Books tagged with: grim

  • Ada KingE M Faulds
    Ada King
    by E M Faulds
    Science Fiction

    Cyberpunk has always concerned itself with the transformational relationship of man and machine. Times and technology changes, but the contemporary cyberpunk story is still concerned with this and Ada King by E. M. Faulds wholeheartedly embraces that essence whilst invoking new dystopian themes and...

  • Azanian BridgesNick Wood
    Azanian Bridges
    by Nick Wood
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction set in the near future, Azanian Bridges is a rough diamond, drawing on a variety of influences to deliver a real and wrenching story. Our setting is an alternative South Africa, where Mandela was never released and Apartheid didn’t end. We follow two characters, Martin and Sibusiso a...

  • BlopeSean Benham
    Blope
    by Sean Benham
    Science Fiction

    Blope is about segregation, plastic surgery gone wrong, and all sorts of messed up religion. For a little background, it is basically another version of history where the American Southwest becomes part of an extreme Taiwanese empire. Its ruler uses the American Southwest as an experiment & segregat...

  • Children of the ThunderJohn Brunner
    Children of the Thunder
    by John Brunner
    Science Fiction

    Children of the Thunder is a science fiction novel by John Brunner. John Brunner has written a really wonderful book 'THE SHEEP LOOK UP' that I should probably re-read. This book came close but not quite to the despondancy that Earth is supposed to face in the present/near future. There is developin...

  • Creation MachineAndrew Bannister
    Creation Machine
    by Andrew Bannister
    Science Fiction

    I’m always guilty of making snap judgements of books and their covers. Sci-fi covers don’t tend to help. Andrew Bannister’s The Creation Machine is not going to draw you in with its generic spaceship framed by a generic planet, and the woefully reductive, sensationalist logline of ‘It helped create...

  • CronixJames Hider
    Cronix
    by James Hider
    Science Fiction

    Cronix starts off with the old and rather underplayed question of what happens when we’re able to upload our minds into virtual reality, and everyone wanders off into imaginary fairylands. As I’ve personally spent many days in a gaming induced haze punctuated by sporadic breaks for work or food, I’v...

  • Dark SeekerK W Jeter
    Dark Seeker
    by K W Jeter
    Science Fiction

    Dark Seeker is a speculative fiction novel by K W Jeter. This is basically a horror novel with group drug use/experimentation as the theme. Like a Tim powers or Phil dick book it's got a skewed version of Los Angeles where a group of kids under a university teacher -and a off track manipulative drif...

  • 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...

  • EdgeThomas Blackthorne
    Edge
    by Thomas Blackthorne
    Science Fiction

    Edge is the first volume in an original science fiction story by John Meaney, writing under the name Thomas Blackthorne. Based in a near future britain, carrying knives has been legalised and a system of dueling to settle arguments now exists which is sensationalized with the TV show Knife Edge wher...

  • Furnace: Death SentenceAlexander Gordon Smith
    Furnace: Death Sentence
    by Alexander Gordon Smith
    Science Fiction

    Furnace: Death Sentence is the third volume in the Furnace series, a young adult science fiction series of books, written by Alexander Gordon Smith. The Furnace is a juvenile prison located one mile beneath the surface of the earth, where kids are sentenced to life imprisonment and where dying isn't...

  • Furnace: SolitaryAlexander Gordon Smith
    Furnace: Solitary
    by Alexander Gordon Smith
    Science Fiction

    Furnace: Solitary is a young adult science fiction novel, the second volume in the Furnace series by Alexander Gordon Smith. Furnace Prison is located a mile beneath the surface of the planet, a place where juveniles are sentenced to life imprisonment with no hope of release, a place where death is...

  • GhostmakerDan Abnett
    Ghostmaker
    by Dan Abnett
    Science Fiction

    The second novel in the Warhammer 40k Gaunt's Ghosts Series and written by that insanely talented author Dan Abnett, Ghostmaker acts as a reflection on the history of the Ghost's and focuses on telling the story of the major characters within the regiment. This is done through the use of connected s...

