Books tagged with: gods

  • Alternate Reality Ain't what it used to beIra Nayman
    Science Fiction

    Alternate Reality Ain't what it used to be by Ira Nayman is a collection of news stories from alternate realities, as told by the intrepid reporters from the Alternate Reality News Service. The book is split into different sections for technology, relationships, games, politics etc. and each section...

  • 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....

  • Divine MurderWard Kelley
    Divine Murder
    by Ward Kelley
    Science Fiction

    Divine Murder is a speculative fiction novel by Ward Kelley. One of the most fascinating elements of reading a fairy tale or a science fiction is the acceptance of a magical world where angels alight serenely with outstretched wings, birds and animals converse fluently, and uncommon things happen qu...

  • Dream AlchemyNicholas Boyd Crutchley
    Dream Alchemy
    by Nicholas Boyd Crutchley
    Science Fiction

    A book filled with ideas and scenes that demonstrate a strong command of both language and writing, Dream Alchemy by Nicholas Boyd Crutchley is a tricky text to review, mostly because it lacks a coherent story. Crutchley is playing with a multiple reality concept. We have occasional hints of this wi...

  • Elysium BurningDDD Bryenton
    Elysium Burning
    by DDD Bryenton
    Science Fiction

    This is a very interesting book, a sort of post-apocalyptic, post-cyberpunk tale that also weaves in a good dose of historic fantasy and mythology while told in a very confident voice dripping with poetic, imaginative prose. Essentially the story goes that the human race almost wiped itself complete...

  • Engine CityKen Mcleod
    Engine City
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    Engine City is the third volume in the Engines of Light series by Ken Mcleod. I've been holding back on reading this the last book in the Engines of Light series, as I was rather disappointed with the second book. Luckily Newton's Wake was a wonderful book, as it gave me the strength to take on MacL...

  • IliumDan Simmons
    Ilium
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Dan Simmons can write just about any genre he takes a stab at and be good at it. Carrion Comfort for horror, Crook Factory for War/thriller and of course the Hyperion Saga for some of the best SF ever written. Ilium is a meta-literary meta-historical science fiction story. That's a lot of meta. I be...

  • Isle of the DeadRoger Zelazny
    Isle of the Dead
    by Roger Zelazny
    Science Fiction

    Isle of the Dead is a classic science fiction novel by Roger Zelazny. This book never really took off for me. It kept reminding me of I. Bank's AGAINST A DARK BACKGROUND, but it was no where near as nutty and multi layered as the Bank's book. This was only about 190 pgs and took an afternoon to read...

  • 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...

  • OlymposDan Simmons
    Olympos
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Olympos is a science fiction novel by the award winning author Dan Simmons. It's strange how something good, can be turned by it's association with something bad. I really loved the first volume in Dan Simmons Ilium/Olympos saga. I really did. But after having read the second volume Olympos, it's ha...

  • Raise the Gipper!John Barnes
    Raise the Gipper!
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Raise the Gipper! is a satire about the forthcoming American presidential elections (The Gipper is a nickname given to the late ex-president and former actor Ronald Reagan) and plays on the current political climate to great effect. The story goes that the Republicans - who are currently fronting mu...

  • Tell No LiesJohn Grant
    Tell No Lies
    by John Grant
    Science Fiction

    This is a story collection that stays in your mind long after you’ve finished reading, John Grant’s selection of writings vary widely across subjects, but return to the theme of duplicity. In many of these stories, the fantasy or science fiction element remains minimal and acts in a constrained role...

  • The Gemini FactorPaul Kane
    The Gemini Factor
    by Paul Kane
    Science Fiction

    The Gemini Factor is a supernatural thriller from the award winning author Paul Kane, whose previous novels include "The Lazarus condition", "Broken Arrow" and "Peripheral visions". The novel tells the story of a twisted and highly successful serial killer who's victims are always one of twins and a...

  • The PrimarchsChristian Dunn
    The Primarchs
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

    It is a time of legends, the entire galaxy is one mighty battleground which see the indomitable space marines locked in a bitter civil war, divided by the heresy of Horus. Some chapters remain loyal to humanities greatest leader; the Emperor, while others have chosen the chaos tainted promises of th...

