Books tagged with: magic system

  • A Thousand SonsGraham McNeill
    A Thousand Sons
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    The Space Wolves, those fiercely loyal and dependable Space Marines are sent to Propsero to enforce the Emperors justice after the Primarch of the Thousand Sons chapter makes a serious mistake that puts the safety of the very birthplace of humanity at risk. The events of this story run parallel with...

  • All the Birds in the SkyCharlie Jane Anders
    All the Birds in the Sky
    by Charlie Jane Anders
    Science Fiction

    Just a month into the New Year and already I've found a must read book. All the Birds in the Sky is the debut novel of Charlie Jane Anders who has been editor-in-chief of the popular SF site IO9.com for quite some time. All the Birds in the Sky follows the paths of two very different people who f...

  • Apocalypses & ApostrophesJohn Barnes
    Apocalypses & Apostrophes
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Apocalypses & Apostrophes is a collection of short stories by the American author John Barnes. I think that I got the idea that Barnes is kind of weird around page 25 of Kaleidoscope Century, and nothing I've read since then has made me think otherwise. Apocalypses & Apostrophes confirms my suspici...

  • City of the Iron FishSimon Ings
    City of the Iron Fish
    by Simon Ings
    Science Fiction

    By the end of the eighteenth century, our world had become fully charted, catalogued, mapped and explored. No longer could it be imagined that beyond some distant horizon there lay a land of extraordinary wonders—a hidden utopia, for example, nestled away somewhere safe from the corrupting inf...

  • Radiant StatePeter Higgins
    Radiant State
    by Peter Higgins
    Science Fiction

    I have been eagerly waiting for this novel, more than most. I thought Wolfhound Century was that good that I chose it as Book of the year for 2013. Truth and Fear — the second volume in the series, narrowly missed out from being book of the year 2014 (That accolade going to Dave Hutchinson's Europe...

  • The Fight for Naturah: The ReclamationLloyd Blake
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Sky Is FallingLester del Rey
    The Sky Is Falling
    by Lester del Rey
    Science Fiction

    The Sky Is Falling is a speculative fiction novel by Lester del Rey. Waking up in a world of magic isn't an easy experience for, just dead, computer engineer Dave Hanson. It doesn't get any easier for him when he learns that the sky is falling and he has been destined to do something about it! Com...

  • 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...

  • Baptism of FireAndrzej Sapkowski
    Baptism of Fire
    by Andrzej Sapkowski
    Fantasy

    The Witcher series is something quite special and Baptism of Fire is no exception. Written by the talented Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski and translated by the equally talented liguist David French (who translated the previous book in the series Time of Contempt). The people behind the series have...

  • Blood of the MantisAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Blood of the Mantis
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    Blood of the Mantis is the third volume in Adrian Tchaikovsky's Shadows of the Apt sequence, published in August 2009 and following directly on from Dragonfly Falling. At three hundred and twenty pages, it is also half the length of either of its predecessors, which is the first interesting decision...

  • Breach ZoneMyke Cole
    Breach Zone
    by Myke Cole
    Fantasy

    Breach Zone is the third and final novel in Myke Cole's unique Shadow Ops series that manages to successfully blend a contemporary setting and fantasy elements with a strong military edge. Cole seems to improve with each book and Breach Zone is undoutably his best yet with a powerful backstory, alm...

  • Broken HomesBen Aaronovitch
    Broken Homes
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    Broken Homes is the fourth novel in Aaronovitch's Rivers of London series and each one gets better and better - this one though has a completely unexpected twist at the end that I guarantee will leave you breathless and have you clambering through the book looking for the clues along the way. One...

  • City of Dreams & NightmareIan Whates
    Fantasy

    City of Dreams & Nightmare is the debut novel from Ian Whates and published by Angry Robot Books. The first in a new series of novels, the story is set against the vertical city of Thaiburley. Thaiburley, known as the "City of a Hundred Rows" is an incredible creation of towering majestic heights a...

  • Cold DaysJim Butcher
    Cold Days
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    Dresden’s time as a spirit-on-a-mission in Chicago was a lot more draining then he was prepared for. Waking up from a coma, Harry realizes that his body has been preserved by the guardian spirit, Demon Reach and his new employer, the Queen of Air and Darkness. Mab, the Fairy Queen of Winter, nurses...

  • Control PointMyke Cole
    Control Point
    by Myke Cole
    Fantasy

    Have you ever wondered what would happen if someone who had military experience wrote urban fantasy? The result is Control Point, a quite brilliant blend of other-worldly fantasy and gritty combat. The novel follows the US Army Lieutenant Oscar Britton who finds himself working alongside SOC (Super...