  • Iron WarriorsGraham McNeill
    Iron Warriors
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    On the dark and bloody battlefields of the Warhammer 40k universe few enemies incite more dread than the merciless Chaos Space Marines. Spreading terror and destruction in their wake, they have fought against their hated Space marine brethren for a millennia. The Iron Warriors are brutal even amongs...

  • Legion of the DamnedRob Sanders
    Legion of the Damned
    by Rob Sanders
    Science Fiction

    Berserker chaos marine chapter the World Eaters are blazing a path of destruction across the galaxy, following in the path of a weird, blood-red comet which holds portents of doom. The small cemetery world of Certus Minor is one such planet along this celestial bodies route and the Excoriators chapt...

  • LoveDeathDan Simmons
    LoveDeath
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    LoveDeath is a speculative fiction novel by the award winning author Dan Simmons. I met Simmons at a recent Danish book fair and had a small talk with him about the range of his published work and the problem of categorising books. Not being a very well read Simmons fan (The Hyperion Cantos and Carr...

  • MoonFallAG Wyatt
    MoonFall
    by AG Wyatt
    Science Fiction

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

  • NoirK W Jeter
    Noir
    by K W Jeter
    Science Fiction

    Noir is a science fiction novel by K W Jeter. NOIR.....Hohoho! What a way to go! Corpses in this book aren't allowed to die, they go into debt and are kept from the grave to hang out on the dead side of what was L.A. (now the Gloss) to wait for some job so they can be buried. X shaped pupils. One gu...

  • PerfectionNick Kyme
    Perfection
    by Nick Kyme
    Science Fiction

    Perfection, an audio drama from those wonderful people at Black Library; this time we are welcomed with the words of Nick Kyme who writes about those colourful, chaotic characters of the Slaaneshi Space Marines. The warped warriors of chaos have beseiged the world of Vardask and things look pretty b...

  • PhalanxBen Counter
    Phalanx
    by Ben Counter
    Science Fiction

    The gargantuan star fort of the Imperial Fists, the Phalanx is to be the host for half a dozen Space Marine Chapters. Along with Inquisitors, Sisters of Battle and agents of the Adeptus Mechanicus they will witness a darkly historic event - the end of a Space Marine chapter. After the events of Hell...

  • School's Out ForeverScott K Andrews
    School's Out Forever
    by Scott K Andrews
    Science Fiction

    Sometimes I feel that reading post-apocalyptic tales are less an escape and more training for the future, after all as a race we aren't doing a great job of preventing this self-destructive outcome. Luckily there is no shortage of literature to teach us about survival in a future wasteland and Schoo...

  • Space MarineIan Watson
    Space Marine
    by Ian Watson
    Science Fiction

    Space Marine is a rare novel that is set in the Warhammer 40k universe, written by Ian Watson. Space Marine is essentially a piece of history in the Warhammer 40k universe, but one that Games Workshop doesn't actually agree with, and was never re-printed. The novel itself no longer "fit's in" with t...

  • The DamagedSimon Law
    The Damaged
    by Simon Law
    Science Fiction

    Horror comes in different guises, it can be dark, chilling, violent, bloody and psychological; Simon Law’s second novel The Damaged is all of these themes. The story starts in 1987 during ‘The Great Storm’. Law does a great job of writing about the eighties that is both familiar to those who remembe...

  • The Emperor's GiftAaron Dembski-Bowden
    The Emperor's Gift
    by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
    Science Fiction

    The legendary Grey Knights are all that stand between mankind and the horrors of chaos. Secret Guardians who journey into the very realms of the warp and beyond in pursuit of the enemy; to most they and their foes are nothing more than myth and legend, those are the lucky ones. The fortress of Titan...

  • The EmpireElizabeth Lang
    The Empire
    by Elizabeth Lang
    Science Fiction

    The Empire is a science fiction space opera by Elizabeth Lang. The Centuries old war with Andromedans is heating up and the Empire is the only force that can stand it's way. One brilliant scientist may hold the key to a weapon that could swing the tide and save the galaxy but the method's of the Emp...