  • American GodsNeil Gaiman
    American Gods
    by Neil Gaiman
    Fantasy

    As a science fiction fan it has to be said that we are becoming increasingly lucky. Film and TV companies seem to have finally grasped that the genre is a gold mine for stories, and that when done right, these stories can attract a big audience. American Gods is one of the more recent stories to bec...

  • Anansi BoysNeil Gaiman
    Anansi Boys
    by Neil Gaiman
    Fantasy

    Illustration ©2019 Francis Vallejo from The Folio Society edition of Neil Gaiman’s  Anansi Boys. The asymmetrical sequel to Gaiman’s American Gods , Anansi Boys makes use of the same dramatic conceit, that Gods exist and walk amongst us. However, this story from Gaiman is more of an urban folk tale,...

  • BloodstoneDavid Gemmell
    Bloodstone
    by David Gemmell
    Fantasy

    Bloodstone is the third and final volume of David Gemmell's Jon Shannow trilogy, and it brings the saga of the Jerusalem Man to a close with all of Gemmell's customary style and grace. I have said of both earlier books that I consider them among Gemmell's finest work, and I will say it again here; m...

  • Breaking the Devil's HeartH A Goodman
    Fantasy

    Breaking the Devil's Heart continues the ideas presented in the previous novel Logic of Demons . This time we follow the young couple Stewart and Layla as they spy on the Devil and try and figure out how to beat "the formula", bankrupt Satan's underground Company and save Heaven from civil war. The...

  • City of StairsRobert Jackson Bennett
    City of Stairs
    by Robert Jackson Bennett
    Fantasy

    City of Stairs is a masterpiece of world-building. Mr Bennett is clearly a gifted writer and his greatest talents lie in creating a vibrant, rich, detailed world. It's also a masterclass on how the dogmatic, blind following of religious doctrines can lead to very real problems. In City of Stairs the...

  • Dark Sun, Bright MoonOliver Sparrow
    Dark Sun, Bright Moon
    by Oliver Sparrow
    Fantasy

    A weighty tome that dramatises the historical events of the Huari Empire in the Andes, mixing in a fantasy plot, Dark Sun, Bright Moon is difficult to categorise. On one hand we have a meticulously researched historical context with pictures and appendices to explain terms and illustrate scenes, on...

  • ElantrisBrandon Sanderson
    Elantris
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    I must admit that prior to the announcement than Brandon Sanderson would finish that little known series known as "The Wheel of Time" I hadn't heard of the author, I know he already had a big following but I think this was more US based prior to the WOT announcement. Now though he has clearly gained...

  • Empire of the SavioursAJ Dalton
    Empire of the Saviours
    by AJ Dalton
    Fantasy

    Empire of the Saviours is a very, very clever novel than manages to offer something different over the traditional fantasy fare, using tried and tested fantasy tropes - young boy from humble beginnings find he has incredible power - but then creating something quite different, fresh and unique that...

  • EmpressKaren Miller
    Empress
    by Karen Miller
    Fantasy

    Empress is the first volume of the Godspeaker trilogy, by Australian author Karen Miller, and a book that does something unusual enough to be worth describing carefully. Most fantasy novels with a slave-girl protagonist follow a fairly well-marked road: the heroine is mistreated, escapes, gathers al...

  • Gods and Monsters: Unclean SpiritsChuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    Unclean Spirits is the first in a new shared-universe series called Gods and Monsters. Gods (and Monsters) are real. In the past this Pantheon were content to keep the world at arms length, sucking up the belief and devotion of mortals to provide them with the power to wage war against each other. B...

  • Harbinger of the StormAliette de Bodard
    Harbinger of the Storm
    by Aliette de Bodard
    Fantasy

    Harbinger of the Storm is the second volume in the Obsidian and Blood series of novels by Aliette de Bodard, and follows on from the events in Servant of the Underworld, both published by Angry Robot Books. One and a half years have passed since the events in Servant of the Underworld and the Empero...