  • Down StationSimon Morden
    Down Station
    by Simon Morden
    Fantasy

    Down Station is actually a real station on the London Underground. You can't however visit this place though, the Trains don't stop there and if you're lucky you can but catch a glimpse of it between Green Park and Hyde Park Corner on the Piccadilly Line. You can see the outside of this abandoned st...

  • 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...

  • Dragonfly FallingAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Dragonfly Falling
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    Dragonfly Falling is the second book in Adrian Tchaikovsky's Shadows of the Apt sequence, published in 2009 and following directly on from Empire in Black and Gold. The premise of the whole series, just to get this out of the way early, is insect people. Tchaikovsky has built a secondary world in wh...

  • Earthquake WeatherTim Powers
    Earthquake Weather
    by Tim Powers
    Fantasy

    Tim's middle names should be has super because there just isn't really any other explanation as to how someone can write the way he does. This is nowhere more evident than in his Fault Lines Trilogy and in particular the finale of the story — Earthquake Weather. The book is set within the San Frans...

  • 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...

  • Element KeepersEP Marcellin
    Element Keepers
    by EP Marcellin
    Fantasy

    Element Keepers: Wispers of the Wind is a fantasy novel by E.P. Marcellin. Rhet is quite content living in obscurity and performing the simple task of gutting fish for a living until one day he is spirited away by nine exotic and beautiful strangers, transported across the continent and promised a...

  • EncryptedLindsay Buroker
    Encrypted
    by Lindsay Buroker
    Fantasy

    Encrypted is a fantasy novel by Lindsay Buroker, set in the same universe as her previous novel "The Emperor's Edge". Tikaya Komitopis is one of the great "hero's" of the war, instrumental in snatching a resounding victory from the jaws of defeat. She isn't however a fearless war hero or a calculat...

  • Fire StudyMaria V Snyder
    Fire Study
    by Maria V Snyder
    Fantasy

    In the sensational sequel to Poison Study and Magic Study, Yelena's apprenticeship is over - now her real test has begun. When word that Yelena is a Soulfinder - able to capture and release souls - spreads like wildfire, people grow uneasy. Already Yelena's unusual abilities and past have set her ap...

  • FlamecasterCinda Williams Chima
    Flamecaster
    by Cinda Williams Chima
    Fantasy

    Adrian sul’Han, known by the nickname Ash, is a powerful healer who wants revenge. After being forced into hiding after a series of murders throws the queendom into chaos, Ash went into training for healing. During his summer’s off, he would exact revenge on the important political figures of Arden,...

  • Fool MoonJim Butcher
    Fool Moon
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    Fool Moon is the second book in the Dresden Files by Jim Butcher and once again we meet up with Chicago's only professional wizard and one of only a dozen of his power in the country. Since we left Harry business has been pretty non-existant and he's been unable to find any kind of work at all munda...

  • Foreign DevilsJohn Hornor Jacobs
    Foreign Devils
    by John Hornor Jacobs
    Fantasy

    A steampunk fantasy set in a world that draws some uncomfortable inspiration from our own, Foreign Devils is the sequel to John Hornor Jacobs’ The Incorruptibles and follows the adventures of Fisk and Shoe – two would be mercenaries making their way through a world of demons, feral elves and worse....

  • Fortress FrontierMyke Cole
    Fortress Frontier
    by Myke Cole
    Fantasy

    Last year we reviewed Control Point, a contemporary fantasy that managed to blend a strong military style with that of fantastic magical powers. The author managed to create a successful combination with tons of action and tense drama; narrated in a powerful, unique voice. Fortress Frontier is the n...

  • Foxglove SummerBen Aaronovitch
    Foxglove Summer
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    Foxglove Summer in the fifth installment in the stunning Rivers of London series by Ben Aaronovitch. After the stunning climax of Broken Homes, (seriously if you haven't read Broken Homes read it first) Foxglove Summer feels like a fresh summer breeze. Peter Grant escapes the rat race of London to...

  • InfernalMark De Jager
    Infernal
    by Mark De Jager
    Fantasy

    Stratus wakes up in a field with no idea who he is. All he knows is that his name is Stratus and he doesn't seem to be human. He quickly learns that he possesses an in-human strength, natural gift in magic and an insatiable hunger. Well that and the fact that there seems to be a raging beast ins...