  • The GenocidesThomas M Disch
    The Genocides
    by Thomas M Disch
    Science Fiction

    The Genocides is a classic science fiction novel by Thomas M Disch. In this post apocalyptic tale of vegetable domination, the earth has been overtaken by a strain of alpha plants... massive and imposing, they suck up all the resources and wreak major havoc on the ecosystem. In just 7 years these gr...

  • The Violent CenturyLavie Tidhar
    The Violent Century
    by Lavie Tidhar
    Science Fiction

    The Violent Century has been one of my Holiday reads, a book I bought when it first appeared but had not had time to enjoy until now. It has to be said that Lavie Tidhar is a master linguist. His voice is confident, it's boldy unique and daring. With The Violent Century the author turns his attentio...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Dorothy The Darker Side of OzScott Stanford
    Dorothy The Darker Side of Oz
    by Scott Stanford
    Fantasy

    Dorothy The Darker Side of Oz by Scott Stanford is a modern, dark interpretation of the classic "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" (originally written by L. Frank Baum). Having seen the original film a number of times (not a fan but the family are) and not actually having read the book, my interpretation...

  • Dragon QueenStephen Deas
    Dragon Queen
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    The fifth book in the dragon series by Stephen Deas, Dragon Queen is certainly value by weight of pages. The previous tale, The Black Mausoleum weighed in at just over three hundred in the mass market paperback, whereas Dragon Queen is twice that and a little more. The first trilogy of Deas’ story i...

  • 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...

  • Fire SeaWeis and Hickman
    Fire Sea
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    Abarrach, the World of Stone is just that: lava, stone, poisonous fumes, and precious little food that can be grown. The peoples of Abarrach rely on giant rune-inscribed stone pillars called colossi to provide warmth and breathable atmosphere, but the colossi have been failing slowly for many years....

  • HellifaxKeith Blackmore
    Hellifax
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    Another episode is the Mountain Man series always brings a degree of eagerness; not only with knowledge that you just know the dialogue will be entertaining but in the authors wonderfully rewarding tone too; Hellifax is no exception. Gus, the reluctant hero of the previous two Mountain Man novels is...

  • Kells LegendAndy Remic
    Kells Legend
    by Andy Remic
    Fantasy

    Kells Legend is the first volume in the Clockwork Vampires Chronicles and has been written by Andy Remic. Without warning came the vast albino army, the army of iron, invading Falanor from the north. To have any hope of survival a small band set off to warn the King. The band leaves quickly and with...

  • Sharp EndsJoe Abercrombie
    Sharp Ends
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

    There is much to like about Joe Abercrombie, particularly when he returns to his darker writing, as published by Gollancz. One of the founders of the ‘grimdark’ movement, Abercrombie’s gritty brand of fantasy delivers real consequences and hard bitten characters in all the different adventures he ha...

  • SplinteredJamie Schultz
    Splintered
    by Jamie Schultz
    Fantasy

    If you like your urban fantasy dark and gruesome with an added touch of horror, Splintered and its predecessor Premonitions are right up your alley. This sequel picks up shortly after the first book, following Anna Ruiz and the rest of the crew. Since the events of the previous novel, Karyn is out o...

  • 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 MausoleumStephen Deas
    The Black Mausoleum
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    The fourth of Stephen Deas’ series, published in 2012, The Black Mausoleum picks up the story of Deas’ Dragon Realms sometime after the events of book three, The Order of the Scales .  This is a wise choice as the epic conclusion to the first trilogy of books left such a scattering of story pieces i...

  • The Illearth WarStephen Donaldson
    The Illearth War
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    The Illearth War follows straight on from the events in Lord Foul's Bane and just as Thomas Covenant is getting used to the idea that his recent experiences were just a dream he is again summoned to the Land. On his return however he discovers that 40 years have passed in his absence with the Counci...