  • Leinster Gardens and Other SubtletiesJan Edwards
    Fantasy

    A collection of shorts that explores supernatural and ghostly themes, there is something about exploring historical events as a setting and bringing them down to the circumstances of individuals who experience the impossible. The use of historical contexts throughout these stories gives them a linge...

  • Lord of SlaughterMD Lachlan
    Lord of Slaughter
    by MD Lachlan
    Fantasy

    The wolves are howling outside the city of Constantinople and mysterious sorcery plagues its citizens. On a field of battle littered with the dead and dying stumbles a ragged figure dressed in wolfskin and wreaking of death. Slipping past the guards he enters the tent of the Emperor and draws his sw...

  • Moon's ArtificeTom Lloyd
    Moon's Artifice
    by Tom Lloyd
    Fantasy

    A man falls from the roof of a building, pursued by agents unknown and Lawbringer Narin is asked personally by none other than a god to investigate the matter and help find a cure to the unconscious mans poison, thus begins Moon's Artifice. What follows is a powerful, rich fantasy tale that hits all...

  • Servant of the underworldAliette de Bodard
    Servant of the underworld
    by Aliette de Bodard
    Fantasy

    Servant of the Underworld is the debut novel from a rising star in the fantasy world, Aliette de Bodard. Acatl is the high priest of the Dead for the Aztec capital city of Tenochtitlan. It is his role to oversee the dead making sure they receive the correct rituals and rites of passage into the next...

  • Sword of the NorthLuke Scull
    Sword of the North
    by Luke Scull
    Fantasy

    The first novel in The Grim Company was a singular example of the traditional fantasy novel for the 21st century. I stand by my comment of it being one of best fantasy novels of 2013. Sword of the North is the direct sequel to this debut and follows the spectacular events at the end of the first boo...

  • The Black Gods WarMoses Siregar III
    The Black Gods War
    by Moses Siregar III
    Fantasy

    The war against the lands of Pawelon is now in its tenth year and King Vieri hopes that the kingdom's holy saviour, his son Caio will lead his army to a final victory. Meanwhile Caio's sister Lucia is tortured with nightly visions from the Black God Lord Danato promising another 10 years of bloodshe...

  • The Curse of KaliGuido Henkel
    The Curse of Kali
    by Guido Henkel
    Fantasy

    The Curse of Kali is the 10th volume in the Jason Dark series by Guido Henkel. The intrepid Inspector Lestrade needs all the help he can get after a the decapitated corpse of a rich writer is found in the hands of a statue of the Hindu goddess Kali. Not even sure if he's looking for a human killer o...

  • The Edge of ReasonMelinda Snodgrass
    The Edge of Reason
    by Melinda Snodgrass
    Fantasy

    Reading the quote on the cover ("War between science and superstition") along with the image could lead you to believe that The Edge of Reason is a sword and sorcery fantasy or religious thriller. It isn't. Instead it's a modern day Urban fantasy that rides the popular wave of police-procedural nove...

  • The Fire SongK Bannerman
    The Fire Song
    by K Bannerman
    Fantasy

    Quick hit – "The Fire Song" is a great read. If that’s all you need to know, then my recommendation is to go buy, rent or borrow a copy and enjoy. If you’re looking for a little more, read on. First, a confession. I’m not your standard fantasy reader. I write crime fiction and like any writer, I rea...

  • The Gospel of LokiJoanne Harris
    The Gospel of Loki
    by Joanne Harris
    Fantasy

    From the first page when Loki interrupts the “official” introduction poem, you know this is going to be a special kind of book. The Gospel of Loki tells the story of Norse mythology from the point of view of the trickster god, covering everything from the birth of the Nine Worlds, all the way up to...

  • The Grim CompanyLuke Scull
    The Grim Company
    by Luke Scull
    Fantasy

    The Grey city of Dorminia, surrounded by granite walls thrice the height of a man and at least three feet thick at it's weakest point. These walls provide a barrier for those without as they do those within, patrolled by the harsh Crimson watch and observed from the skies by the Mindhawks - magical...