  • Jonathan Strange & Mr NorrellSusanna Clarke
    Fantasy

    Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is an alternative history novel by Susanna Clarke. In the year 1806, England is becoming frustrated by the long drawn out war with Napoleon. Practical Magic has long faded into the countries history but one remaining true Magician is found, a very reclusive Mr Norr...

  • KrakenChina Mieville
    Kraken
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    Kraken is essentially "grown up" urban fantasy - and when I say grown up I don't mean littered with expletives but with a deal of maturity and written without compromise (as all Miéville's works are). You won't find any soppy vampires or angst ridden werewolves here, Kraken is a complicated mix of m...

  • LiraelGarth Nix
    Lirael
    by Garth Nix
    Fantasy

    Lirael is a young adult fantasy novel written by Garth Nix and is the second volume in the Old Kingdom Series. The novel is split into three different parts with the first set 14 years after the events of Sabriel and the other two parts set 19 years after. Sabriel and Touchstone are married with tw...

  • London FallingPaul Cornell
    London Falling
    by Paul Cornell
    Fantasy

    London Falling is the first in Paul Cornell's Shadow Police series. For those who don't know, Paul Cornell is an award winning author who writes across a variety of media and one of only two people to have been Hugo nominated for prose, TV and comics. He's also written a number of Doctor...

  • Lord BrotherCarolyn Kephart
    Lord Brother
    by Carolyn Kephart
    Fantasy

    Lord Brother is the second part of a fantasy tale by Carolyn Kephart. Lord Brother is the much needed follow up to Kepharts debut novel Wysard. As you may remember the first books ended without warning, leaving the story hanging with no prior warning of any kind. I've talked with Kephart about this...

  • Magic Parcel: The Gathering StormFrank English
    Fantasy

    Jimmy is trapped in the realm of the Omni with no one to help him unless Ursula can learn to control her raw and unrefined powers. For the natives of Omni this intrusion of otherworldlings could be seen as a potentially destructive threat to their stability and possibly even their own existence....

  • ManrootAnne Steinberg
    Manroot
    by Anne Steinberg
    Fantasy

    Manroot opens in the spring of 1930 with Katherine Sheahan and her father, Jessie, looking for work in the tourist town of Castlewood, Missouri. Jesse gets a job as a handyman and Katherine as a hotel maid. While her father eventually embraces the drink and disappears, Katherine makes a living for h...

  • 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...

  • Moon Over SohoBen Aaronovitch
    Moon Over Soho
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    Reviewed by Ed Prior. Moon Over Soho is the second novel in Ben Aaronovitch’s Rivers of London series about Metropolitan Police Constable and trainee wizard Peter Grant and his magical mentor DCI Thomas Nightingale. Moon Over Soho finds PC Peter Grant still living with the fallout from his first en...

  • PremonitionsJamie Schultz
    Premonitions
    by Jamie Schultz
    Fantasy

    It’s the kind of heist Karyn Ames has dreamed of—enough to set her crew up pretty well and enough to keep her safely stocked on a very rare, very expensive black market drug. Without it, Karyn hallucinates slices of the future overlapped with her present until she’s incapacitated and completely over...

  • Prince of FoolsMark Lawrence
    Prince of Fools
    by Mark Lawrence
    Fantasy

    Prince of Fools is the first in a new series (called the Red Queen's War) set within the same world as the authors acclaimed Prince of Thorns series. It is a slight departure in style and yet retains the wit and light-heartedness that those who have read the authors work will be familiar with. Prin...

  • Proven GuiltyJim Butcher
    Proven Guilty
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    Harry Dresden is once again thrown into magical conflict in Proven Guilty. As always, our wise cracking wizard-for-hire is up to the challenge! Proven Guilty smoothly picks up where Dead Beat leaves off. Harry Dresden, now named a Warden of the White Council, struggles to fulfill his role as magic...

  • Red GloveHolly Black
    Red Glove
    by Holly Black
    Fantasy

    It's funny how even if you follow a genre closely you can still miss some pretty successful authors, I guess that there are just so many novels published nowadays that this will become increasingly common. I haven't read anything by Holly Black before but I have been aware of her work without realis...

  • Rise of the TaiGethenJames Barclay
    Rise of the TaiGethen
    by James Barclay
    Fantasy

    James Barclay is undoubtedly one of the finest heroic fantasy authors writing today, his Raven series are incredible novels with some really exceptional battles and fight scenes. Rise of the TaiGethen is the second novel in his series that feature those immortal forest dwellers, the Elves - and foll...

