Books tagged with: alien world

  • 13th ZookeeperBernd Struben
    13th Zookeeper
    by Bernd Struben
    Science Fiction

    Mankind has long lost it's connection to mother nature, to the wildlife of Earth and all the natural wonders contained. In an effort to recreate that which was lost a remote planet is terra-formed to resemble mankind's first home and then populated with all of the plants and animals that existed in...

  • A Deepness in the SkyVernor Vinge
    A Deepness in the Sky
    by Vernor Vinge
    Science Fiction

    A Deepness in the Sky is the prequel to A Fire Upon the Deep by Vernor Vinge. Long awaited prequel to A Fire Upon the Deep. The stories are taking place in the same universe, but are otherwise not connected. I don't think that it matter what order you read them in – the important thing is that you r...

  • A Fire Upon the DeepVernor Vinge
    A Fire Upon the Deep
    by Vernor Vinge
    Science Fiction

    A Fire Upon the Deep is a science fiction novel by Vernor Vinge. This is the first book, by Vinge that I've read and it couldn't have started much worse than it did or end much better. aFud starts off with a family crash-landing their space ship on an uncharted planet, the parents get killed nearly...

  • Adam RobotsAdam Roberts
    Adam Robots
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Adam Robots is a collection of science fiction shorts by the irrepressible author Adam Roberts. Each little story explores a different style, sub-genre or convention and yet each is quite clearly a product of the authors mind. There is a certain momentum to Roberts prose, a hustling and yet elegant...

  • Against A Dark BackgroundIain M Banks
    Against A Dark Background
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    Against A Dark Background is a novel by the noted author of science fiction Iain M Banks. Yes, more Banks - Since Crow Road and Use Of Weapons he has definetly become one of my favorite authors. Against a Dark Background is Science Fiction at its best. Suspence, love, action and high-tech gadgets ar...

  • Alien 3Alan Dean Foster
    Alien 3
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    WOW! I have not said that in a while and this reviewer surely did not expect that word to come from Alan Dean Foster’s 247-page novelization of Alien 3. Like so many—like millions— who were disappointed with David Fincher’s 1993 film, I did not expect Foster’s novel to change my mind about the “orig...

  • Alien: Sea of SorrowsJames A Moore
    Alien: Sea of Sorrows
    by James A Moore
    Science Fiction

    The second installment in the new Alien series by Titan books is quiet different from the first and doesn’t quiet fit in the way I expected. Yet, it delivers what any fan of the Alien franchise craves: insane amounts of Xenomorph action. Alien: Sea of Sorrows takes place on LV178, which is what conn...

  • Aliens the Female WarSteve Perry
    Aliens the Female War
    by Steve Perry
    Science Fiction

    Steve Perry recruits his daughter, writer Stephani Perry, to conclude a separate storyline to one of the best SciFi franchises of all time. Filled with plenty of Xenomorph-action and a conclusion that no one would guess, Aliens: The Female War rocks hard and entertains like a champ! Now joined by El...

  • Aliens: River of PainChristopher Golden
    Aliens: River of Pain
    by Christopher Golden
    Science Fiction

    The story behind LV-426 is more terrifying than anything my childhood imagination lent after watching Alien and Aliens on VHS. Although before my generation, both Ridley Scott and James Cameron contributed to one of the most terrifying storylines in cinema history. And for this reviewer, it has beco...

  • Barok's ExodusWilliam L.K
    Barok's Exodus
    by William L.K
    Science Fiction

    Six years have passed since the greatest storm the planet of Stritonoly has ever seen, six years since that night of treachery. The Princess Becki has not been idle during that time, learning all she can about her powers and how they could be used against her captives, something that she has been wa...

  • Bowl of HeavenGregory Benford
    Bowl of Heaven
    by Gregory Benford
    Science Fiction

    The partnership of Benford and Niven is a coming together of two icons of science fiction. Both have won Nebula awards for their work and are contemporaries of each other - an unusual collaboration as many partnerships tend to be of an older established writer and a young talent, but in this case we...

  • Children of TimeAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Children of Time
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    Desperate to find a new home amongst the stars, the last remnants of the human race are cast out into deep space. Thousands upon thousands asleep aboard a colossal colony ship, hibernating until a habitable planet is located. Eventually they discover a world which was terraformed by humanity long ag...

  • Cosmonaut KeepKen Mcleod
    Cosmonaut Keep
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    Cosmonaut Keep is the first volume in the Engines of Light trilogy by Ken Mcleod. This is the first book in a brand new universe, called "Engines of Light", and as that the first book that MacLeod has written outside the universe of Star Fraction and Cassini Division. As I've understood it the unive...

  • Courage and HonourGraham McNeill
    Courage and Honour
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    The fifth book in the Ultramarines series and the second in the newly released Ultramarines Omnibus II, which also includes several additional short stories and even a nice graphic short. Captain Uriel Ventris is once again in charge of the 4th company, this story is firmly rooted in Uriel's return...

  • Dark EdenChris Beckett
    Dark Eden
    by Chris Beckett
    Science Fiction

    This review was originally published in 2012 and has been re-published following the launch of the book in the US, published by Crown Publishing. I often start a review with a bit of blurb about the book itself, setting the scene for the reader and I try to never give too much away - limiting the in...

  • Dark LightKen Mcleod
    Dark Light
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    Dark Light is the second volume in the Engines of Light series by Ken Mcleod. This is the first time that I've had any kind of doubt as to what I should write about a MacLeod book. Normally I would just heap words of praise upon other words of praise, until it hit a fitting length for a book review....

  • Deathworld 3Harry Harrison
    Deathworld 3
    by Harry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    Another fun filled and action packed book from the man who has given us The Stainless Steal Rat and Bill the Galactic Hero. The Deathworld stories are much like these other two series, the main difference being that the Deathworld stories are a bit more bloody and a lot less humorous. Not that they...