  • The Hundred Thousand KingdomsNK Jemisin
    Fantasy

    The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms is the first volume in the The Inheritance Trilogy and the debut of N. K. Jemisin. This review has been written for the David Gemmell Morningstar award . Yeine Darr, ruler of her people is still mourning the untimely death of her mother when she is summoned to the magni...

  • The ImmortalsJordanna Max Brodsky
    The Immortals
    by Jordanna Max Brodsky
    Fantasy

    As someone who likes their fantasy fictions quite traditional, i.e. heroes riding on horses, rather than riding subways, I was a little apprehensive of The Immortals (Olympus Bound) by Jordanna Max Brodsky. However I was pleasantly surprised. The story is set in modern day Manhattan, where our 'kick...

  • The Mage of StormsMercedes Lackey
    The Mage of Storms
    by Mercedes Lackey
    Fantasy

    The Mage Storms by Mercedes Lackey is the bringing together of three previously released books ( Storm Warning , Storm Rising and Storm Breaking ) into one volume. This makes a lot of sense as while the books form part of the Valdemar series they are a complete story in themselves. No previous knowl...

  • The Missing BoatmanKeith Blackmore
    The Missing Boatman
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    All over the World, Miracles are taking place, on a wintery highway in Quebec a man crashes his car and survives, in New York a homeless person is run over by a bus and lives. In Tokyo, a teenager jumps off a high rise building and fails in taking her own life. While many see these marvels as a posi...

  • The Siege of ScarnRobert C Auty
    The Siege of Scarn
    by Robert C Auty
    Fantasy

    The Siege of Scarn is the first volume in the fantasy series Trance Warriors, written by Robert C Auty. It is a time of Chaos in the middle isle, Connor - an outlaw whose family was killed by the Kings own troops finds himself drawn into a fight between good and evil, a clash of Gods that will decid...

  • The Splintered GodsStephen Deas
    The Splintered Gods
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    Book six of the Memory of Flames series picks up right from the moment book five – Dragon Queen ends. This time we’re in the ruined aftermath of Zafir’s ride to destroy the city of Dhar Thosis and Baros Tsen T’Varr is contemplating the ruination of his plans. This is not a book to read without the r...

  • The Way of Kings Part 1Brandon Sanderson
    The Way of Kings Part 1
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    Released in hardback last year, The Way of Kings was such a weighty tomb that it was decided it would need to be split into two volumes for the paperback version, lest people developed a bad back carrying it home. Reviewed here is the first part of the first novel in the Stormlight Archive, written...

  • 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...

  • Waking NightmaresChristopher Golden
    Waking Nightmares
    by Christopher Golden
    Fantasy

    Former Vampire turned powerful Mage Peter Octavian returns to investigate the small coastal town of Hawthorne in Massachusetts when the forces of darkness target the otherwise ordinary community. Since the Vatican's sorcerers are no more the magical barriers they spent hundreds of years building to...

  • When The Heavens FallMarc Turner
    When The Heavens Fall
    by Marc Turner
    Fantasy

    An epic fantasy story that begins The Chronicles of the Exile, there is a lot to like about Turner’s first book in this series. The beginning requires some perseverance. We are introduced to Luker Essendar and his former associate Gill. What follows is a very long exposition as discussion between th...

  • Whispers UndergroundBen Aaronovitch
    Whispers Underground
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    As with many urban fantasy detective novels, Whispers Underground starts with the discovery of a body. On this occasion its an American exchange student with a wealthy, politically powerful family who is found brutally murdered at the far end of the Baker street tube station. With the pressure of an...

  • We Are All Completely FineDaryl Gregory
    We Are All Completely Fine
    by Daryl Gregory
    Horror

    Cannibals ate Stan’s hands and legs. A psychopath cut Barbara open and carved pictures on her bones. They and other people with similarly intense and unbelievable experiences attend group therapy sessions at the center of Daryl Gregory’s novella We Are All Completely Fine. At the start of the story...

  • The SevenPeter Newman
    The Seven
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Seven is Peter Newman's stunning conclusion to the post-apocalyptic Vagrant Trilogy, following on from the events of The Vagrant and The Malice . A number of years have passed since the Vagrant journeyed to the Shining City with a baby Vesper and Gamma's sword. Following in her fathers footsteps...

