Books tagged with: isolation

  • CoyoteAllen Steele
    Coyote
    by Allen Steele
    Science Fiction

    I first found this novel during a book hunt back in 2006, at that time I hadn't heard of the author however I had just read Kim Stanley Robinson's Red Mars and as such was looking for another space opera "settlement" style novel. What I found with Coyote impressed me so much that I went straight out...

  • 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...

  • Evening's EmpiresPaul McAuley
    Evening's Empires
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    Evening's Empires is the fourth novel set within the Quiet War series, although it is pretty much a stand-alone story in that universe and can be enjoyed without any prior knowledge of McAuley's works. The story follows Hari, a young man who has narrowly escaped kidnap (or worse) and as we join him...

  • Extinction GameGary Gibson
    Extinction Game
    by Gary Gibson
    Science Fiction

    Extinction Game is a clever novel that mixes a post-apocalyptic setting with parallel worlds and a thrilling plot. It all begins with Jerry Beche who believes he is the only survivor following a viral pandemic that sweeps the globe. While eking out an existence alone in the quiet wilderness that sur...

  • GatewayFrederik Pohl
    Gateway
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

    Gateway is a classic science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl. Rereading classics or old favourites is something that I've done all to seldom the last couple of years, which is both a testimony to the high quality of the book published today and the fact that I actually have the money to buy new books...

  • Hull Zero ThreeGreg Bear
    Hull Zero Three
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    A starship hurtles through the empty void of space towards an unknown destination, it's purpose and history lost in the midst of time. One man finds himself ripped from his dream of a new home and partner and awakens to the freezing cold and dark halls of Hull Zero One, a place that seems full of da...

  • I am LegendRichard Matheson
    I am Legend
    by Richard Matheson
    Science Fiction

    I am Legend is a post apocalyptic vision by Richard Matheson, created in 1954 it tells the story of Robert Neville, the last surviving human in the world, surrounded by bloodthirsty vampires - both living and undead. Part of the Gollancz SF Masterworks collection, the novel has received critical acc...

  • NodAdrian Barnes
    Nod
    by Adrian Barnes
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • PureJulianna Baggott
    Pure
    by Julianna Baggott
    Science Fiction

    I do so love a post apocalyptic tale and they often seem not very far from the reality in these times of economic turmoil. It therefore gives me great pleasure to inform you dear reader of another tale of survival after a world altering cataclysmic event. Pressia can barely remember a time before th...

  • Ready Player OneErnest Cline
    Ready Player One
    by Ernest Cline
    Science Fiction

    The smash hit science fiction debut from Cline in 2011, Ready Player One has been written about and reviewed many times since. What more can we say here at SFBook? Cline’s story is a first person narrative that describes a new virtual utopia woven out of eighties culture. The real world socio-econom...

  • 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...

  • Tales of Time and SpacePat Castaldo
    Tales of Time and Space
    by Pat Castaldo
    Science Fiction

    Tales of Time and Space is a collection of science fiction short stories by Pat Castaldo. There are 27 short stories contained within this book, all written by Pat Castaldo. The short stories are: The Immune Man Dr Barron's Boy The Pottery method My other self the test the galactic inn for sale at o...

  • 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...

  • The Big TimeFritz Leiber
    The Big Time
    by Fritz Leiber
    Science Fiction

    The Big Time won the coveted Hugo award for best novel in 1958 - the fourth novel to win such award; a science fiction story written by an author best known for his fantasy stories. It's unique in style and form, reading as much as a play as it does a novel. This feeling is re-enforced by the fact t...

  • The Big UNeal Stephenson
    The Big U
    by Neal Stephenson
    Science Fiction

    The Big U is the first novel by the award winning author Neal Stephenson. Reading the reprinting of the first (and unsuccessful) novel of a now successful author can be a mixed blessing. Sometimes there’s actually a good reason why it wasn’t that successful the first time around. The Big U has been...