  • Deception WellLinda Nagata
    Deception Well
    by Linda Nagata
    Science Fiction

    Deception Well is a science fiction novel by Linda Nagata. In this, the third book from this new master, Linda Nagata takes us to the far future and away from earth - paradoxically the characters in this book aren't quite as strange as the characters in her first two books (The Bohr Maker and Tech-H...

  • Divine Endurance - Flowerdust editionGwyneth Jones
    Science Fiction

    Divine Endurance and Flowerdust, - two novels collected together for the first time exclusively as an e-book and known as "The Last Days Of Ranaganar" - are set within a far-future south-east Asia, a future that is hardly recognizable from the present and one that seems both medieval and futuristic...

  • Divine FanaticismRobin G Howard
    Divine Fanaticism
    by Robin G Howard
    Science Fiction

    Divine Fanaticism is the fourth novel in the Jim Long series by Robin G Howard. Long ago on the planet Thraeot a religous order was created that was shrouded in miraculous mythology, now the political environment of the planet has become unbalanced and mass scale war appears imminent. To make matter...

  • Dying Star: ProphecySamsun Lobe
    Dying Star: Prophecy
    by Samsun Lobe
    Science Fiction

    Dying Star: Prophecy is the first volume in a new Scifi series Dying Star, written by Samsun Lobe. The Star Shu is slowly dying, becoming a black dwarf as it's remaining energy depletes. This causes the orbiting planet Gebshu and it's moon to change beyond recognition. The world becomes engulfed in...

  • Earth Made of GlassJohn Barnes
    Earth Made of Glass
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Earth Made of Glass is the second volume in the Thousand Cultures series by the American author John Barnes. It has been ten years and Giraut and Margaret of "A Million Open Doors" have been working as diplomats/undercover agents on just about every possible world in The Thousand Cultures. They are...

  • Earth SinkIlyan Lavanway
    Earth Sink
    by Ilyan Lavanway
    Science Fiction

    Earth Sink is a science fiction apocalyptic vision by Ilyan Lavanway. War has broken out on the planet of Antecedeon, a seemingly perfect alien world where peace and harmony have reigned for countless generations. A group calling themselves the New Order have grown bored and fed up with perfection a...

  • Echoes of the well of SoulsJack L Chalker
    Echoes of the well of Souls
    by Jack L Chalker
    Science Fiction

    Nathan Brazil had been the guardian of the Well of Souls, where the Well World's master control lay. But now the universe faced a threat more grave than mere destruction: an unnamed and utterly alien entity had somehow been released from its ancient prison and was bent on the corruption of the Well...

  • EmbassytownChina Mieville
    Embassytown
    by China Mieville
    Science Fiction

    On the concrete balcony of a third-floor industrial complex in London, China Miéville was speaking earnestly about his early experiences of reading H.P. Lovecraft. He was remembering the Cthulhu. They were, he said, quite sexy. Three years later and the alien species of Embassytown are a language-im...

  • EndgameDafydd ab Hugh
    Endgame
    by Dafydd ab Hugh
    Science Fiction

    The last book in the series was, unfortunately, this reader’s least favorite, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t a real gem. The reality of the series ending was saddening and expectations tend to be very high as a story culminates to its final chapters. Regardless, every series must conclude and writer...

  • Ensign FlandryPoul Anderson
    Ensign Flandry
    by Poul Anderson
    Science Fiction

    The Merseian Empire has, for some strange reason, decided to help out the water people of Starkad. Which means that the good old Earth Empire, simply has to help the land people of Starkad to keep the status quo. Now if I tell you this story was published right in the middle of the Vietnam War, the...

  • Extreme DifferenceDB Reynolds-Moreton
    Extreme Difference
    by DB Reynolds-Moreton
    Science Fiction

    Waking up on a strange world with no memory of his past, our intrepid protagonist finds an unusual group of people surviving on the slope of a mountain chain that forms a ring around a vast sandy dust-bowl that appears to hold dangers unseen. Everyone else seem to also have no memories of their past...

  • Eye of VengeanceGraham McNeill
    Eye of Vengeance
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    This is a first for SFBook, in it's 13 year history not once has an Audio book been reviewed, it's long before time this changed and I hope to review at least a few novels in this format over the coming months. Honour of the first goes to a specially created audio only book by the Black Library. Eye...

  • Garden of RamaArthur C Clarke
    Garden of Rama
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    These books are the third and fourth in the Rama series (number one being Rendezvous with Rama and number two being Rama II). I have decided to review them together - as they should be read together and right after each other. If you haven't read the first two Rama books, do not read these books and...

  • Guy Erma and the Son of EmpireSally Ann Melia
    Guy Erma and the Son of Empire
    by Sally Ann Melia
    Science Fiction

    Guy Erma and the Son of Empire is a young adult science fiction tale which, to my mind is wrapped in the packaging of a fantasy novel at first glance. Granted it’s on the fantastical side, but the deception remains. The writing also holds a few quirks, initially in its spaced layout, but beyond this...

  • In the BloodRobert J Sullivan
    In the Blood
    by Robert J Sullivan
    Science Fiction

    In the Blood is a science fiction novel by Robert J Sullivan. The Utu festival was only three days old when the first body was found, 22 year old Gloria Ashlock, naked except for her shoes, lashed to a column in a warehouse and stabbed 35 times. The discovery was a shock but not a surprise to the po...

  • In the Mouth of the WhalePaul McAuley
    In the Mouth of the Whale
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    I first read one of Paul J McAuley's novels over 20 years ago, picked up completely at random for reason's that are shrouded in the midst of time. The book was Secret Harmonies and it became one of the most memorable novel's I have read before or since, managing to evoke a powerful feeling of travel...

  • Isaac Asimov's UtopiaRoger MacBride Allen
    Isaac Asimov's Utopia
    by Roger MacBride Allen
    Science Fiction

    Utopia takes place five years into the reign of Alvar Kresh as the governor of Inferno, who is now married to robotisist Fredda Leving. The re-terraforming effort is doing fairly well, but many believe still doomed to failure. The plot centers around a plan created by an Infernal named Dalvo Lentral...