  • The Return ManV. M. Zito
    The Return Man
    by V. M. Zito
    Fantasy

    The Return man is a post-apocalyptic Zombie novel that manages to offer a few surprises and original ideas in this rapidly expanded sub-genre. The story goes that a mass "outbreak" divides America in two, on the east the untouched survivors remain safe while the west has become truly wild - a ravage...

  • The Sad Tale of the Brothers GrossbartJesse Bullington
    Fantasy

    The Sad Tale of the Brothers Grossbart is a dark fantasy novel, the debut of Jesse Bullington. The year is 1364 and in the plague infested, devil-haunted darkness of Medieval Europe most of the population struggle to survive, living in abject poverty while the opulent few enjoy a life of luxury. The...

  • The Straight Razor CureDaniel Polansky
    The Straight Razor Cure
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    The greatest city in the Thirteen Lands, Rigus stands as a radiant hub of grandiose manors and sparkling citadels. It's a place where nobility rules and disagreements are settled with honourable duels. In the shadow of this glory sits Low Town, a vast warren of dark, narrow streets, dirty alleys and...

  • Viking DeadToby Venables
    Viking Dead
    by Toby Venables
    Fantasy

    Viking Dead is a dark fantasy novel by Toby Venables, part of the "Tomb of the Dead" collection published by Abaddon Books. Bjolf, son of Earling is the captain and leader of the Viking raiding ship "Raven" who after reluctantly fleeing from a raid gone wrong find themselves sailing into very strang...

  • Zombies: A CompendiumOtto Penzler
    Zombies: A Compendium
    by Otto Penzler
    Fantasy

    Brains, Brains, BRAINS!, you just have to love those lurching, decaying animated corpses. The living dead make a great enemy and here we have wall-to-wall flesh eating monsters, ghouls and things that go bite in the night, brought to (un)life by some of the best horror and fantasy writers in the wor...

  • Darkness ComesDean Koontz
    Darkness Comes
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    Review by Arron Clegg. (*Darkness Comes is also known as Darkfall). In his early days Dean spent a lot of time trying different genres out and attempting different writing styles. Nowadays he is more famous for writing about events and stories which are very feasible in the modern world. Sometimes t...

  • FiendPeter Stenson
    Fiend
    by Peter Stenson
    Horror

    It’s a book about drugs. No it’s a book about zombies. Wrong again, it’s a book about love, hope and the desire we have to be better people. It is all of these and so much more. Peter’s creations of zombies being referred to as Chucks due to the fact that they are always chuckling and giggling bring...

  • SlugsShaun Hutson
    Slugs
    by Shaun Hutson
    Horror

    Ok so we all know who Shaun Hutson is, and asked to name some of his works then Slugs is more than likely to be in the answer bank, most people probably know that it was even his first novel. What they may not know however, unless they have read up on the guy is that he is a die-hard Iron Maiden fan...

  • The Long MidnightEd Gorman
    The Long Midnight
    by Ed Gorman
    Horror

    I remember seeing Ed’s books in shops when I was younger, mysterious front covers that looked interesting but back covers that sounded just a bit, well, naff. You then look closer and read things like "Master of Dark Suspense", Koontz stating that, "Gorman’s writing is strong, fast and sleek as a bu...

  • The Whispering DeathSara Jayne Townsend
    The Whispering Death
    by Sara Jayne Townsend
    Horror

    Live roleplaying, ritual sacrifice and 14 th century magic. There’s a lot of buttons being pushed right upfront in Sara Townsend’s very English hobby horror. We begin amidst a woodland adventure with our main characters introduced in a blur between real (fictional) life and their fantasy characters...

  • VictimsShaun Hutson
    Victims
    by Shaun Hutson
    Horror

    Back in his heyday Shaun Hutson was a prolific writer of horror novels. When people ask what defines a horror novel, depending on who you ask, you will get a plethora of answers. The horror genre has changed so much over the years as also the number and type of things people are frightened of has ch...