  • The Black HoleAlan Dean Foster
    The Black Hole
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    Seen as how BOB has been hanging around the website for some time now (he's the robot at the top left) I thought it was about time that I reviewed The Black Hole, the book (and film) that features BOB. The book is a direct novelisation of the 1979 Disney film of the same name, written by Alan Dean F...

  • The Boat of a Million YearsPoul Anderson
    The Boat of a Million Years
    by Poul Anderson
    Science Fiction

    The Boat of a Million Years is a science fiction novel by Poul William Anderson. Starting in the year 310BC and taking us beyond our present day, The Boat of a Million Years takes on one of Poul Anderson's favourite topics, namely longevity. Most of the book follows Hanno as he lives through a coupl...

  • 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 Darwin ElevatorJason M Hough
    The Darwin Elevator
    by Jason M Hough
    Science Fiction

    It's the 23rd Century and Earth is changed forever following the arrival in Darwin, Australia of the alien "builder" technology that provides a "tether" out into space; humanity finally has a space elevator. No-one knows why, or even if these elusive aliens will return. Some time later the planet is...

  • The Dog StarsPeter Heller
    The Dog Stars
    by Peter Heller
    Science Fiction

    Hig is a survivor, a lone pilot who's wife, friends and almost all neighbours are long dead. Living in the hanger of a small abandoned airport with only his dog and his gun-toting neighbour for company. He flies his 1956 Cessna around the perimeter looking out for trouble and occasionally sneaks off...

  • The ExplorerJames Smythe
    The Explorer
    by James Smythe
    Science Fiction

    Journalist Cormac Easton is chosen to join a group of elite astronauts as they take part in the very first manned mission into the furthest reaches of the solar system. Documenting the greatest journey of human-kind should secure his place in history as one of the outstanding explorers of the age. I...

  • 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 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 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 MartianAndy Weir
    The Martian
    by Andy Weir
    Science Fiction

    The Martian is one of those books that if many authors had attempted it, wouldn't have worked. The majority of the novel follows one man surviving on Mars with little more than a shelter, 2 rovers, a few space suits, air, water and potatoes. There are no monsters, no antagonists (unless you count th...

  • The Naked SunIsaac Asimov
    The Naked Sun
    by Isaac Asimov
    Science Fiction

    The Naked Sun is the second volume in the Robot series by Isaac Asimov. This is the second book in the Elijah Baley series. The simple fact that it's the number two in a series, gives it a couple of advantages and a couple of disadvantages. On the plus side is that we know the main characters and th...

  • The New York TrilogyPaul Auster
    The New York Trilogy
    by Paul Auster
    Science Fiction

    The New York Trilogy is a collection of 3 stories by Paul Auster. This is the first book that I've read by Poul Auster. I saw him on TV a few months ago, he read from this book and I was deeply fascinated – the way the words flowed and the richness of his voice, gripped me deeply. And then joy, joy,...

  • The PassageJustin Cronin
    The Passage
    by Justin Cronin
    Horror

    I've been aware of The Passage for years but never had chance to pick it up - even though I have family connections to the Cronin surname (although doubtfully any connection to the author!). Recently the final novel in the series was released which prompted me to begin reading. The book describes a...

  • 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 Shadow of HeavenBob Shaw
    The Shadow of Heaven
    by Bob Shaw
    Science Fiction

    The Shadow of Heaven is a science fiction novel by Bob Shaw. First copyrighted 1969, this "terrifying novel of the future" is surprisingly unjaded by time. In The Shadow of Heaven, World War III isn't the nuclear inferno as must feared at the time, but something a lot closer to what we fear today. A...

  • The Sudden Appearance of HopeClaire North
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • The Twilight of BriareusRichard Cowper
    The Twilight of Briareus
    by Richard Cowper
    Science Fiction

    The Twilight of Briareus is a science fiction novel by Richard Cowper. Getting bad weather as after-effects of a nearby supernova, seems quite reasonable, but the people of earth are in for a lot more that they had expected. Humanity wakes up on the brink of a new ice age and is forced to recognise...