  • JemFrederik Pohl
    Jem
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

    Jem is a classic science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl. Pohl writes a new book every year, this one is high on the pile of what I've read. It was just sitting simply and carefully almost precariously in the 'forget it' pile up til page 80 and then whammo! I got so jumped on with the typeface I scra...

  • Kane of Old MarsMichael Moorcock
    Kane of Old Mars
    by Michael Moorcock
    Science Fiction

    If you missed out on Michael Moorcock the first time around, the collated paperback editions of his work from Gollancz are an excellent way to discover his stories. Kane of Old Mars collects three Kane books, Warriors of Mars , Blades of Mars and Barbarians of Mars . All of Moorcock’s adventures are...

  • Lord of LightRoger Zelazny
    Lord of Light
    by Roger Zelazny
    Science Fiction

    Lord of Light is a science fiction novel written by Roger Zelazny. Reading classics, isn't exactly what I would call a duty, but one should remember to pick up a classic once in a while and see why it became a classic. Some of them are actually quite good! I don't think that I've ever read any Zelaz...

  • Lord Valentines CastleRobert Silverberg
    Lord Valentines Castle
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    Lord Valentines Castle is the first volume in the Marjipoor series by Robert Silverberg. The hardest thing about reviewing this book is to label it correctly. We are on a humanly colonised planet at least ten thousand years in the future. We share this world, of gigantic proportions, with several al...

  • Majipoor ChroniclesRobert Silverberg
    Majipoor Chronicles
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    Majipoor Chronicles is the second volume in the Marjipoor series by Robert Silverberg. Took me a bit of time to verify that this is the second book in the Majipoor series. It seems that the reason why this isn't widely discussed is that it doesn't really matter when you read this one. The story take...

  • Mother of EdenChris Beckett
    Mother of Eden
    by Chris Beckett
    Science Fiction

    The sequel to the BSFA Award winning novel Dark Eden , this book returns us to the dark planet, fast forwarding the generations to a fractured and disparate society that has come to colonise many of Eden’s different landmasses. Much of the themes hinted at in Dark Eden are developed here in the sequ...

  • No Time Like TomorrowBrian Aldiss
    No Time Like Tomorrow
    by Brian Aldiss
    Science Fiction

    No Time Like Tomorrow is a collection of science fiction short stories by Brian Aldiss. This little book is all Aldiss shorties that end real abrubtly or have sort of nice wrapped up endings that are reflecting on the rest of the story in this light of 'well that was...ok'. There is one particular s...

  • Old Man's WarJohn Scalzi
    Old Man's War
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    At 75 years old, John Perry takes stock of his remaining life, with his wife dead and buried and a retirement of increasing dotage to look forward to he does the only sensible thing possible - he joins the army. Now known as the Colonial Defense Force (CDF) the war of the 22nd century is fought out...

  • Prospero BurnsDan Abnett
    Prospero Burns
    by Dan Abnett
    Science Fiction

    This is the third audio book to be reviewed within the pages of SFBook and again we are firmly within the realms of Warhammer 40k, this time during that tremulous period of the Horus Heresy. Dan Abnett is the author and Prospero Burns the novel, narrated by Gareth Armstrong on eleven CD's representi...

  • ProximaStephen Baxter
    Proxima
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Proxima is more than a bit of a surprise. There is no doubt that Stephen Baxter is a talented and imaginative author and has worked with some of the finest people to put pen to paper however I find some of his novels quite dry and lacking in empathy / effective characterisation. To be fair though pa...

  • RenewalHylton H Smith
    Renewal
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    Renewal is a stand alone novel set after the events of the Darwinian Extension series by by the science fiction author Hylton H Smith. Phoenix is a colossal space vessel, built in the Mars Docks by three races (The Axis, Symbiants and Sapients), it's the size of a city and is currently in it's 43rd...

  • RingturnJohn C Mawson
    Ringturn
    by John C Mawson
    Science Fiction

    Ringturn is a science fiction novel by British Author John C Mawson. A number of people are abducted from earth during the time of the black death by alien forces and repopulated on a planet orbiting Epsilon Eridani, eleven light years from Earth. Slowly those frightened humans build a new civilisat...

  • Ringworld ThroneLarry Niven
    Ringworld Throne
    by Larry Niven
    Science Fiction

    The Ringworld Throne is the third book in the Ringworld series and centres on a variety of races banding together to kill a large nest of Vampires on a world that is the shape of a ring. Third book in the Ringworld series. It hasn't been easy for me to keep a positive attitude towards this book. Som...

  • Secret HarmoniesPaul McAuley
    Secret Harmonies
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    I first read this book about 20 years ago, one that I picked up at random having not heard anything about the author in the slightest, it become one of the most memorable books I have read before or since and this will be the third or fourth time I have read it. Ironically it's still the only novel...

  • Shakespeare's PlanetClifford D Simak
    Shakespeare's Planet
    by Clifford D Simak
    Science Fiction

    Shakespeare's Planet is a science fiction novel by Clifford D Simak. The plot of the novel lacks overall action. There is some exploration of the ruins, pond and hill by Carter Horton but this come to very little information or help to solve the problems the characters face. Most of the time the cha...

  • ShipstarGregory Benford
    Shipstar
    by Gregory Benford
    Science Fiction

    The second part of the story begun with Bowl of Heaven, Benford and Niven bring us the conclusion to their mysterious 'big smart object' story. Shipstar is less of a sequel than a continuation. The fitful nature of the story which caused problems in the first book is not smoothed as much as it might...

  • Sky CityCarl Eddy Skovgaard
    Sky City
    by Carl Eddy Skovgaard
    Science Fiction

    In Denmark there is a thriving science fiction subculture with many short stories being written every year. Since 2007 the Danish science fiction association (Science Fiction Cirklen) has published an annual anthology of a selection of these original stories, written by Danish authors. For the very...