  • Rivers of LondonBen Aaronovitch
    Rivers of London
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    Rivers of London is an urban fantasy novel by Ben Aaronovitch. Peter Grant was just a probationary constable in the Metropolitan Police Force and faced a life in the drudgery of the Case Progression Unit (doing paperwork so real coppers don't have to). Then one night, on a cold, wet night while inve...

  • 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 nex...

  • Sixty One NailsMike Shevdon
    Sixty One Nails
    by Mike Shevdon
    Fantasy

    Sixty One Nails is an urban fantasy novel of a secret war raging beneath the streets of London, written by Mike Shevdon. Under the nations capital there is a whole other world where magic is real, the world of the Feyre. A dark magic will be unleashed by the Untained… Unless a new hero can be found...

  • Songs of the EarthElspeth Cooper
    Songs of the Earth
    by Elspeth Cooper
    Fantasy

    There has been a lot of good things said about Songs of the Earth and a consummate amount of praise given to the author of this debut novel. It has even been described as the "fantasy debut of 2011" when it was first released in hardback last year and has been on my list of books to read for some ti...

  • StarbornLucy Hounsom
    Starborn
    by Lucy Hounsom
    Fantasy

    An exciting new high fantasy story in a new fantasy world, Starborn is Lucy Hounsom’s debut novel. Her graduation to UK Tor’s writing stable from an MA in Creative Writing and before that a BA in English and Creative Writing speaks for itself as being quite an illustrious journey towards the promise...

  • Stone of TearsTerry Goodkind
    Stone of Tears
    by Terry Goodkind
    Fantasy

    Stone of Tears is the second volume in the epic Sword of Truth series by Terry Goodkind. Darken Rahl has finally been defeated and Richard and Kahlan race off back to the mud people to marry. Nothing goes to plan however and as they are waiting for the wedding preparations to be completed three Sis...

  • Storm FrontJim Butcher
    Storm Front
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    Storm Front is the first novel introducing the wizard P.I. Harry Dresden to the world, a gritty urban fantasy that manages to captivate right from the start. We join Harry as he's going through a bit of a slow patch and so when the Chicago PD asks for help with a double homicide he jumps at the cha...

  • 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 bloodsh...

  • The Cathedral of Known ThingsEdward Cox
    Fantasy

    The Cathedral of Known Things is the sequel to the fantasy novel The Relic Guild by Edward Cox. The ongoing story of the agents of The Relic Guild as they seek to oppose their enemies, the Genii. The Guild is trying to prevent them from achieving what they started in the previous war, the destructi...

  • The Dragon at WarGordon R Dickson
    The Dragon at War
    by Gordon R Dickson
    Fantasy

    The Dragon at War is a fantasy novel by the author Gordon R Dickson. Over a century ago, the dragon Gleingul fought and slew a sea serpent in single combat. A genuine David and Goliath moment as sea serpents are more than twice as large as dragons. Ever since, there has been great animosity between...

  • The Dragon on the BorderGordon R Dickson
    The Dragon on the Border
    by Gordon R Dickson
    Fantasy

    The Dragon on the Border is a fantasy novel by the author Gordon R Dickson. Jim, the product of a technologically advanced civilization 600 years ahead of the one he now calls home and now minor apprentice in magic has become the target of the Dark Powers in their latest attempt to disrupt the bala...

  • The Dragon RebornRobert Jordan
    The Dragon Reborn
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Dragon Reborn — the leader long prophesied who will save the world, but in the saving destroy it; the savior who will run mad and kill all those dearest to him — is on the run from his destiny. Able to touch the One Power, but unable to control it, and with no one to teach him how &m...

  • The Eye Of The WorldRobert Jordan
    The Eye Of The World
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Wheel of Time turns and Ages come and go, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth return again. In the Third Age, an Age of Prophecy, when the World and Time themselves hang in the balance, a wind rises in the mou...

  • 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 Guns Of IvreaClifford Beal
    The Guns Of Ivrea
    by Clifford Beal
    Fantasy

    The Guns of Ivrea is a seafaring fantasy adventure that immediately establishes its author, Clifford Beal as eminently knowledgeable in his chosen subject area and a strong storyteller to boot. Our plot revolves around the fortunes of Nicolo Danamis, a pirate in the same vein as Sir Francis Drake,...

  • The Heir of NightHelen Lowe
    The Heir of Night
    by Helen Lowe
    Fantasy

    The Heir of Night was reviewed by me for the 2012 David Gemmell Morningstar Award, which went on to win the award! I've been aware of the novel for some time now but as it was never sent to me it remained one I'd been meaning to buy and I'm very glad that I'm getting the chance to read it for the G...