  • The Wasp FactoryIain M Banks
    The Wasp Factory
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    The Wasp Factory is the stunning debut of the British author Iain M Banks. Having read everything by Iain M. Banks and finding this book while browsing my brother's bookshelves, made for some hasty rearrangements of my to-read stack. Mostly the words "first novel" on the cover intrigued me - what co...

  • Tobacco Stained Mountain GoatAndrez Bergen
    Science Fiction

    Melbourne, Australia - a metropolis that at one time was the biggest and wealthiest city in the world, ranked as one of the top three world's most liveable cities and a mecca for the arts, commerce, education, entertainment, sport and tourism. It also happens to be the only city in the world left st...

  • Twenty Trillion Leagues Under the SeaAdam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    As the name would suggest, Twenty Trillion Leagues Under the Sea takes on the classic Jules Verne 19th century novel Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea as inspiration to create a remarkably clever and entertaining novel that is in parts as thought provoking as the original must have been when it...

  • VeteranGavin Smith
    Veteran
    by Gavin Smith
    Science Fiction

    Three hundred years in the future and the world is a vastly different place with humanity fighting a seemingly endless war against an implacable alien enemy. The planet is in constant danger from alien infiltrators and religious hackers while orbital elevators allow easy access to space, a huge conv...

  • Who Goes ThereJohn W Campbell
    Who Goes There
    by John W Campbell
    Science Fiction

    "Who Goes There?" is the novella by John W Campbell on which John Carpenter based the classic film "The Thing", its presented here with another 6 short stories by the same author, mostly published within Astounded magazine in the 1930's. John W Campbell is widely regarded as being highly influential...

  • Among OthersJo Walton
    Among Others
    by Jo Walton
    Fantasy

    Among Others is about as different from any novel I have read than the Moon is from a piece of pie. It's not even a book I thought I would enjoy either, if someone had approached me and asked me to read a novel about a 15 year old girls account of her life in a boarding school - delivered in the for...

  • AutumnDavid Moody
    Autumn
    by David Moody
    Fantasy

    Autumn was originally self published and given away by the author ten years ago, since then it has been read by hundreds of thousands of people and even turned into a film starring David Carradine and Dexter Fletcher. It's now published by those fantastic people over at Gollancz and I must say that...

  • Autumn - The CityDavid Moody
    Autumn - The City
    by David Moody
    Fantasy

    Autumn - The City is the follow up to the sensational zombie novel Autumn, promising the same power and subtle horror of the first. It takes a lot of guts to start a story again right from the beginning but told from a different perspective - a brave move that could have gone horribly wrong. Instead...

  • BlackbirdsChuck Wendig
    Blackbirds
    by Chuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    Blackbirds follows the life of Miriam Black who has a singular gift (or curse) that means each time she touches someone she knows when and how they will die - vividly reliving their final moments. Still in her early twenties she's seen sights most people couldn't even imagine along with countless he...

  • Fingers and other Fantastic StoriesMarian Coman
    Fantasy

    Fingers and other Fantastic Stories is an anthology by the talented Romanian author Marian Coman, current editor in chief of the newspaper "Obiectiv - Vocea Br'ilei" and a very talented writer. Fingers is his first work to be translated from his own language and includes four short stories that were...

  • FireKristin Cashore
    Fire
    by Kristin Cashore
    Fantasy

    Fire is a fantasy novel from the new voice in fantasy, Kristin Cashore, author of Graceling. A sort of prequel to Graceling, Fire is set in a stunningly detailed, beautiful world, filled with very dangerous monsters. Fire is the name of one of the most dangerous of all, a human. Marked by her blazin...

  • Lord Foul's BaneStephen Donaldson
    Lord Foul's Bane
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    Lord Fouls Bane is the first volume in the The First Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever, written by Stephen Donaldson. Thomas Covenant was a very successful author before being diagnosed with leprosy, the wasting disease that causes fear, revulsion and even hatred in other people. Fearing...

  • MistificationKaaron Warren
    Mistification
    by Kaaron Warren
    Fantasy

    In Mistification Kaaron Warren creates a character called Marvo the magician; a stage magician whose magic is real. It’s a world where a small number of true magicians use the “mist” to keep the horrors of reality hidden from the world. It starts with Marvo trapped in an attic with his grandmother....