  • Something Coming ThroughPaul McAuley
    Something Coming Through
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    A near future that sees an altered world, changed by flooding, climate change and terrorism. The biggest change however is by the arrival of the aliens who call themselves the Jackaroo. The Jackaroo seem to be Earths hope and salvation, saving it from itself. At last the question of whether we are a...

  • Son of the TreeJack Vance
    Son of the Tree
    by Jack Vance
    Science Fiction

    Son of the Tree is a science fiction novel by Jack Vance. SON OF THE TREE-Jack Vance. I loved this story even more. Head in the clouds the arrogant druids of Kyril fed and nutured the 5 mile wide by 12 mile tall tree that was the cornerstone of their religion. They have a full slave society with man...

  • Speaker for the DeadOrson Scott Card
    Speaker for the Dead
    by Orson Scott Card
    Science Fiction

    Speaker for the Dead is the second volume in the Ender Saga, by Orson Scott Card and has won the Hugo, Locus and Nebula awards. This book could probably be read on it’s own, but it contains numerous spoilers for Enders Game and I can’t think of any good reasons why you wouldn’t want to read that one...

  • 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....

  • Startide RisingDavid Brin
    Startide Rising
    by David Brin
    Science Fiction

    Startide Rising is a science fiction novel by the acclaimed author David Brin. Finally I have some luck with a Brin book. SR has its good sides even if parts of it make me kind of sick. Sorry, but intelligent dolphins not my cup of tea. I'm not sure why, but I think its because I really loath the ki...

  • TangerineWodke Hawkinson
    Tangerine
    by Wodke Hawkinson
    Science Fiction

    Tangerine is a science fiction novel by PJ Hawkinson and K Wodke collectively known as Wodke Hawkinson. Set in a future time where long distance space travel is commonplace and aliens are a natural part of society, Tangerine is a story of the interstellar biologist Ava who explores the wild orange b...

  • TerraMitch Benn
    Terra
    by Mitch Benn
    Science Fiction

    Terra is a very different novel. It doesn't take itself too seriously and on the surface appears very light-hearted, a safe novel with prose full of soft curves rather than sharp edges. This is after all a young-adult novel and yet there is much more to this book than meets the eye. The story follow...

  • The Augmented AgentJack Vance
    The Augmented Agent
    by Jack Vance
    Science Fiction

    The Augmented Agent is a collection of science fiction short stories by Jack Vance. Jack Vance:I read the intro and.....Basically it was a campaign for Vance heroes as regular fellas running around and doing incredible things to the environment they are written into with wits and brains rarely emplo...

  • 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...

  • The City and The StarsArthur C Clarke
    The City and The Stars
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    The City and The Stars is a science fiction novel by Arthur C Clarke. This little story has a rather nice premise: After decades of exploring space and it's many wonders, The Intruders force Humanity to retreat into an enclosed city on Earth that is totally self-sufficient. Humans have lived in this...

  • The Disestablishment of ParadisePhillip Mann
    Science Fiction

    Something is going wrong on the planet of Paradise, crops will no longer grow while those imported are withering and dying in their droves. The indigenous plant life (never entirely safe) is becoming wildly unpredictable and dangerous. And so the order is given to abandon Paradise, all personnel to...

  • The DispossessedUrsula K Le Guin
    The Dispossessed
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The Dispossessed, a novel by the distinguished and award winning author Ursula K Le Guin It's been some time since I last read anything by LeGuin (I think that it was The Word for World is Forest, which I liked); I've never really been much into her for some reason. Got no idea why. She writes quite...

  • The Divine InvasionPhilip K Dick
    The Divine Invasion
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    The Divine Invasion is a science fiction novel by the critically acclaimed author Philip K Dick. Couple of people live in some bubbles on a crispy cold methane planet. Bachelor pad one: the guy loves some Rondstadt type woman (Linda Fox) and is a dj from his home dome. The lady in the next bubble is...

  • The Eye of the StormWilliam L.K
    The Eye of the Storm
    by William L.K
    Science Fiction

    Dmitri, the only son of the Czar of Stritonoly and heir to the throne has been driven insane by the forbidden poison of the diminutive slave race that provide a worker class to the Empire. Setting in motion a catastrophic chain of events, a storm of epic proportions gathers over the Citadel while a...

  • The Fight for Naturah: The ReclamationLloyd Blake
    Science Fiction

    The Fight for Naturah: The Reclamation is a speculative fiction novel by Lloyd Blake. The Year is 2085 and Mark Ashton has just finished his term as the President of the United States of America. Leaving in his wake a very successful 8 years with an improved economy, increased employment and a safer...

  • The Forever WarJoe Haldeman
    The Forever War
    by Joe Haldeman
    Science Fiction

    The Forever War is the Hugo and Nebula award winning military science fiction novel by Joe Haldeman. Originally written in 1974, the novel begins in the relative future of 1997 where thanks to the discovery of the collapsars - wormhole type gates that allow faster than light travel between the stars...

  • The Houses of IszmJack Vance
    The Houses of Iszm
    by Jack Vance
    Science Fiction

    The Houses of Iszm is a science fiction novel by Jack Vance. HOUSES OF ISZM-Jack Vance. The Iszic have been growing some wicked pod homes with security, pipes, and furniture included for 200,000 years. The secret and origin of growing these homes are very guarded because this is what keeps the plane...

  • The Inosculation SyndromeDB Reynolds-Moreton
    The Inosculation Syndrome
    by DB Reynolds-Moreton
    Science Fiction

    Another novel being published by those good people at Scifi Cafe, The Inosculation Syndrome is something of a surprise. The book tells the story of the astronaut Kal who becomes stranded on an alien planet due to a series of errors after losing touch with his star ship while charting regions of spac...