  • Shovel ReadyAdam Sternbergh
    Shovel Ready
    by Adam Sternbergh
    Science Fiction

    I found this book on Amazon while generally having a browse around and put it on my wish list for Christmas (yes, last Christmas). I finally got round to reading it, I'm glad I did! Shovel Ready is set in a near future New York that has suffered much since a dirty bomb hit Times Square and the refus...

  • 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...

  • A Time for GriefAdrian Tchaikovsky
    A Time for Grief
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    This is the second in the series of books of short stories in the shadows of the apt world from Newcon Press written by Adrian Tchaikovsky.  You don't need to have read Tales of the Apt book 1, Spoils of War, to appreciate this one, but it would probably help if you were familiar with the world as a...

  • BlackwingEd McDonald
    Blackwing
    by Ed McDonald
    Fantasy

    Blackwing is a book that suprised me more than any other has so far this year. It's the debut of Ed McDonald and boy what a way to make an entrance. The book follows Galharrow, leader of the mercenary squad known as Blackwing. Galharrow and his band take on jobs most would consider too dangerous, es...

  • The Real-Town MurdersAdam Roberts
    The Real-Town Murders
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    One of the (many) things I like about Adam Robert's stories is that they are always full of big ideas and The Real-Town Murders is no exception. This time the author has written a future-noir crime story which revolves around the "locked room mystery". A popular subgenre in it's own right, "locked r...

  • AustralPaul McAuley
    Austral
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    Paul McAuley is a vastly under-appreciated author. His books are inspiring, hypnotic and inventive. Austral is all of these and more, a book set in a plausible, climate-changed future where the planet has a new continent with a partial thawing of the Antarctic. There are still vast vistas of ice but...

  • The Seventh DecimateStephen Donaldson
    The Seventh Decimate
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Science Fiction

    A new fantasy series from Stephen Donaldson, the author of the Thomas Covenant chronicles and the two Mordant’s Need novels. The first book, The Seventh Decimate tells the story of the war between the nations of Amika and Belleger that has raged for generations. Its roots lie in the distant past, be...

  • ShelterDave Hutchinson
    Shelter
    by Dave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

    Hutchinson's writing has, at times, turned out to be worryingly prophetic - he wrote about the break-up of the European Union while Brexit was just a twinkle in David Cameron's eye, in his astounding Fractured Europe series. This time he's writing about life in rural England after an apocalypse. Wor...

  • The Bad NeighbourDavid Tallerman
    The Bad Neighbour
    by David Tallerman
    Horror

    Ollie Clay is a supply teacher who inherits fifty thousand pounds and spends it on a house. It turns out the house is next door to a neo Nazi called Chas Walker. Walker’s anti-social behaviour contributes to Clay’s life spiralling downhill, until he tries to take matters into his own hands and force...

  • The Mouth of the DarkTim Waggoner
    The Mouth of the Dark
    by Tim Waggoner
    Horror

    The very nature of horror means that it should not always be a pleasant read. You should be unsettled, scared and perhaps even disgusted at times, but a balance must be struck. If an author is failing to get genuine scares into their book they may resort to cheap tricks such as writing things so gro...

  • Batman: The Killing JokeChrista Faust
    Batman: The Killing Joke
    by Christa Faust
    Science Fiction

    The Batman Universe comes in all shades as long as they are dark blue, dark grey or black. You have your lighter fare such as LEGO Batman or the 60s incarnation and you also have your darker versions. Tim Burton’s Batman was dark, Christopher Nolan’s was darker still, but both owe homage to the iter...

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

    There is a huge difference between a battle and a war. You can lose one, but still be victorious in the other. Or indeed win a battle, but overall be on the losing side. Brian McClellan’s latest trilogy set in the Powder Mage universe shows that even in a fantasy setting, war is hell. Whilst in Sins...

  • Sky in the DeepAdrienne Young
    Sky in the Deep
    by Adrienne Young
    Fantasy

    Heroic Fantasy doesn't always get the credit it deserves, but when done well can be powerful, energetic and immersive fiction.  Sky in the Deep is one of the best examples of recent times and an equal to Gemmell's past stories. The story follows Eelyn, a member of the Aska clan. She's been raised as...