  • Mountain manKeith Blackmore
    Mountain man
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    Mountain Man introduces us to a world that is now mostly inhabited by the walking undead and Augustus Berry lives a day-to-day existence that is largely composed of getting drunk, foraging for supplies and preparing for the day when the Zombie horde will come up the side of the mountain and penetrat...

  • RoseannaMaj Sjowall
    Roseanna
    by Maj Sjowall
    General Fiction

    This review is written for the Killer Reads website, a fantastic resource for anything crime and thriller related. Originally written in the 1960's by the Swedish author Maj Sjowall and her partner Per Wahlöö, Roseanna is a defining point in the genre of crime fiction, not only founding the award wi...

  • SafariKeith Blackmore
    Safari
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    We are once again re-united with one of the few survivors in a world infested with the undead. Gus is a little more dishevelled than the last time we saw him, more bruised and a bit more reckless too as his daily existence of waking up, getting drunk and preparing for the inevitable zombie horde beg...

  • The Boy with the Porcelain BladeDen Patrick
    Fantasy

    Lucien de Fontein is one of the Orfano, a group who have grown-up deformed in some way and hold a strange place in society - not quite outcast but not accepted either, tormented by their deformity. Orfano are known to have powers that others do not and Lucien is as skilled a fighter as his young age...

  • The City & the CityChina Mieville
    The City & the City
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    The City & the City is an award winning and critically acclaimed novel by China Miéville. If you are a fan of science fiction or fantasy the chances are you will already be aware of this novel, not only has it won nearly every major genre award for 2010, it also received critical acclaim from almost...

  • The Death HouseSarah Pinborough
    The Death House
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

    I have been lucky enough to be one of a select few to receive an early copy of The Death House , wrapped in brown paper and twine and promising much. I have to say it's an impressive read. The story involves a unique childrens home (The Death House) where those who are found susceptible to an unexpl...

  • The Dying of the Light: IntervalJason Kristopher
    The Dying of the Light: Interval
    by Jason Kristopher
    Fantasy

    The world has ended and the few who remain are faced with a struggle to survive, not only with a lack of food and heat (not to mention any real form of civilisation) but also against the hordes of shambling undead who look to rip, tear, kill and eat not to mention the possibility of an even more dan...

  • The slow regard of silent thingsPatrick Rothfuss
    The slow regard of silent things
    by Patrick Rothfuss
    Fantasy

    There are not many authors who are willing to write "You may not like this book" right at the beginning. That's one of the things that makes Patrick Rothfuss so special though - he cares that much about his fans, his readers that he is even willing to sacrifice sales to avoid annoying them. He has a...

  • The Way InnWill Wiles
    The Way Inn
    by Will Wiles
    Fantasy

    If you've ever stayed in a Premier Inn or a Travel Lodge then you will be able to relate to "The Way Inn". It's actually one of the things I most like about staying at a Premier Inn, wherever you go you will always get the same standard. Even if it is the same layout and the same pictures on the wal...

  • The World HouseGuy Adams
    The World House
    by Guy Adams
    Fantasy

    The World House is the first novel of a two part modern fantasy, written by Guy Adams. An unassuming wooden box, small enough to hold in one hand and carved with Japanese writing, except it doesn't open as you would expect a box to, it opens the door to the most unusual house you could ever dream (o...

  • Walking the TreeKaaron Warren
    Walking the Tree
    by Kaaron Warren
    Fantasy

    Walking the tree, by Kaaron Warren (the author of Slights), is a fantasy novel set on the island Botanica. This is no ordinary island however, almost the entire space is taken up by one enormous tree. Small communities live around the coastline and depend on the tree for shelter, firewood and even m...

  • AfraidJack Kilborn
    Afraid
    by Jack Kilborn
    Horror

    This is the first book I’ve read by this author. I kind of stumbled across it by accident and I’m so glad I did. Jack Kilborn is a pen name for the author J.A Konrath, and this was his first novel writing under that name. It is a simple tale, wrote simply and in no way completely original and yet th...