  • The Kings JusticeStephen Donaldson
    The Kings Justice
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    The Kings Justice is one of two new stories released this month from one of the veterans of the Fantasy scene - Stephen Donaldson. It's a tale of an enigmatic figure known only as Black who goes in search of evil deeds. He has powers that help him route out evil, not least the ability to mani...

  • The Kinshield LegacyKC May
    Fantasy

    The Kinshield Legacy is a fantasy novel by KC May. For two hundred years a mysterious stone tablet embedded with five magical gems has sat abandoned in a cave, while the kindom around it falls to ruins. But then, the gems in the tablet, one by one, disappear and the next King of the realm may final...

  • The Legends of LightGill Shutt
    The Legends of Light
    by Gill Shutt
    Fantasy

    Legends of Light is a high fantasy saga told as a series of poems, each building upon the last to weave a tale of magic, romance and creatures of the dark. I must admit that I am not really one to read poems, they have never interested me in the slightest and so when I was asked to review this book...

  • The Legion of ShadowMichael J Ward
    The Legion of Shadow
    by Michael J Ward
    Fantasy

    I have many fond memories of the fighting fantasy books created by the legends Steve Jackson and Ian Livingston. I devoured them during childhood and still have a number of them of my shelves, including the very first, the Warlock of Firetop Mountain. At the same time I also discovered the joy of th...

  • The Name of the WindPatrick Rothfuss
    The Name of the Wind
    by Patrick Rothfuss
    Fantasy

    The Name of the Wind is the first volume in the Kingkiller Chronicles and tells the story of the notorious wizard Kvothe. After gaining his reputation at a very young age with included being expelled from university younger than most who are allowed in, talking to gods and writing songs, he dissapea...

  • The Night CircusErin Morgenstern
    The Night Circus
    by Erin Morgenstern
    Fantasy

    “The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not. Within the black-and-white striped canvas tents is an utterly unique experience full of breathtaking amazements. It is called Le Cirque des Rêves, and it is only open at night.” Celia Bo...

  • The Path Of DaggersRobert Jordan
    The Path Of Daggers
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Path of Daggers is the eighth volume in Robert Jordans fantasy epic, the Wheel of Time series. Following the events in A Crown of Swords, Elayne, Nyneave, Aviendha and a coalition of women who can channel the one power finally manage to use the "Bowl of the Winds" to reverse the un-natural heatw...

  • The Philosophers StoneJ K Rowling
    The Philosophers Stone
    by J K Rowling
    Fantasy

    (Seems to be titled "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" in the US). Not a word about Hollywood and the movie (which I will be seeing in a couple of days). Not a word about the merchandise and kids dressed as Potter. Not a word about how this book made the kids read again. Just the book. Some o...

  • The Queen of the TearlingErika Johansen
    The Queen of the Tearling
    by Erika Johansen
    Fantasy

    Kelsea Glynn is the only heir to the throne of Tearling but rather than growing up surrounded by servants and sophistication she has been raised in a woods by foster parents, in secret. Mostly this is due to her real mothers failings - Queen Elyssa was murdered for ruining the kingdom and for 18 yea...

  • The Relic GuildEdward Cox
    The Relic Guild
    by Edward Cox
    Fantasy

    Sometimes a book comes along that reminds you of the pleasure of being a reader and/or a writer, a book that you start at the right time and cannot fail to admire. In a measure, The Relic Guild is this kind of book. From the first page, the description crackles and draws you into the story and cert...

  • The Reluctant MageKaren Miller
    The Reluctant Mage
    by Karen Miller
    Fantasy

    The Reluctant Mage is the second volume in the Fisherman's Children series by Karen Miller. Rafel has been gone for months, last seen heading over Barl's Mountains into the unknown in a desperate quest to find help in the legendary magical Library but such time has passed and all hope appears lost....

  • The Riddler's GiftGreg Hamerton
    The Riddler's Gift
    by Greg Hamerton
    Fantasy

    The Riddler's Gift is the first volume in the Lifesong series by Greg Hamerton. There is a song that drifts on the breeze through all the world. Its rhythms are echoed in our breath, the music is caught in our laughter, hidden in our language, woven through our life... Most of the old world has be...