  • Call Him MineTim MacGabhann
    Call Him Mine
    by Tim MacGabhann
    General Fiction

    The politicians in Mexico seriously need to have a word with whoever is in charge with promoting their country. This vast and gorgeous nation is increasingly being known more for its hideous crimes. With drug cartels running rife and corrupt police it seems that a fresh murder happens every few minu...

  • 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...

  • Echoes of WarCheryl Campbell
    Echoes of War
    by Cheryl Campbell
    Science Fiction

    In Cheryl Campbell's vision of the future, humanity finds itself enslaved by a genocidal faction of an alien race known as the Wardens. Decades of war has left much of the planet in ruins and threatens the existence of any human (or alien) who offer any form of resistance. Dani thought she had survi...

  • The Triumph of the Spider MonkeyJoyce Carol Oates
    The Triumph of the Spider Monkey
    by Joyce Carol Oates
    General Fiction

    A lot of crime fiction is told from the prospective of an investigator. We follow them as they stumble across clues and finally get their suspect. This method provides structure and cohesion as even amateur sleuths follow some sort of logical pattern. Authors such as John Sandford and his Prey serie...

  • Blood of an exileBrian Naslund
    Blood of an exile
    by Brian Naslund
    Fantasy

    Once a noble lord, after a failure on the field of battle, Silas Bershad "The Flawless" was stripped of all titles and forced into the life of a dragonslayer, moving from one perilous hunt to the next. Stalking dragons and collecting their valuable oil, his only escape seems to be death. But death h...

  • Dark InkGary Kemble
    Dark Ink
    by Gary Kemble
    Horror

    People have power over on another. Someone who is charismatic may be able to manipulate others to do their bidding even against their own best interests. The opposite sex can also have power. What would you do to be with the partner you love/lust  for ? Mistress Hel is a Dominatrix who  speciali s e...

  • Alpha OmegaNicholas Bowling
    Alpha Omega
    by Nicholas Bowling
    Science Fiction

    If you read enough Near Future fiction you will start to see a trend. The future is not orange at all but bleak and a little depressing. It could be giant robots, aliens or the undead. There always seems to be something around the corner that is more dystopian  than utopian. I can take all the UFOs...

  • Shadow FallAlexander Freed
    Shadow Fall
    by Alexander Freed
    Science Fiction

    If you look at the Star Wars timeline from afar it can seem a little depressing. An Old Republic falls only for an Empire to rise. That goes and you get The New Order. It seems that the rebels are always having to rebel against something.  However, for the Sith to rise, there  must  be moments when...

  • The Book of MalachiT C Farren
    The Book of Malachi
    by T C Farren
    Science Fiction

    The way that humans treat each other in real life is far darker and harrowing than any science fiction book that you can create, but this does not stop some authors from exploring the depths of the  human  condi tion. If we are only as good as how we treat the weakest in society, the people who inha...

  • RavenspurConn Iggulden
    Ravenspur
    by Conn Iggulden
    General Fiction

    I love Fantasy as a genre but sometimes I get the impression that it only exists because we can only retell our own history so many times. Tales of various houses fighting for the crown , treachery, murder, a cast of heroes of villains. I am not talking about the likes of  Game of Thrones  but our o...

  • Judge Dredd: AmericaJohn Wagner
    Judge Dredd: America
    by John Wagner
    Science Fiction

    Growing up my group of friends was obsessed with America and  all wanted to move there. They had all been taken in by the glossy American films and TV shows that suggested that even if you were  unemployed, you would own a swanky loft apartment. I had relatives who live there and was far more aware...

  • Ten LowStark Holborn
    Ten Low
    by Stark Holborn
    Science Fiction

    The best Science Fiction will tell a story, but also build a world. I prefer my tales to hint about the wider world and what happened to land the protagonists in their current position. Take Ten Low for example, a medic who roams a dusty moon. Her only goal in life is to survive and help others that...