  • Demon SeedDean Koontz
    Demon Seed
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    A book so good he had to write it twice? Actually that’s a fair statement to make. Demon Seed was originally written in the 70’s and then thirty years later was completely re-written. The story and plot remains the same but what Koontz has done is move the novel into the 21st century with modern day...

  • Geralds GameStephen King
    Geralds Game
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Geralds Game is a novel by the master of Horror, Stephen King. This is the first Stephen King book (please notice that I wrote book and not story) I have read that really doesn't have anything supernatural in it. Not that I missed it, GG is still a terrific story. The story starts off with Jessie an...

  • HexThomas Olde Heuvelt
    Hex
    by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
    Horror

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

  • No One Gets Out AliveAdam Nevill
    No One Gets Out Alive
    by Adam Nevill
    Horror

    Ok it’s fair to say I struggled with this book a lot more than I expected to. Promise of an English Stephen King, was lapped up by yours truly, a self-confessed King fan, add on to that the fact I’m English myself and I had a book on my hands I just had to read. The promise was far more than the act...

  • Salems LotStephen King
    Salems Lot
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Salem's Lot was Kings second published novel, following on from his success with Carrie. Written shortly after King moved to Maine (the bulk of the story was actually written before Carrie), it follows the writer Ben Mears as he moves back to the small town of Jerusalem's Lot (known locally as Salem...

  • SpankyChristopher Fowler
    Spanky
    by Christopher Fowler
    Horror

    This is the first book I have read by this author, not somebody I had ever heard of. To my surprise I discovered a large catalogue of books he has written, most of which are very popular in their own right and it is at times like these I question what I have been reading these last thirty odd years....

  • The Girl Who Loved Tom GordonStephen King
    Horror

    The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon is a novel by Stephen King. Probably one of the shortest novels by Stephen King that I've ever read. Two hundred and twenty five pages in the hardcover edition is a lot less that we are used to, but King manages to do, what he set out to do, in those pages and he does i...

  • 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...

  • At the Mountains of MadnessHP Lovecraft
    At the Mountains of Madness
    by HP Lovecraft
    Fantasy

    At the Mountains of Madness is a novella set within the Cthulhu Mythos and written by HP Lovecraft. The Barren, windswept interior of the Antarctic plateau is considered completely devoid of life until an expedition from the University of Miskatonic find strange fossils of unknown creatures along wi...

  • DefenderGX Todd
    Defender
    by GX Todd
    Science Fiction

    In the dark future of Defender , the majority of the worlds population have died. Killed by themselves and others who were listening to voices steering their horrific actions. Those who survived live in a hostile environment, unable to trust strangers and fighting over limited resources. On a long d...

  • Gun MachineWarren Ellis
    Gun Machine
    by Warren Ellis
    General Fiction

    I've been trying to expand my range of reading for a while now, crime fiction especially. I hadn't realised that the talented Warren Ellis had written a crime novel. For those who haven't heard of Ellis he's a renown British writer best known for his comic book writing. He's won seven Eagle awards a...

  • 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...

  • The WindJay Caselberg
    The Wind
    by Jay Caselberg
    Science Fiction

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

  • One WayS J Morden
    One Way
    by S J Morden
    Science Fiction

    People have been imagining life on Mars for hundreds of years but it seems to becoming an increasingly popular destination at the moment. We've got a growing number of films, games, VR "experiences" and of course books. NASA has it's own "Journey to Mars" program of sending humans there in the 2030'...

  • One of us will be dead by morningDavid Moody
    Horror

    One of us will be dead by morning . Fifteen people trapped on Skek, a small, barren island in the middle of the North Sea between the coasts of Denmark and the UK. Skek is the home of the extreme sports company Hazelton Adventure Experiences, who specialise in corporate team building in an environme...

  • Across the VoidS. K. Vaughn
    Across the Void
    by S. K. Vaughn
    Science Fiction

    On our first trip to Mars I hope that they send the best equipped, those with the skills and temperament to handle any situation that may occur. If disaster struck I would hope that these men and women would tackle the challenge dispassionately in an attempt to survive the oncoming end with as littl...