  • The Killing GroundGraham McNeill
    The Killing Ground
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    The Killing Ground is the first novel in the newly released second Ultramarines Omnibus, which also includes several additional short stories and even a nice graphic short. The story see's the Two Ultramarines Pasanius Lysane and Uriel Ventris escaping from the Eye of Terror after the events of Dead...

  • The Left Hand of DarknessUrsula K Le Guin
    The Left Hand of Darkness
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The Left Hand of Darkness was first published almost 50 years ago, receiving critical acclaim and firmly establishing Le Guin as a serious, talented author. It's known as one of the first examples of feminist science fiction and retrospectively won the Hugo and Nebula awards. I don't think it's an e...

  • The Moat around Murcheson's eyeLarry Niven
    Science Fiction

    The Moat around Murcheson's eye is the sequel to the scifi classic The Mote in God's eye by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. (Released as "The Gripping Hand" in the US) The Gripping Hand is the sequel to The Mote In God's Eye and as that I think that it's utterly uninteresting for people that haven'...

  • The Reality DysfunctionPeter F Hamilton
    The Reality Dysfunction
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    The Reality Dysfunction is the first volume in the Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter Hamilton. In the far future, humanity has divided along a single major line. The Edenists are genetically engineered space-dwellers with telepathic affinity to their biotechnological homes and ships. Adamists are effecti...

  • The Robots of DawnIsaac Asimov
    The Robots of Dawn
    by Isaac Asimov
    Science Fiction

    The Robots of Dawn is the third volume in the Robot series by Isaac Asimov Written nearly thirty years after The Naked Sun this, the third volume in the Elijah Baley series, is one of Asimovs greatest accomplishments. His writing has matured a lot in those thirty years and he has, in countless robot...

  • The Science of AvatarStephen Baxter
    The Science of Avatar
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Avatar is without a doubt a great film and I'm clearly not alone in that opinion, since it's release in 2009 it has become the highest grossing film of all time and the first to pass $2 billion in sales. It was nominated for a total of 9 Academy Awards and won "Best Cinematography", "Best Visual Eff...

  • The Seed GardenDB Reynolds-Moreton
    The Seed Garden
    by DB Reynolds-Moreton
    Science Fiction

    A while ago now I reviewed a surprisingly entertaining novel called "The Insoculation Syndrome" which detailed a tale of an astronaut stranded on a alien planet. The Seed Garden starts in a very similar fashion, Jed's ship malfunctions and his only hope for survival is to jump in an escape pod and l...

  • The Sixth DisciplineCarmen Webster Buxton
    The Sixth Discipline
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    Trained in the mental and physical disciplines of his people, Ran-Del Jahanpur is a warrior of the Sansoussy Forest. Overconfident in his abilities he is all too easily caught when he sets off a high tech trap. He finds himself transported to a strange alien city where machines speak, metal boxes ca...

  • The Stainless Steel Rat for PresidentHarry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    The Stainless Steel Rat and Angelina enjoy a belated honeymoon on a planet run by a dictator who rigs elections to get into office, so they set the Rat up as a candidate instead. Very much a satire on banana republic politics and a parody of adventures set in Latin America I regretted buying this bo...

  • The Star Crossed Saga: ProtostarBraxton A Cosby
    Science Fiction

    The galactic civilisation of the Torrian Alliance is on the brink of Civil War - crusading to destroy the "Star-children" to suppress an intergalactic evil. King Gregorio Derry send's his only son on a mission to restore the honor of his family, to hunt down one of these children. Life is never stra...

  • The Status Civilization - MindswapRobert Sheckley
    Science Fiction

    The Status Civilization - Mindswap is a collection of two science fiction stories by Robert Sheckley. This book contains two stories of about a hundred and fifty pages each. The stories are very different, so I'll review them as separate stories. The Status Civilization. Most of this story read as y...

  • The Third SideStephen Sweeney
    The Third Side
    by Stephen Sweeney
    Science Fiction

    The Pandoran war machine is on the move and Simon Dodds finds himself shot down over the luxury planet of Mythos. Separated from his team mates he soon learns that the once-popular holiday destination has become a hellish war zone, swarming with armies of seemingly unstoppable black-suited soldiers....

  • The Word for World is ForestUrsula K Le Guin
    The Word for World is Forest
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    Far in the future the humans of Earth have spread to the stars, but at great cost to Earths fragile ecosystem. For a world that is largely concrete and plastic, wood has more value than gold and the Terrans waste no time in establishing a logging colony and military base named "New Tahiti" on an idy...

  • Theme PlanetAndy Remic
    Theme Planet
    by Andy Remic
    Science Fiction

    Andy Remic has managed to carve out his own particular niche within the science fiction genre, deliberately pushing the boundaries and not holding back in the slightest. Finding a new Remic book is very much like finding a new Tarrantino film - you just know it's going to be an irresistible action p...

  • Trader to the StarsPoul Anderson
    Trader to the Stars
    by Poul Anderson
    Science Fiction

    Trader to the Stars is a collection of science fiction short stories, written by Poul William Anderson. Three stories copyrighted from 1956 to 1962 from one of the old masters. All three stories have the space merchant Nicolas Van Rijn as the main character and what a character! He's the kind of cha...

  • Transformers ExodusAlex Irvine
    Transformers Exodus
    by Alex Irvine
    Science Fiction

    Transformers Exodus is the official history of the war for Cybertron, written by Alex Irvine. Before Autobots and decepticons, before Optimus Prime and Megatron, Cybertron was a planet with a strict caste system, each bot assigned a role according to their own caste. Orion Pax is a data clerk, sorti...

  • TribesCarmen Webster Buxton
    Tribes
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    Hob is a slave, abandoned as a baby to be brought up with no hope of freedom or any chance of a normal life. On the world of Tribes any male babies born without a father figure to welcome him into his tribe becomes enslaved. Eventually Hob manages to escape and is rescued by a woman from a fighting...

