction

    If I have said it once, I have it said a thousand times, science fiction is the best genre as it is so wide reaching. Stories can be grandiose, epic Space Operas with multiple characters on several planets. Or, stories can be personal affairs, titbits of speculative fiction that tweaks our own reali...

  • HighfireEoin Colfer
    Highfire
    by Eoin Colfer
    Fantasy

    Dragons get a bad press. They may have been known to ransack a few villages and eat people, but if they were left alone, they would not bother you. They are, of course, extinct now. If one or two of them remained where would they hide? Somewhere remote enough to be away from crowds carrying pitchfor...

  • Books and BewitchmentIsla Jewell
    Books and Bewitchment
    by Isla Jewell
    Fantasy

    As a born cynic, I am always on the lookout for the angle in life and in fiction, but sometimes something is what it seems on the surface; wholesome. Not all books need to challenge the reader and leave them exhausted. Novels can be an escape, an entertainment, full of love and magic. Books and Bewi...

  • Monkey Around Jadie Jang
    Monkey Around 
    by Jadie Jang
    Fantasy

    Watching television in the 70s and 80s was less about choice and more about just watching what was on. You only had four channels and not much catered for children, we would watch anything. Re-runs of  The Land of the Giants  or  Star Trek  became the bread and butter of Sunday viewing. It was not a...

  • The WindJay Caselberg
    The Wind
    by Jay Caselberg
    Science Fiction

    Newcon Press’ second novella series is a beautiful collection of four books. The Wind by Jay Caselberg launches straight into the kind of folk horror/ weird fiction premise that seems to emerge from a particular sense of British society. There are shades of Mythago Wood and The Wickerman in Caselber...

  • The ContestJeff Macfee
    The Contest
    by Jeff Macfee
    General Fiction

    Puzzle me this. Whilst other kids were outside climbing trees or knocking a football around, you would often find me indoors or under a tree reading a book or doing puzzles. That has led to two lifelong consequences; a love of puzzles and a problem with weight. Puzzler was always my favourite, and I...

  • Bound in BloodJohnny Mains
    Bound in Blood
    by Johnny Mains
    Horror

    If you are reading this, you have some interest in books, enough to read a review about one. Bound in Blood is not just a book, this is a book about books. Well at least a collection of spooky short stories about books, authors, libraries, and all things bibliophile. For those of us in the know, the...

  • The Gaia ChimeJohnny Worthen
    The Gaia Chime
    by Johnny Worthen
    Horror

    What can cause the end of the World? A massive explosion, a meteor the size of the moon tearing it in two? What would cause the end of the World and what would cause the end of humankind are two very different things. Our watery globe will still be spinning long after we are food for the worms, huma...

  • Mr BreakfastJonathan Carroll
    Mr Breakfast
    by Jonathan Carroll
    Fantasy

    Breakfast is my favourite meal of the day as I can indulge in some food I shouldn’t really be eating from sugary cereal to a full English breakfast. There are other more sensible options; porridge or bran flakes. The wonderful thing is that I can choose each day what I want. What I am unable to do i...

  • The Shadow GlassJosh Winning
    The Shadow Glass
    by Josh Winning
    Fantasy

    If you are of a certain age, you will know that the 80s was by far the best decade for pop culture, the films, music, comics, books, all unbeatable. All the films and TV shows basking in that 80s nostalgia prove it so. But wait, what is that? A load of 90s-based films and TV shows are starting to be...

  • The Splendid CityKaren Heuler
    The Splendid City
    by Karen Heuler
    Fantasy

    Urban Fantasy has become a staple of the Fantasy genre in recent years, and you are as likely to find a book about a necromancer librarian or zombie private detective walking around a modern city as you are elves and dwarves in a version of the past. I thought I had seen it all; teddy bear detective...

  • The Bog WifeKay Chronister
    The Bog Wife
    by Kay Chronister
    Horror

    How big does a cult have to be to become a cult? Does it have to be thousands of people? Hundreds? Tens? Could one family be a cult? If you brought your children up in a remote location without access to the internet and media, it may be possible to make them believe almost anything. Like a tale abo...

  • Mister MagicKiersten White
    Mister Magic
    by Kiersten White
    Horror

    Children’s TV shows will always have an evocative place in your memory, especially those half-remembered tales from when you were young. Your cognitive powers had not yet full formed, so your memory of the show comes in snatches like magic. For me it will always be Wizbit. I picture a strange triang...

  • Lycanthropy and Other Chronic IllnessesKristen O'neal
    Fantasy

    Stories about monsters were told back in the day as a way of making people scared. And they should be. How do you stop a curious child from walking in the woods at night or going for a swim in a deep lagoon? You speak of vampires, werewolves and merfolk that are there to eat them. This may not be tr...

  • Asian Ghost Short StoriesLee Murray
    Horror

    Editing a collection of short stories must be a task. Whittling down all the possibilities to just a few that represent a vision. The key is to make the subject matter attainable; stories about monsters in pubs or griffons on an aeroplane. Taking on all Asian Ghost Short Stories is an almost impossi...

  • Wonders Never CeaseLexy Hudson
    Wonders Never Cease
    by Lexy Hudson
    Fantasy

    I do not think of myself as a person of culture, but when I stop to think about it, I have likely been to more theatre productions, museums and Stately Homes than most people. I can thank my mother for this as being forced to go as a youth has made me appreciate them and want to go as an adult. One...