  • No WayS J Morden
    No Way
    by S J Morden
    Science Fiction

    No Way is the follow up to the gripping thriller One Way.   A perilous journey to the Red Planet by a group of convicts. Deciding that it was much more economically viable to train people that would have otherwise rotted in a jail rather than a group of experienced and highly trained Astronauts form...

  • All Roads End HereDavid Moody
    All Roads End Here
    by David Moody
    Horror

    David Moody has been writing his Hater series (which has been optioned for a film by Universal Studios) since 2006, originally with the books Hater , Dog Blood and Them or Us . Then in 2017 he started from the beginning of the story again but from a totally different perspective with  One of Us Will...

  • Magic for LiarsSarah Gailey
    Magic for Liars
    by Sarah Gailey
    Fantasy

    There are books that ruin it for anyone else. Harry Potter has basically made it impossible to make a book set in a magical school without someone saying, “rip off”. Just don’t mention to those people that The Worst Witch has been around a lot longer. Still, it takes a brave soul to set their book i...

  • 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...

  • The Best of British Fantasy 2018Jared Shurin
    Fantasy

    An exciting collection of short stories, for many different tastes. I enjoyed them all. They vary from what looks like a traditional sword and sorcery tale (but is a lot else besides), to modern myths exploring identity and the impact of childhood neglect on the adult. The characters of these storie...

  • A Boy and his Dog at the End of the WorldC A Fletcher
    Science Fiction

    As the world tears itself apart in front of us, there is something comforting about reading a good dystopian novel. If we are going to go out, at least it will not be due to zombies, bombs, viruses or all the bees dying out. Then again, it could be all of these together. Once the nuclear fallout has...

  • The Return of the Incredible Exploding ManDave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

    Failed science writer Alex Dolan is just floating along, struggling to find work when multi-billionaire Stanislaw Clayton provides a surprising, well-paid offer out of the blue. He wants Alex to write a book about the world's first privately funded high-energy physics facility - the Sioux Crossing S...

  • Echo CyclePatrick Edwards
    Echo Cycle
    by Patrick Edwards
    Science Fiction

    Above all genres, science fiction is my favourite. Why? Because anything can happen. You can have epic space battles between alien races you cannot pronounce or go in the other direction and create a subtle alternative reality where words have the power to kill. Ideas run the entire gamete and they...

  • Night TrainDavid Quantick
    Night Train
    by David Quantick
    Science Fiction

    I am not a big fan of train travel. The route I take is usually into London on a packed train. I have been made to suffer by standing all the way and having no access to the t oilets. I have considered putting this into prose form in a science fiction  thriller but  needing the loo and having sore f...

  • Hope IslandTim Major
    Hope Island
    by Tim Major
    Horror

    Kids  love them or fear them. It may seem a little odd to  be scared of   infants , but if anyone else screamed at you with a  psychopathic  rage you would probably take a step back. On  their own  they can be  manageable , but i n a  group,  they are  sometimes  scary. Even a few eight years olds ...

  • Mexican GothicSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Mexican Gothic
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    The gothic novel should always have on the cover the image of a women with a ripped and flowing dress running away in terror from an imposing stately house. This is not the cover that  Silvia Moreno-Garcia chose for  Mexican  Gothic,  but it could so easily have been. The story  begins as pure gothi...

  • Red NoiseJohn P Murphy
    Red Noise
    by John P Murphy
    Science Fiction

    There is a certain type of film that I love. It has a central character wronged in some way and this gives them the flimsy premise to basically kill all the bad guys.  Death Wish ,  John Wick ,  The Equaliser , to name  bu t a few.  Red Noise  by John P Murphy is the science fiction  equivalent  wit...

  • JuddermanD. A. Northwood
    Judderman
    by D. A. Northwood
    Horror

    Some people love the city life, there is something to do every hour of the day. I find it a little odd. You can  open the door of  your million - pound house an d have to  step over  the  passed  out  person on your step. One street can look like it is from a movie set, whilst only one road over it...