  • The Throne of the Crescent MoonSaladin Ahmed
    Fantasy

    One the greatest advantages of this ever shrinking world is being able to read stories that break out of the "western" mindset. Initially The Throne of the Crescent Moon may seem like a traditional sword & sorcery that was a stable of fantasy in the 80's however look a little deeper and you will fin...

  • The Warrior SagePaul Mills
    The Warrior Sage
    by Paul Mills
    Fantasy

    The Warrior Sage is a young adult high fantasy novel by Paul Mills. Chael dreams of a greater life than that of a simple farmer and when he and his sister take the long journey to Darvenlure it soon becomes clear that he may just get what he wished for. Along the road they meet a disarming and ove...

  • 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...

  • The Way of Kings Part 2Brandon Sanderson
    The Way of Kings Part 2
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    This is the second part of the Way of Kings, the first novel in the Stormlight Archive by Brandon Sanderson and the start of an epic series. As this is the second part of a book, it makes sense that you read the The Way of Kings Part 1 first. Starting to read this second part it becomes clearer why...

  • The Wayfarer KingKC May
    The Wayfarer King
    by KC May
    Fantasy

    The new king of Thendylath Gavin Kinshield has vowed to protect the realm and it's people from the evil of the Beyonders - creatures of chaos who appear without warning and invade the world of men to wreak havoc. For this though he will need an army and of course a huge amount of funds to support su...

  • The Wise Man's FearPatrick Rothfuss
    The Wise Man's Fear
    by Patrick Rothfuss
    Fantasy

    The Wise Man's Fear follows on from the authors incredible debut "The Name of the Wind" which is currently one of the most memorable, most enjoyable fantasy novels I have ever read - I seriously recommend you read that first. Picking up where the last novel finished we once again follow the j...

  • The Wizard of Crescent Moon MountainOldman Brook
    Fantasy

    The Wizard of Crescent Moon Mountain is firmly rooted within the high fantasy genre, telling the tale of the wizard Greybeard and little elf Beezle who set off on an adventure after a magical weapon proves to have a distinct life of it's own. The novel draws heavily from Lord of the Rings with nods...

  • The Wounded LandStephen Donaldson
    The Wounded Land
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    For ten years Thomas Covenant has done his best to move on with his life and get back on top of his illness. While a decade may have passed in Covenant's world, in the Land it's been over three thousand years since he freed the people and defeated the evil Lord Foul. In this time Foul has not been...

  • Vegas KnightsMatt Forbeck
    Vegas Knights
    by Matt Forbeck
    Fantasy

    Vegas Knights is an urban fantasy novel by Matt Forbeck. Set in Las Vegas (Nevada) the story tells the tale of two college guys Jackson and Bill at the University of Michigan who also happen to be students of magic (or "trans-quantum postulating" in scientific terminology). Having learnt such valua...

  • 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 a...

  • WysardCarolyn Kephart
    Wysard
    by Carolyn Kephart
    Fantasy

    Wysard is part 1 of a fantasy story by Carolyn Kephart. I felt rather brave when I started on this book. One of the characters is described as "wicked" on the back of the book, which is never a good thing unless it's meant as a joke. I'm counting the title as bad omen number two (yes, it means wiza...

  • A City DreamingDaniel Polansky
    A City Dreaming
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    Daniel Polansky is the author of the wonderful Low Town fantasy series, which shows how great a story-teller he is. A City Dreaming stretches these talents and more. The book follows the life of M, a magically gifted drifter with a loose grip on morality and a quick, sharp tongue. He does his bes...

  • Spoils of WarAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Spoils of War
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    Spoils of War, by Adrian Tchaikovsky, is a volume of short stories set in the Tales of the Apt world and takes place (in the chronology of the world) before Empire in Black and Gold which is the first novel in that series.  It tells stories of some of the minor characters from the main book series,...

  • Touch of IronTimandra Whitecastle
    Touch of Iron
    by Timandra Whitecastle
    Fantasy

    Touch of Iron is not, as the Amazon blurb suggests, a tale of an epic quest of a Prince for a magic sword, although there is a Prince and he is on a quest for a magic sword.  Neither is it is a story about Fae, as evoked by the title in the trend of supernatural fantasy.  It is instead, the story of...

  • Crow ShineAlan Baxter
    Crow Shine
    by Alan Baxter
    Horror

    A well respected novelist, Australian writer Alan Baxter is also the author of many short stories, appeared in various venues, but never before assembled in a single volume. Crow Shine is a massive collection of Baxter's dark tales which will pleasantly surprise the reader not yet acquainted...

  • 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 danger...