  • Who is Charlie KeeperMarcus Alexander
    Who is Charlie Keeper
    by Marcus Alexander
    Fantasy

    Who is Charlie Keeper, a young adult fantasy novel written and self published by Marcus Alexander with original Artwork by Lobak Oren. This novel has created such a stir that Graffiti artists, including the Corrupt Government Crew have previously tagged Charlie Keeper inspired characters around Lond...

  • The Midnight LibraryMatt Haig
    The Midnight Library
    by Matt Haig
    Fantasy

    What is your  L imbo? Do you even believe such a place exists between life and death? I have always imagined that if it did exist it would be like a waiting area in which you have to make up for all t hose sins you did in life. For me, this will consist mainly  of  apologising to ants and spiders th...

  • When the Wolf Comes HomeNat Cassidy
    When the Wolf Comes Home
    by Nat Cassidy
    Horror

    I have had my fill of Vampires. They are the Primadonna of the undead world hogging all the limelight with their films and TV shows. They are also all over books. One of my family member’s entire book collection is just vampires. What about the other supernatural beings? A vampire's erstwhile enemy...

  • The Zygon InvasionPeter Harness
    The Zygon Invasion
    by Peter Harness
    Science Fiction

    Doctor Who has saved the solar system on countless occasions and planet Earth even more than this, but some of these saves felt a little.... minor. Alien races trying their arm at taking over Earth with nary a plan worth writing on the back of a psychic beermat. Sometimes though the stakes are big,...

  • CackleRachel Harrison
    Cackle
    by Rachel Harrison
    Fantasy

    Witches have a bad reputation, green skinned, covered in warts and prone to stealing children so that they can use their bones for broth. People feared the idea of witches so much that they would place innocent people on trial. Don’t they realise that if witches were as powerful as they thought, the...

  • Love BitesRy Herman
    Love Bites
    by Ry Herman
    Horror

    The best thing about genre fiction is that it provides such a wide array of ideas. Take the  concept  of a vampire novel. You may immediately think of  gothic buildings and lace, but you could easily read a modern vampire novel that is violent and full of action.  Love Bites  by Ry Herman  goes in a...

  • Bleeding HeartsRy Herman
    Bleeding Hearts
    by Ry Herman
    Fantasy

    I have always wondered how people can believe in some things but not others. If you have a world that has vampires roaming at night, what makes bloodsuckers so great that they get to be the only things that bump in the night? Ry Herman already introduced us to the idea of vampires, witches and a gli...

  • EvocationS T Gibson
    Evocation
    by S T Gibson
    Fantasy

    It cannot be easy to talk to the dead. Equally, foreshadowing the future or sending demons back into the abyss are not simple tasks. All are tricky and all are specialties that need experience, concentration, and skill. Even with the right environment and correct mindset it may not be enough, seeing...

  • Queen of the DeadSarah Broadway
    Queen of the Dead
    by Sarah Broadway
    Fantasy

    My partner and I have differing opinions on ghosts. I like to read about them but am incredibly cynical that they exist. My partner is more of a believer. I just refuse to believe that ghoulies can exist without more evidence, we live in a surveillance society at this point. However, even I would st...

  • Gods of Jade and ShadowSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Gods of Jade and Shadow
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Fantasy

    Religion is a tricky thing, a lot of people think they have picked the right one. Some believe in one God, but many people have several. The Mayans had some deities you would not want to meet in a dark alley as they prey on humans from the underworld. Meeting one of these Gods would be scary, but if...

  • Signal to NoiseSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Signal to Noise
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Science Fiction

    I am not one to look back on my life, preferring to live and enjoy what I have in the present, but when I do it is often about my years at school and University. That person I could have treated better or the time I stood up in assembly by mistake. The events felt at huge at the time, but in retrosp...

  • SanctusSimon Toyne
    Sanctus
    by Simon Toyne
    Fantasy

    Sanctus is a mystery detective novel and the debut of Simon Toyne. An enigmatic citadel sits atop a steep mountain, overlooking the ancient Turkish city of Ruin. One of the oldest and most secretive inhabited places on earth is about to draw the attention of the world as a symbolic suicide set's off...

  • Coup de GraceSofia Ajram
    Coup de Grace
    by Sofia Ajram
    Science Fiction

    People read for all sorts of reasons. I read to escape and have fun, my preference is for high action and laughs, but I understand that some people like to be challenged by their reading. This could be a complex Space Opera, or a piece of literature that tackles the life of a downtrodden mother in 1...

  • A Stroke of the PenTerry Pratchett
    A Stroke of the Pen
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    They say that you should never meet your heroes, lest they disappoint, but I have met several of my favourite authors over the years and have always had a pleasant experience. I never had the chance to meet Sir Terry Pratchett which was a shame as he was, like for many readers of genre fiction, one...

  • The Imaginary CorpseTyler Hayes
    The Imaginary Corpse
    by Tyler Hayes
    Fantasy

    Where do dreams go when we forget them? Do they dissipate into the ether, or do they settle somewhere? This is the intriguing premise of Tyler Hayes’ The Imaginary Corpse , an alternative detective noir novel. How alternative? It stars a stuffed toy triceratops private investigator called Tippy who...

  • ShigidiWole Talabi
    Shigidi
    by Wole Talabi
    Fantasy

    Most people love a good heist if they are not the ones being robbed. Be it in the movies, a documentary, or even a novel, a heist is all about planning and then it falling apart instantly. You can tell the story of a heist in different ways; do you go deeply into the plan or find out more about the...