  • FearlessAllen Stroud
    Fearless
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    It's 2118 and humanity has not only got over the coronavirus, but have reached out into space - colonising the Moon, Mars, Ceres and Europa. It's still early days of mankind's expansion though and the ship Khidr is part of a small fleet who travel between the different colonies, assisting the huge c...

  • 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.  ...

  • Velvet Was the NightSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Velvet Was the Night
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    General Fiction

    I love to read as books transport me to places and worlds that I have never been and can never go. In most cases these are fantasy or science fiction worlds, but there are a lot of places in our own history that seem just as exciting and different. 1970s Mexico is nothing like the country I grew up...

  • The CabinetUn-Su Kim
    The Cabinet
    by Un-Su Kim
    Science Fiction

    I love genre fiction that deals with people who have developed superpowers;  X-Men ,  The 4400 ,  The Boys . All of them have ordinary people gaining extraordinary powers. Some become superheroes, other supervillains. However, what about those mutations that are a little naff? Do you deserve to be s...

  • 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...

  • World's EdgeDavid Hair
    World's Edge
    by David Hair
    Fantasy

    Fantasy books are often bulky reads. Not only this, they also often come as part of a series. A series of chunky books. That is a lot of story to tell and the trickiest part is the middle. Book one introduces you to the characters, while the final book concludes all that has gone before. How do you...

  • All the White SpacesAlly Wilkes
    All the White Spaces
    by Ally Wilkes
    Horror

    There are places on the planet that are scary enough on their own. You would never find me plunging the depth of the deepest oceans or spending the night in an abandoned greenhouse somewhere in a wild forest. There are dangers aplenty without any monsters, ghoulies or manifestations. Add to this lis...

  • Braking DayAdam Oyebanji
    Braking Day
    by Adam Oyebanji
    Science Fiction

    When we colonise space, I hope that we send out the brightest and the best. These people will represent the absolute best that humanity has to offer, but what happens if the journey is a long one? The bright young things are not going to live to see the destination in 150 years, but their great-grea...

  • PlutoshineLucy Kissick
    Plutoshine
    by Lucy Kissick
    Science Fiction

    The concept of humankind travelling to other planets to colonise has been a staple of science fiction for decades and as the world in which we inhabit becomes increasingly tricky for humans to live on, the novels are set to keep on rolling. Some are action pieces, some concentrate on the colonists t...

  • MaliceHeather Walter
    Malice
    by Heather Walter
    Fantasy

    Are villains made or are they born? I believe more in nurture over nature, that someone is not born inherently evil but is made so by their experiences. Alyce is not a bad person, but her heritage as half-Vila makes her a pariah in the Kingdom of Briar. The people hate her, but her elixirs are usefu...

  • CackleRachel Harrison
    Cackle
    by Rachel Harrison
    Fantasy

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

  • The HollowsDaniel Church
    The Hollows
    by Daniel Church
    Horror

    Humans fear the dark and we fear the cold. There is good reason for this. In our modern world we can wrap up warm in a synthetic coat and take along a torch that can be seen from space, but that was not always true. The dark used to mean the unknown. Animals or something else preying on you. The col...

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

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

  • IsolationDan Coxon
    Isolation
    by Dan Coxon
    Horror

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

  • 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...

  • What Moves the DeadT Kingfisher
    What Moves the Dead
    by T Kingfisher
    Horror

    There has been somewhat of a renewed interest in all things fungi since the Last of Us depicted a post-apocalyptic world ravaged by such an infection that could spread to humans. It's one of those things that at first glance seems worryingly within the realm of possibility, all too well described in...

  • Untamed ShoreSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Untamed Shore
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    General Fiction

    One of the wonderful things about reading is finding that next great author that you love. You read one of their books and instantly spend the next few days hunting down their back catalogue. Experience has taught me not to read too many of these in a row as you start to see parallels in the books –...

  • 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...