  • Tritcheon HashSue Lange
    Tritcheon Hash
    by Sue Lange
    Science Fiction

    Tritcheon Hash is a science fiction novel by Sue Lange. The first thought that popped into my head after having read a couple of pages of T. Hash was; “What? Lesbian Science Fiction?”. After at few chapters it's clear that it isn't and after having finished it, I'm not even sure that it qualifies as...

  • Uplift WarDavid Brin
    Uplift War
    by David Brin
    Science Fiction

    Uplift War is the third volume in the Uplift Series by David Brin. The Uplift War is not exactly a follow up to Startide Rising, but it does take place in the same universe as Startide Rising and it takes place chronologically right after it. There are a few small spoilers in The Uplift War for SR,...

  • Valentine PontifexRobert Silverberg
    Valentine Pontifex
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    Valentine Pontifex is the third volume in the Marjipoor series by Robert Silverberg. I’m afraid that there’s no nice way of saying this so I’ll just get over with it: This is probably the most boring book Silverberg has ever written. Valentine Pontifex is divided into five parts and I can easily sum...

  • Winter SongColin Harvey
    Winter Song
    by Colin Harvey
    Science Fiction

    Winters Song is a science fiction novel and has been written by Colin Harvey, published by Angry Robot Books. When Karl Allman's spaceship crashes on an unknown god-forsaken and forgotten planet he finds himself hunted by an ancient, primitive yet powerful race. The descendants of a Viking culture,...

  • Worlds of Exile and IllusionUrsula K Le Guin
    Worlds of Exile and Illusion
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The first three Hainish novels written by Ursula Le Guin in the 1960s are brought together in this one volume. This is the same science fiction setting as her award winning stories The Dispossessed and the Left Hand of Darkness . Worlds of Exile and Illusion begins with the short story prologue – Th...

  • Dillon's Dream: Water and EarthDr Shawn Phillips
    Dillon's Dream: Water and Earth
    by Dr Shawn Phillips
    Fantasy

    Dillons Dream: Water and Earth is a speculative fiction novel by Dr Shawn Phillips and has been written for young adults and adults alike. Dillon lives in the picturesque Antelope Valley in California and ready to graduate high school very soon. One fateful day his life is torn apart by a nearly fat...

  • Elven StarWeis and Hickman
    Elven Star
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    Pryan, the World of Fire, does not orbit a sun— at least, not in the normal manner. It is a giant stone sphere containing four suns (similar to a Dyson Sphere), and it is always daytime. The "ground" is not the ground at all, but rather moss and the leaves of huge, mile-high trees; most people don't...

  • Serpent MageWeis and Hickman
    Serpent Mage
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    The novel picks up just where Fire Sea left off. Alfred jumps into Death's Gate as Haplo's ship passes through it, and finds himself in a stasis room like the one he woke up in; in fact, he believes he's on Arianus. Tired, he decides to put himself back to sleep... Only to find someone in "his" stas...

  • From Darkest SkiesSam Peters
    From Darkest Skies
    by Sam Peters
    Science Fiction

    It's funny how life seems to throw co-incidences at you. Until recently I'd never given the small island of Gibraltar any real thought. Then the company I work for expanded their services there which meant I needed to learn about this unusual British overseas territory. A few weeks later the monumen...

  • A Closed and Common OrbitBecky Chambers
    A Closed and Common Orbit
    by Becky Chambers
    Science Fiction

    A Book that brings you Home: Becky Chambers’ A Close and Common Orbit.  It took me a while to  work up the emotional energy to read Becky Chambers’ A Close and Common Orbit . This is Chambers’ second novel. Her first novel, A Long Way to a Small Angry Planet , was a unique self-published sci-fi nove...

  • The SlantRobert Gibson
    The Slant
    by Robert Gibson
    Science Fiction

    It's funny how you can read books as far afield as China and Australia and not realise there are talented authors on your own doorstep. I  discovered the author Robert Gibson in Morecambe bay, only a few miles from my home. Robert has been writing science fiction stories for a number of years, The S...

  • Zoe's TaleJohn Scalzi
    Zoe's Tale
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    Zoe’s Tale is one of the Old Man War series of books by John Scalzi and covers the same time period and events as The Last Colony , (the previous book in the series) but from a different character’s perspective.  Despite this, it can be read as a standalone novel.  Zoe is moving to a new colony with...

  • AcadieDave Hutchinson
    Acadie
    by Dave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

    I've always said that Hutchinson is an under-appreciated author. His Europe series not only being an accomplished trilogy, but also somewhat prophetic given the UK's current realtionship with the EU. Acadie is a step away from his near-future,alternative fiction series, instead set in the far-future...

  • Empire of SilenceChristopher Ruocchio
    Empire of Silence
    by Christopher Ruocchio
    Science Fiction

    Empire of Silence is the debut of Christopher Ruocchio and the first in the Sun Eater series. It describes the early life of Hadrian Marlowe, an infamous figure who is remembered galaxy-wide as both hero and monster. The man who burned every last alien Cielcin from the sky. The man who destroyed a s...

  • From Distant StarsSam Peters
    From Distant Stars
    by Sam Peters
    Science Fiction

    From Distant Stars is the follow-up to Sam Peter's impressive debut From Darkest Skies . Detective Keon Rause has mostly come to terms with the death of his wife five years previously and his illegally created AI Liss has gone - presumably destroyed. He's tasked with investigating the death of milit...

  • Starship TroopersRobert A Heinlein
    Starship Troopers
    by Robert A Heinlein
    Science Fiction

    Illustration ©2018 Stephen Hickman from The Folio Society edition of Starship Troopers The Folio Society has produced a beautiful, limited edition of Robert Heinlein’s classic book, Starship Troopers, first published in 1959. In 1998, aged 22, I went to the cinema to see Paul Verhoeven’s adaptation...