  • The Call of Cthulhu & Other Weird StoriesHP Lovecraft

    To many, HP Lovecraft is seen as the father of modern horror and The Call of Cthulhu is undoubtedly his most famous work. Like many artists Lovecraft wasn't appreciated during his lifetime and his work only achieved success and literary recognition after his death. Collectively these weird tales (an...

  • RavencryEd McDonald
    Ravencry
    by Ed McDonald
    Fantasy

    Last year one of the most impressive debut's I read was Ed McDonald's Blackwing . It's dark, confident and bold fiction with some exceptional world-building and even finer characters, Ravencry is the sequel and does everything a sequel should, building on the best elements of the first novel and tak...

  • Sherlock Holmes and the Sussex Sea-DevilsJames Lovegrove
    Fantasy

    Sherlock Holmes and his creator may be long dead, but this has not stopped the master detective living on in the works of others. James Lovegrove has written several stories that have expanded on Arthur Conan Doyle’s legacy, but The Cthulhu Casebooks offer something very different by blending in the...

  • The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & ClayMichael Chabon
    General Fiction

    Illustration ©2018 Chris Samnee from The Folio Society edition of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay It is 1939. Forced to live together in a small New York apartment, two young men, Samuel Clay and Joseph Kavalier bond over their shared interest in comic books and cartoon art. Together, they...

  • The City of Lost FortunesBryan Camp
    Fantasy

    Post-Katrina New Orleans is haunted by history and destruction. Similar burdens are shouldered by the Street Magician Jude Dubuisson. He's got a gift of finding things people have lost - inherited from an unknown father. His gift has become an almost overwhelming curse following the storm, with so m...

  • 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...

  • CrowfallEd McDonald
    Crowfall
    by Ed McDonald
    Fantasy

    Crowfall is the third novel in Ed McDonald's Raven's Mark series, following on from Blackwing and Ravencry . If you haven't read the previous two books I recommend you do so before reading this book, or indeed this review.   Some time has passed since the events of Ravencry , and the world is change...

  • Complete DarknessMatt Adcock
    Complete Darkness
    by Matt Adcock
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction is a crowded market. There are a variety of ways in which a writer can try to tell a story that gives a sense of a possible future. Some of those ways are close to our reality, some are not. Complete Darkness by Matt Adcock certainly offers a glimpse into something futuristic. A worl...

  • Fate of the fallenKel Kade
    Fate of the fallen
    by Kel Kade
    Fantasy

    I love Fantasy, I believe it creates a sense of the epic better than any other genre. Not only do big events happen but you often get a manifest destiny. The issue can be that too much might happen. Our heroes come across so many monsters, pitfalls and dead ends that even the most ardent of Fantasy...

  • Blood of EmpireBrian McClellan
    Blood of Empire
    by Brian McClellan
    Fantasy

    Fantasy is known as an epic genre; stories can span generations and civilisations rise and fall. As a fan of the  genre,  you also notice some regula r tropes that  occur,  similar races and similar storylines.  Within the pages of  Brian Mc Clellan ’s  Powder Mage  trilogy and follow up threesome ...

  • The Head of MimirRichard Lee Byers
    The Head of Mimir
    by Richard Lee Byers
    Fantasy

    The Marvel Universe has plenty of areas to explore, it is not just  superheroes . You also have mutants, magic, aliens and so much more. Perhaps one of the hardest e lements to get your head around are the Gods of  Asgard. Suddenly, the Norse Gods of Odin and Thor are fighting alongside the likes of...

  • Zeus Is A DickSusie Donkin
    Zeus Is A Dick
    by Susie Donkin
    General Fiction

    One man’s truth is another man’s myth and whilst the Greek Gods may have once been worshipped as real, they are now considered  by most  as myths. This is great for a genre review site  as the Greek Gods are as fantastical as they come. They turn themselves and others into animals ,  have superpower...