  • The Gauntlet and the Fist BeneathIan Green
    Fantasy

    People moan about the rain, but I don’t always mind it. Many of my best memories of childhood are of sleeping under canvas and listening to the patter of rain, safe in the knowledge that I am all snuggly in my sleeping bag and close to loved ones. These fond memories would have quickly turned to ter...

  • The HoodLavie Tidhar
    The Hood
    by Lavie Tidhar
    Fantasy

    The legend of Robin Hood has changed over the years. I know it is hard to believe but he was not always imagined as a mullet haired Kevin Costner trying to save Nottingham with a dodgy English accent. One element of the story that has fallen out of fashion is Robin Hood’s links with the world of Fae...

  • HellSansEver Dundas
    HellSans
    by Ever Dundas
    Science Fiction

    Typography has a larger role in your life than you may think. It is important to get the right font in the right place. No one wants to have Beware of the Cliff written in Comic Sans. Advertisers spend millions on typefaces to make a brand instantly recognisable. All these things are noble pursuits,...

  • LeechHiron Ennes
    Leech
    by Hiron Ennes
    Horror

    We have all come to loath the Flu virus and its even worse cousin, but how are we as humans to prevent the spread of life? It will find a way. For mammals it is making babies, for a virus it is infiltrating a host and multiplying, then moving onto the next host. The virus does not care that it destr...

  • How to Sell a Haunted HouseGrady Hendrix
    How to Sell a Haunted House
    by Grady Hendrix
    Horror

    Any house of a decent age is haunted. There are no spectres, but there are ghosts of memories, the people that lived and died there over the years. I grew up in a house that was once a Victorian police station and then a Greengrocers. As I moved out, my parents stayed. When they left, instead of mov...

  • 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...

  • VagabonderR T Coleman
    Vagabonder
    by R T Coleman
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction is one of the best genres because you can explore subjects via a prism of the future. Writing a book about how we treat others does not have to be told via a historic story, or the present, you can look far to the future and draw parallels between that world and ours. What would happ...

  • Maeve FlyC J Leede
    Maeve Fly
    by C J Leede
    Horror

    It makes me comfortable to think that we all have small voices in our heads on occasion telling us to do something. The important thing is to only listen to them when they are giving good advice. Ask that person out – sounds scary, but a good plan. Put that spoon in between your teeth and twist – ba...

  • Anatomy of a KillerRomy Hausmann
    Anatomy of a Killer
    by Romy Hausmann
    General Fiction

    Having watched plenty of True Crime documentaries I am often struck how loyal some friends and family are to the criminal. They have been convicted of the crime, but sometimes family just will not accept the outcome. Injustice is one reason, people do get sent down for something they never did, but...

  • The Lost CauseCory Doctorow
    The Lost Cause
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    As a long-term science fiction fan, it sometimes feels like we are living the books that I grew up reading. Not the flying cars and cure for cancer stories, but the ones that warned about humankind’s tendency to destroy itself. It feels like only a matter of years until Gort rocks up to give us one...

  • 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...

  • Nobody's AngelJack Clark
    Nobody's Angel
    by Jack Clark
    General Fiction

    I am of a certain age, and I recall that the 1990s was a good decade, a time of societal development and change for the better. I used to look down on those who rated the 70s as a fun decade as it seemed grim to me, but as I get older the 90s was as grim as the 70s and I am sure that the 2010s will...

  • To Kill a KingDavid Gilman
    To Kill a King
    by David Gilman
    General Fiction

    When I finally get around to building that time machine, I made a note not to visit 14 th century Europe. The continent was a hodgepodge of wars and battles. Even during times of peace you could still stumble across the wrong village, and they would kill you for your shoes. Not a century for me and...

  • These Deathless ShoresP H Low
    Fantasy

    You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain. Peter Pan is cheeky, certainly a hero, but he was also annoying and domineering. Did the Lost Boys want to stay on the island, or did Peter force them? On reflection, Peter Pan had some issues, but Disney put an airbrush t...