  • JunctionDaniel M Bensen
    Junction
    by Daniel M Bensen
    Science Fiction

    Junction asks the question: what would we do if we had access to a brand new, virgin world? Would we destroy it like we are doing with our own world? Or would we learn from our mistakes and treat this as a second chance to do things right? Daisuke Matsumori is a Japanese nature show host who happens...

  • The TellingUrsula K Le Guin
    The Telling
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    What is  religion? Most of us aren’t used to contemplating that question too hard. The answer seems self-evident. In the world around us now, we have Christianity, Judaism, and Islam as the big three monotheistic religions. India and East Asia provide numerous examples of the polytheistic variety. I...

  • Captain Marvel: Liberation RunTess Sharpe
    Science Fiction

    It is not hard to see where Marvel Studios get all their ideas from as they sit upon a rich heritage of characters and storylines that will take decades to exhaust. I am somewhat of an old school Marvel fan and know the classic runs. Therefore, the newer creations flummox me. Captain Marvel is more...

  • Children of RuinAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Children of Ruin
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    The sequel to the 2016 Clarke Award winner, Children of Time , the story of the far future human and spider civilisations picks up several generations after the events at the end of the previous novel. A terraforming team, led by Dirsa Senkovi and Yusuf Baltiel discover alien life on a far distant p...

  • Molten HeartUna McCormack
    Molten Heart
    by Una McCormack
    Science Fiction

    Back in the day the Doctor Who spin off novels had a real advantage over the TV show as they had no budget. The limit to what could happen in these books was not down to the pen pushers at the BBC or the naivety of special effects. The only limit to the books was the author’s imagination. Go big or...

  • Master & ApprenticeClaudia Gray
    Master & Apprentice
    by Claudia Gray
    Science Fiction

    With the new films, TV shows and cartoons it is sometimes hard to keep up with the Star Wars Universe and all its moving parts. Some of the less fashionable elements could be ignored in favour of big flashy characters like Han Solo or Boba Fett. Thankfully, the Star Wars books are continuing to expl...

  • Thanos: Death SentenceStuart Moore
    Thanos: Death Sentence
    by Stuart Moore
    Science Fiction

    To anyone who has seen the latest Avengers movies you will know that Thanos is not a nice chap. He single handily (infinitely glovely) creates an intergalactic genocide. Despite this, the films try to give him some sympathetic elements; he only wipes out so many to save the whole. The Thanos of Stua...

  • Shrouded LoyaltiesReese Hogan
    Shrouded Loyalties
    by Reese Hogan
    Science Fiction

    What is war good for? Not much, but it does advance some technologies faster than they might have been. Microwave technology, nuclear, plastic surgery – all have benefitted from being pushed by necessity. What about a war on a distant planet? Like here on Earth, any opposing armies will be looking f...

  • The Last StandBrad Ferguson
    The Last Stand
    by Brad Ferguson
    Science Fiction

    Wars can go on for years. Not just the moments of action in which thousands of people die, but the cold wars between. Different factions may have an uneasy peace, but is this peace just an excuse to build for the next conflict? You may not imagine that Star Trek: The Next Generation is the best plac...

  • Dune SeriesFrank Herbert
    Dune Series
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

    For a span of twenty years, genre fiction fans had the opportunity to live through what many call the greatest science fiction tale of all tune, Frank Herbet’s epic Dune series. The saga consists of six novels: Dune (1965), Dune Messiah (1969), Children of Dune (1976), God Emperor of Dune (1981), He...

  • Galactic KeeganScott Innes
    Galactic Keegan
    by Scott Innes
    Science Fiction

    As a football fan it is sometimes hard to understand that some people just don’t care about it. They see it as a  frivolous  game of kicking a pig’s stomach around a patch of grass.  In the context of life and death, it is just something to keep you busy on a Saturday afternoon. That is unless you a...

  • Doors of SleepTim Pratt
    Doors of Sleep
    by Tim Pratt
    Science Fiction

    Making an author come up with a single science fiction  concept  is tricky enough, but to ask them to come up with an infinite number of multiverses is just plain mean. Tim Pratt only have themselves to blame  as they choice to take  Zaxony   Delatree  on an adventure across a multitude of worlds.  ...

  • Perchance to DreamHoward Weinstein
    Perchance to Dream
    by Howard Weinstein
    Science Fiction

    I have been a fan of  Star Trek  for a long time and am happy to overlook many of the  contradictions   and technobabble that it has a habit of spouting but one thing I can never get my head around is why. Why are they on these ships? Why  risk  their lives? For a  scientific  vessel the turnover is...

  • Inhibitor PhaseAlastair Reynolds
    Inhibitor Phase
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    When I talk to readers who do not like Science Fiction, I have found they say their minds just cannot get around the fantastical nature of the ideas contained within. They cannot understand sentient spaceships or aliens that think differently to ourselves. I try to point out that the genre is a vast...

  • Mickey7Edward Ashton
    Mickey7
    by Edward Ashton
    Science Fiction

    If I lived in a Star Trek universe I would always travel by shuttlecraft and refuse to use the transporter. I am just uneasy with the idea of being split into atoms and reformed elsewhere. I am, for all intents and purposes, the same person, with the same memories, but am I? Is it not true that one...

  • DuneFrank Herbert
    Dune
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

    Throughout history many have searched for ways to live longer, from healthy eating and exercise to eliminating illness and seeking an elixir of life. I think it’s fair to say it’s a common goal to extend our lifespan. What would you say if I told you there was a substance that, if ingested regularly...

  • PodLaline Paull
    Pod
    by Laline Paull
    General Fiction

    Nature, red in claw and tooth. It is a world of the strong surviving the weak dying. Therefore, fiction that tells a story from the animal perspective can be full on. Watership Down and The Animals of Farthing Wood have managed to traumatise many a youth and even the jolly Redwall books I used to re...