  • Battle GroundJim Butcher
    Battle Ground
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    A brief admission to start. I've just finished Twelve Months and realised, slightly to my embarrassment, that I never actually got round to writing a review for Battle Ground . So here, six years late, is that review. I will keep this one largely spoiler-free; the events of Battle Ground are by now...

  • The 13th WitchMark Hayden
    The 13th Witch
    by Mark Hayden
    Fantasy

    I find it amazing how easy it is to miss things that are right on your doorstep. I grabbed this book online (not by choice, this was before the shops had re-opened) because I was after some easy reading. I often find good urban fantasy easy and immersive. It was only after actually picking the book...

  • HoundedKevin Hearne
    Hounded
    by Kevin Hearne
    Fantasy

    Hounded is the first book in Kevin Hearne's Iron Druid Chronicles, a series of urban fantasy novels that follow the adventures of Atticus O'Sullivan, a 2,000-year-old druid living in modern-day Arizona. The story begins with Atticus, who has managed to keep his true identity and magical abilities hi...

  • HexedKevin Hearne
    Hexed
    by Kevin Hearne
    Fantasy

    Hexed is the second book in Kevin Hearne's Iron Druid Chronicles, a series of urban fantasy novels featuring the adventures of Atticus O'Sullivan, a two-thousand-year-old druid who is trying to keep a low profile in modern-day Tempe, Arizona. The story picks up where the first book, Hounded , left o...

  • HammeredKevin Hearne
    Hammered
    by Kevin Hearne
    Fantasy

    Hammered is the third book in Kevin Hearne's Iron Druid Chronicles series, following the story of Atticus O'Sullivan, a 2,000-year-old druid who runs a bookstore in Tempe, Arizona. The plot revolves around Atticus trying to defend himself and his store from the wrath of the Norse god Thor, who has a...

  • City of Last ChancesAdrian Tchaikovsky
    City of Last Chances
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    I have read more than my fair share of fantasy novels and I love them. As a rule, they fall into a couple of camps on how they are narrated – from a single point of view, or through the eyes of several people, normally 3-7. Leaping from one character and back again works in the genre as it gives you...

  • BellatrixSimon Turney
    Bellatrix
    by Simon Turney
    General Fiction

    Given a time machine where would you travel? Reading a lot of Historic Fiction as taught me that the Roman Empire would not be my choice. Life was hard and short for many people and that included many of the emperors. It could be a challenging time to survive in. Becoming a legionary promised a bett...

  • ArcaG. R. Macallister
    Arca
    by G. R. Macallister
    Fantasy

    Fantasy is one of my favourite genres for a reason. It is a genre that can tell epic storylines through several different characters and span the years. G R Macallister’s Five Queendoms trilogy does just that focussing on the female characters. This is a land dominated by powerful Queendoms and expl...

  • InannaEmily H. Wilson
    Inanna
    by Emily H. Wilson
    Fantasy

    A lot of what goes on in Fantasy novels is miraculous, magic spells cause havoc on the battlefield, or dragons swoop through the air. Their very nature is that they are fantastical. Some of the characters are like Gods with their powers, but few claim to actually be deities. When Inanna is born, she...

  • PomegranatesPriya Sharma
    Pomegranates
    by Priya Sharma
    Science Fiction

    In the aftermath of the global pandemic, there is a darkness to the world that has yet to retreat. The way in which writers approach their craft in this moment is crucial. Some are electing to ignore it in the stories that they create, whilst others embrace the context directly in their work. In gen...

  • 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...

  • The Sun and The VoidGabriela Romero Lacruz
    The Sun and The Void
    by Gabriela Romero Lacruz
    Fantasy

    For a long time, the Fantasy genre felt very Western European. So many of the fantasy worlds seemed to be based on a version of Medieval Europe, but that has not been the case for some time now. It does not take much searching to find a book that very much still feels like fantasy but has a differen...

  • Hellwegs KeepJustin Holley
    Hellwegs Keep
    by Justin Holley
    Horror

    I have always felt that the idea of travelling space is horrific enough without the thought of added monsters or manipulations of the mind. The only thing between you and the vast vacuum of space is a few inches of steel. When you arrive on a new planet, things are not much safer. The air may be bre...