  • The Last ShieldCameron Johnston
    The Last Shield
    by Cameron Johnston
    Fantasy

    What is Fantasy if it is not epic battles against elves and orcs? Fans of the genre know that it can be a lot of other things than just that. Some of the best modern fantasy that I have read have been smaller stories set in fantasy worlds. How about a Die Hard-like experience set in a castle where a...

  • Empire of the VampireJay Kristoff
    Empire of the Vampire
    by Jay Kristoff
    Fantasy

    I've been meaning to read this book for quite some time. It's been staring accusingly across the room. But I'm still trying to find time to read right now and it's not the most sveltely of shapes, coming in at a weighty 730+ pages. I finally gave in, and I'm glad I did. This does invariably mean how...

  • GuillotineDelilah S. Dawson
    Guillotine
    by Delilah S. Dawson
    Horror

    There are enough stories escaping from Private Islands that makes me think that the rich do not think there are consequences for their actions. What happens on the island stays on the island. With luck, it may just be a celebrity marriage, but on the other hand it could be some of the darkest moment...

  • The RaveningDaniel Church
    The Ravening
    by Daniel Church
    Horror

    Horror comes in many shapes and sizes. The horror could be on this plane of existence, a creature that stalks you and your family through generations. It could be even closer to home, the horror of the mundane, the terror of ordinary people willing to do anything to achieve their goals, even if this...

  • Anji Kills a KingEvan Leikam
    Anji Kills a King
    by Evan Leikam
    Fantasy

    In the fantasy that I usually read Regicide is usually the goal for the end of the book. In fact, I have read entire trilogies in which the protagonist is trying to kill a royal. You get the sense that Evan Leikam is going to tackle things a little differently in Anji Kills a King when the first sce...

  • The Last ManPeter Roberts
    The Last Man
    by Peter Roberts
    Fantasy

    I found this book while wandering around the Dealers' room at EasterCon 76 (Belfast Reconnect). I had the honour of being the first person to buy the book, and had a chance to meet the author, who had travelled from the distant lands of Paris to make an appearance. I believe it's his debut novel, bu...

  • 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...

  • Coffin MoonKeith Rosson
    Coffin Moon
    by Keith Rosson
    Horror

    Vampire lore is well documented, the rules and regulations differ from book to book, but in most cases if you are a vampire, you cannot do much during the day. In modern life not being able to escape during the daylight hours after leaving a few emptied bodies would be a problem. Cameras would catch...

  • Lives of Bitter RainAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Lives of Bitter Rain
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    We only have so many books in us, and an author may just not have the time to experiment with different formats or genres, unless they are very prolific. They do not come much more prolific than Adrian Tchaikovsky, a writer who dabbles in various types of genre fiction, always bringing high quality....

  • Caesar's SpyJean-Pierre Pecau
    Caesar's Spy
    by Jean-Pierre Pecau
    General Fiction

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

  • SupermaxKen Bruen
    Supermax
    by Ken Bruen
    General Fiction

    The pulp crime genre is one of my favourite because it pushes the envelope of what is acceptable in crime. It can be a little too gory, a little too silly, a little too much, but that is what makes it so fun to read. There is a delicate balance between writing a thrilling action crime story that is...

  • Blood RivalJake Arnott
    Blood Rival
    by Jake Arnott
    General Fiction

    In fiction you can blur the real world with the fictional to give your story a sense of authenticity. This is something that Jake Arnott has done in the past taking a splash of truth, a soupcon of reality, and then blending in some fictional high-octane action. In the case of Blood Rival , there was...

  • Paved With Good IntentionsPeter Mclean
    Paved With Good Intentions
    by Peter Mclean
    Fantasy

    They say never judge a book by its cover and this is a good lesson to take heed of with Peter McLean’s Paved With Good Intentions , as the UK cover stars Eline dressed in regal splendour. You see, Eline is also someone you should not judge from by her looks. She may be presenting as a member of the...