  • The Others of EdenwellVerity M Holloway
    The Others of Edenwell
    by Verity M Holloway
    Horror

    Societies’ relationship with death has changed through the ages. With developments in healthcare and longer lifespans the modern world seems to want to forget that death exists, you are dropped into a lonely pit of grief while others continue to live around you. Good health was not always easy and u...

  • PromiseChristi Nogle
    Promise
    by Christi Nogle
    Science Fiction

    I set a high bar set for science fiction short story collections that is in no way the fault of any modern author. Unfortunately for them I read The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury at an influential age. I rate a collection against the creepy science fiction/horror tones that Bradbury was able to cr...

  • The Graveyard ShiftMaria Lewis
    The Graveyard Shift
    by Maria Lewis
    Horror

    I love listening to the radio, but even I struggle when it gets late at night. Suddenly the airwaves are packed with novelty DJs using all their shtick to ‘entertain’ the few remaining listeners. It is even worse if you live in London, when the light fades the pirate radios stations come out to play...

  • 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...

  • One Eye Opened In That Other PlaceChristi Nogle
    Fantasy

    Not all authors write short fiction and those that do, do not always have enough to fill a complete collection, never mind several. Christi Nogle is a talented short story writer as their previous collections have already shown. One Eye Opened in That Other Place is one of the trickier collections t...

  • SmothermossAlisa Alering
    Smothermoss
    by Alisa Alering
    Fantasy

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

  • 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...

  • InspirationDavid Churcher-Muria
    Inspiration
    by David Churcher-Muria
    Science Fiction

    There are all diverse types of people that make a successful working environment. If everyone were the same, we would all be doing the same thing and loads of stuff would not get done. Some people like to stand out in the crowd and pitch ideas, others are happy to lead. Engineer may be the second in...

  • HoneycombS B Caves
    Honeycomb
    by S B Caves
    Science Fiction

    Before a drug is allowed onto the marketplace, it must undergo rigorous tests. Firstly on animals and then eventually on humans. These tests will determine what side effects there are, and in many cases, there will be side effects. Do the positives outweigh the negatives? If a wonder drug saves the...

  • Folk HorrorPaul Kane
    Folk Horror
    by Paul Kane
    Horror

    There is an art to the short story, and I can say from experience that Flame Tree Press have gotten it down. They have produced many excellent short story collections, and their new venture is the Beyond & Within series. In many ways these books are the same as their larger collections, handpicked,...

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

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

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

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

  • The House of Last ResortChristopher Golden
    The House of Last Resort
    by Christopher Golden
    Horror

    You do not have to travel as far as Italy to get a bargain house, but I like the hills and sunshine of Sicily over a row of abandoned terrace housing in the wet UK. In the past you could pick up houses for as little as £1/€1 in both these places as the local councils encouraged younger people to mov...

  • Unto leviathanRichard Paul Russo
    Unto leviathan
    by Richard Paul Russo
    Science Fiction

    Unto Leviathan was originally released back in 2001, under the title Ship of fools , winning the Philip K Dick award in the process. It's since been re-released by Orbit under the current title. The generational ship Aragonos  travels the galaxy, looking for signs of life and a possible place to cal...

  • SymbioteMichael Nayak
    Symbiote
    by Michael Nayak
    Science Fiction

    The thought of travelling to space and living on the International Space Station has no interest to me. Stuck in a metal box, isolated, miles away from civilisation with only the same people as company sound like a one-way ticket to madness. You do not need to go into space to create such a feeling....

  • A Forest, DarklyA G Slatter
    A Forest, Darkly
    by A G Slatter
    Fantasy

    Dealing with major changes in your life is not easy. You can find help in your community, but when you are a Witch who is hunted down, this is not so simple. Any other Witch that you come across is also being hunted or is too young to know what to do and needs a mentor. All Merhrab wants is to be le...

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

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

  • The Night ShipAlex Woodroe
    The Night Ship
    by Alex Woodroe
    Horror

    One of the wonderful things about genre fiction is that an author does not have to explain what is going on if they do not want to. Science Fiction often goes into great detail trying to explain the science, but sometimes it just happens to be set on a remote alien planet – deal with it. In Alex Woo...