  • RedsightMeredith Mooring
    Redsight
    by Meredith Mooring
    Science Fiction

    There are space books and then there are Space Operas. What makes a good Space Opera is a sense of scale – the big and the small. Characters making decisions that define the entire Universe, but also their place in the local power struggle. Who will rule, which family? Which sect? Which Goddess? Red...

  • 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...

  • Crucible of ChaosSebastien De Castell
    Crucible of Chaos
    by Sebastien De Castell
    Fantasy

    The locked room scenario is a classic of the crime genre and does not have to mean just a locked room but the idea of a contained place that holds all the victims, suspects, and clues within. A monastery perched atop a remote island only passable when the tide is low would be a perfect place for thi...

  • House of Open WoundsAdrian Tchaikovsky
    House of Open Wounds
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    There are authors that you love because you can pick up one of their books and know what you are going to get, like putting on your favourite pair of comfortable slippers again. There is also that rarer breed of author that you love, maybe even a little bit more. Those authors that will not be pigeo...

  • Sword of the War GodTim Hodkinson
    Sword of the War God
    by Tim Hodkinson
    Fantasy

    There are ways of writing a historic epic. The current trend is more towards long drawn-out sagas over several books, sometimes up to twenty or more. This allows you to really get to know the characters and read about them for decades, keeping you and the author busy for years. They are great but ca...

  • That Which Stands OutsideMark Morris
    That Which Stands Outside
    by Mark Morris
    Horror

    What makes a good folk horror story? It is not just the tension and gruesome moments, but the feeling. You need to get the tone right. A visitor to a new place that is familiar in some ways, but alien in others. You can experience some of this unease yourself just by travelling to somewhere abroad o...

  • Marc Spector Was Host to Venom?Mike Chen
    Science Fiction

    Comics have a complex history with some storylines going back decades. Even the relatively new superheroes can have intricate lore. Moon Knight has had plenty of time to muddy the waters with almost 50 years of stories to look back on, but it is not the depth of the stories that make Moon Knight so...

  • The Country Under HeavenFrederic S Durbin
    The Country Under Heaven
    by Frederic S Durbin
    Fantasy

    Who does not love a genre mash up? The industry certainly does as they ride that Romantasy train all the way to the bank. Although I do not mind a whimsical fantasy, I would not consider it my favourite genre. A mash up of genres needs a little more bite to interest me. How about Westerns with the O...

  • Wings of Steel and FurySarah Daley
    Wings of Steel and Fury
    by Sarah Daley
    Science Fiction

    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 magic, unt...

  • Cry, VoidbringerElaine Ho
    Cry, Voidbringer
    by Elaine Ho
    Fantasy

    I enjoy a dose of Low Fantasy; a bit of grimdark and violence feels like a good counterpart to High Fantasy with its heroism and magic. A fantasy tale that is told from the muck and the trenches just feels more real, even if it is fantastic, a fantasy for our modern troubled world. But there is Low...

  • Spawn of the Serpent GodTim Waggoner
    Spawn of the Serpent God
    by Tim Waggoner
    Fantasy

    Conan has fought against Gods his whole life. The little ones that try to interfere with the ways of man, and the Old Ones that nestle in other dimensions waiting for their chance to absorb the Earth. The only God that Conan has had little trouble with is Crom, his own God, and that is because Crom...

  • First Mage on the MoonCameron Johnston
    First Mage on the Moon
    by Cameron Johnston
    Fantasy

    I like when a genre becomes so embedded that as a whole, we can play with it. This has happened for years in comic books, even the films are so prevalent now that you get plenty of leftfield superhero movies. One genre that has been around longer and has even deeper roots is Fantasy, but has it expl...

  • Aphrodite in PiecesLauren J A Bear
    Aphrodite in Pieces
    by Lauren J A Bear
    General Fiction

    I am a student of History, but even to this day there are massive blind spots in my learning, moments in the past that I know little about, so anything on the subject matter feels fresh to me. I have a passing knowledge of the Antient Greek Gods, but having read Aphrodite in Pieces by Lauren J. A. B...