  • Terry Pratchett's Discworld ImaginariumPaul Kidby

    Paul Kidby was Pratchett's artist of choice and once described his lively, colourful illustrations as: The closest anyone's got to how I see the characters He's been drawing Discworld for over fifteen years, including the superbly illustrated Last Hero, not to mention The Art o...

  • 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...

  • Lies SleepingBen Aaronovitch
    Lies Sleeping
    by Ben Aaronovitch
    Fantasy

    Lies Sleeping is the seventh book (eighth if you count The Furthest Station) in the impressive River of London urban fantasy series, following Peter Grant - detective constable for the metropolitan police and apprentice wizard. It looks like time may finally be up for the Faceless Man (Martin Chorl...

  • 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...

  • The Sign of NineG. S. Denning
    The Sign of Nine
    by G. S. Denning
    Fantasy

    Warlock Holmes is back. No, not Sherlock, Warlock. If you think about it, what makes more sense; a man who can somehow divine everything from a few clues, or a Warlock who just uses magic to do the same? The Sign of Nine continues the premise that Sir Conan Doyle’s original stories were actual...

  • We are the DeadMike Shackle
    We are the Dead
    by Mike Shackle
    Fantasy

    The Fantasy genre has the unwarranted reputation of being staid. If you do not read it, you may think that it is all still elves and dwarves hanging out in some sort of fellowship. Fantasy fanatics know different. There are distinct fashions within the genre that has evolved between high and low, ma...

  • 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...

  • 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 speci...

  • The Lost WarJustin Lee Anderson
    The Lost War
    by Justin Lee Anderson
    Fantasy

    The first in the Eidyn series, The Lost War begins its story part way through, in the aftermath of a ruinous war for the kingdom of Eidyn. The location of the opening scenes, in a tavern no less, and the easy interplay of two of the main characters Aranok the draoidh and Allandria, his bodyguard and...

  • Lord of SecretsBreanna Teintze
    Lord of Secrets
    by Breanna Teintze
    Fantasy

    To the ill-informed all fantasy books must look the same. They are about elves and dwarves, just retelling The Lord of the Rings repeatedly, aren’t they? Fans of the genre know that this is anything but the truth. Fantasy is an evolving genre that encompasses high and low, fantastical and the...

  • 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 regular tropes that occur, similar races and similar storylines. Within the pages of Brian McClellan’s Powder Mage&nbs...

  • The Farseer TrilogyRobin Hobb
    The Farseer Trilogy
    by Robin Hobb
    Fantasy

    The Farseer Trilogy is one of those series that is so well crafted, unique that it defines a genre. It's been twenty five years since Robin Hobb (a pseudonym of Margaret Astrid Lindholm Ogden) started writing about the Realm of the Elderlings and the adventures of Fitz and the Fool. Since then she h...

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

    Since the days of The Lord of the Rings the fantasy genre has had a close relationship with the idea of a fellowship of characters. A group of disparate people of all races brought together to fight for a common cause. This produces a sense of shared responsibility and brotherhoo...

  • The Forever SeaJoshua Johnson
    The Forever Sea
    by Joshua Johnson
    Fantasy

    If you have ever been out to sea on a sailing boat, you may have felt that feeling of majesty and awe that the water evokes. This vast expanse that continues as far as the eye can see. Depending on your personality, it can instil a sense of fear or a sense of adventure. I have felt this feeling on l...

  • Blackheart KnightsLaure Eve
    Blackheart Knights
    by Laure Eve
    Fantasy

    One of the wonderful things about genre fiction is that an author can take their imagination anywhere and run with it. I can imagine a lot of things, but an alternative urban fantasy that has Knights on motorbikes. That is a new on me. Laure Eve...

  • 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...

  • The Liar of Red ValleyWalter Goodwater
    The Liar of Red Valley
    by Walter Goodwater
    Horror

    There are many flavours of horror, but one that I prefer is American Gothic. There is something about the Deep South of America that mixes well with horror. It already feels like a foreign and mysterious place to many of us so when you add the notion of t...

  • 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 quick...

  • A Marvellous LightFreya Marske
    A Marvellous Light
    by Freya Marske
    Fantasy

    Secrets are powerful. They can make or break someone. In the alternative Edwardian England of Freya Marske’s A Marvellous Light there is a magical society of people who hide their powers. This is a big secret to keep, but there are others. Both Robin Blyth and Edwin Co...

  • 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...