  • The Circus InfiniteKhan Wong
    The Circus Infinite
    by Khan Wong
    Science Fiction

    There is something magical about the idea of a circus, the lights, the action, the antics, and the acts. The reality in my youth was a little different with a threadbare tent being erected in a local muddy play field. Khan Wong has thankfully decided to capture the majesty that the idea evokes in Th...

  • StringersChris Panatier
    Stringers
    by Chris Panatier
    Science Fiction

    Comedy combined with Science Fiction is rare because it is so hard to do. When it clicks though it is worthwhile as you get some absolute classics such as Red Dwarf or Hitchhiker's . Those are mighty large shoes to try and fill, but Chris Panatier is giving it a go in Stringers , a book that feels l...

  • The Androids of TaraDavid Fisher
    The Androids of Tara
    by David Fisher
    Science Fiction

    The Doctor can travel anywhere in the Universe and at any time. He can witness the last days of existence or visit a planet of peace. Or he could visit Tara, a planet that seems like our own feudal era Britain, but with added androids. And some odd feeling 70s chauvinism. Target Books have adapted D...

  • Falling DarkTom Lloyd
    Falling Dark
    by Tom Lloyd
    Science Fiction

    It should not matter what format you ingest a novel – on paper, on the screen or even via audio, but it does. I do not always get on with audio as I am such a fast reader, even on speed up the narrator cannot keep up with my awful lack of attention. However, the right book works as an audio experien...

  • The Distant Stars Are My Only FriendsStephan George
    Science Fiction

    As a species we are doing a good enough job of messing up our own chances of survival, but what if I told you that we could also mess up another distant planet too? In Stephan George’s The Distant Stars Are My Only Friends , Arax is a traveller who does not go into space, but instead projects his co...

  • Where it Rains in ColorDenise Crittendon
    Where it Rains in Color
    by Denise Crittendon
    Science Fiction

    The future is full of an almost infinite sea of possibilities and that’s what makes science fiction such a great genre. Whilst I may imagine a dystopian future of bleak radioactive zombies, you may think of a utopia. The best books should be a mix of the two, a dark future with a glimmer of hope, or...

  • CelestialM D Lachlan
    Celestial
    by M D Lachlan
    Science Fiction

    There are many roads to enlightenment. You can spend decades mastering the art of meditation, becoming one with the universe. You can seek to achieve the divine through the depraved, in acts so vial that you push through what is acceptable into the other. Any of the routes take commitment and none o...

  • Fractal NoiseChristopher Paolini
    Fractal Noise
    by Christopher Paolini
    Science Fiction

    I have never wanted to travel to space. THUD. Not only would it be physically challenging, but also mentally tough. THUD. The knowledge that the only thing between you and the infinite void is a sheet of metal. THUD. The great expanse making you question your tiny existence and the insignificant lif...

  • Lessons in BirdwatchingHoney Watson
    Lessons in Birdwatching
    by Honey Watson
    Science Fiction

    The science fiction genre is open to exploring alien worlds and alien ideas, but many times you find it is a very Terran feeling society being all human about things. It may be an android as the main character, but that android is following a classic crime noir style plot you could find on Earth. Wh...

  • Planet of the OodKeith Temple
    Planet of the Ood
    by Keith Temple
    Science Fiction

    It can be hard for the casual Doctor Who viewer to see the character as alien. They may have two hearts, regenerate once in a while, but fundamentally the Doctor looks human. It does not help that they are obsessed with human culture and like to hang around on Earth a lot (cheap sets). But fundament...

  • 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...

  • RefractionsMel Melcer
    Refractions
    by Mel Melcer
    Science Fiction

    Any story of colonial rescue, involving cryosleep spaceships and small crews operating to solve a crisis far from Earth has all the ingredients to be an exciting read. However, the way in which a writer organises these elements and makes them palatable as a story remains an issue at hand. Refraction...

  • Interstellar MegaChefLavanya Lakshminarayan
    Interstellar MegaChef
    by Lavanya Lakshminarayan
    Science Fiction

    I enjoy it when the publishing community gets together and decides to proclaim there is a new subgenre. These are a collection of books that have already been written but are now herded into a common bracket. Romantasy and Cosy Fantasy are doing great, and I have read a few of these. Low stake conse...

  • Future's EdgeGareth L Powell
    Future's Edge
    by Gareth L Powell
    Science Fiction

    The Earth has exploded killing all the inhabitants, the only survivors are those humans that happened to be off planet at the time. Does not sound like the start of a fun Science Fiction novel, does it? Douglas Adams would beg to differ and so would Gareth L. Powell. Future’s Edge is the author’s la...

  • The Intergalactic Empire of WakandaSuyi Davies Okungbowa
    The Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda
    by Suyi Davies Okungbowa
    Science Fiction

    The sheer number of comic books out there are a blessing and a curse. There are so many stories to catch up on and different versions of the same characters. It is wonderful for the explorer, but for the casual fan it can be daunting. We all know something about Black Panther , the character, Wakand...

  • The Coming of GalactusJames Lovegrove
    The Coming of Galactus
    by James Lovegrove
    Science Fiction

    The Marvel Universe is jammed packed with famous storylines, but one of the biggest has always been the time that The Fantastic Four took on Galactus. It resonates because it has lasted since the 1960s and appears to be having a reimagining in the latest film. The Coming of Galactus by James Lovegro...

  • Stars Like UsStephen K. Stanford
    Stars Like Us
    by Stephen K. Stanford
    Science Fiction

    Invent any innovative technology and it won’t be long until someone finds a way to use it to make money via base entertainment. We are talking wine, woman, and song. The same can be said of future worlds; the Emperor may have thought he had an iron grip on all his subjects, but just below the surfac...

  • If We Cannot Go at the Speed of LightKim Choyeop
    Science Fiction

    Starting a new book can always be daunting, but I have a special trepidation for short story collections. They can be vast, full of stories that are loosely linked. Trying to find themes and remember all the stories can feel impossible when considering a review. However, you sometimes get a more cur...