  • Slaine DragontamerPat Mills
    Slaine Dragontamer
    by Pat Mills
    Fantasy

    I love 2000AD, it is a fantastic serial comic that is filled with some of my favourite characters. Judge Dredd is omnipresent, but there are other characters that I picture when I think of opening a new issue; ABC Warriors, Rogue Trooper and of course, Slaine. Slaine felt a little dif...

  • ScorpicaG. R. Macallister
    Scorpica
    by G. R. Macallister
    Fantasy

    Sometimes it is hard to see that something is not quite right as it has always been that way. Why in children’s cartoons does there always seem to be a misbalance between the male and female characters? Will boys not watch girls on screen? Will men not read about women in books? Fantasy has mo...

  • The Knave of SecretsAlex Livingston
    The Knave of Secrets
    by Alex Livingston
    Fantasy

    I am not a gambler. All I do is look at how rich the casino and betting companies are to see that the odds are stacked in their favour. If you play the odds, eventually you will lose. However, there are games that require skill. Poker is one. It has elements of luck, but a skilled player is far more...

  • The House of Sorrowing StarsBeth Cartwright
    The House of Sorrowing Stars
    by Beth Cartwright
    Horror

    Grief can feel like a weight that you carry with you. The luckiest people will feel the weight get lighter as time moves on, always there, but more bearable over time. In The House of Sorrowing Stars by Beth Cartwright there is a home that captures all the real stories of sorrow in its vast library....

  • The Tangleroot Palace & Other StoriesMarjorie Liu
    Fantasy

    If you go down to the woods today, you are in for a big surprise. Something far worse will be waiting for you than a few bears holding sandwiches. These are the ancient woods that our ancestors grew up near, pockets of civilisation surrounded by darkness and danger. When myths and folklore were bein...

  • The Ballad of Perilous GravesAlex Jennings
    Fantasy

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

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

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

  • 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...

  • Blood of the SerpentS M Stirling
    Blood of the Serpent
    by S M Stirling
    Fantasy

    Bringing back classic character is a wise decision as you already have a built-in fan base and the potential to make new fans. Who does not want to read more Sherlock Holmes? But it is fraught with dangers. Suddenly you have Winnie the Pooh and The Grinch starring in horror films. In some cases, the...

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

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

  • The CleavingJuliet E Mckenna
    The Cleaving
    by Juliet E Mckenna
    Fantasy

    I really enjoy a retelling of the Arthurian Legend, which is a good thing as I have read a fair few. Each author tackles the story in a unique way looking to put their own spin on a well-known tale. Do you follow the classic beats making the likes of Morgana the villain? Perhaps it is Merlin's fault...

  • The Judas BlossomStephen Aryan
    The Judas Blossom
    by Stephen Aryan
    Fantasy

    How do you like your fantasy? It comes in so many flavours now that you can pick and choose what type you like. Dragons, magic, and high fantasy – tasty. Violence, political intrigue, low fantasy – a guilty treat. Stephen Aryan has chosen a different route, a book that has its heart in l...

  • The First Bright ThingJ R Dawson
    The First Bright Thing
    by J R Dawson
    Fantasy

    Circuses are magical places; they are also mysterious and occasionally a bit murderous. All the elements that make them perfect for romantic visions of running away and visiting new places each week, are also perfect for someone who likes to snatch victims and not be around when the police start to...

  • The Road to NeverwinterJaleigh Johnson
    The Road to Neverwinter
    by Jaleigh Johnson
    Fantasy

    The tie in novel can have a bad press, a book churned out to steal some of the glory from a popular TV show or film, but I have a soft spot for them. When done well they can expand the universe; tie in novels for the likes of Star Trek, Doctor Who, Star Wars (twice) and many others have given fans c...

  • Silver NitrateSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Silver Nitrate
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    There is something magical about the silver screen. I enjoy watching films at home, but I love going to the cinema. A group of people in a dark room with a large screen and superior sound. I feel like I am immersed in the film, it draws me in, there is a power. But what if that power was real? What...

  • 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 an...

  • Sons of DarknessGourav Mohanty
    Sons of Darkness
    by Gourav Mohanty
    Fantasy

    Fantasy is a wonderful genre, and it has become more so in recent years as it has grown in diversity. It felt for a while that fantasy was always epic and set in some sort of alternative Europe. There were plenty of alternatives to find if you looked, but today theses are abundant and that is fantas...

  • Mr BreakfastJonathan Carroll
    Mr Breakfast
    by Jonathan Carroll
    Fantasy

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

  • The Night FieldDonna Glee Williams
    The Night Field
    by Donna Glee Williams
    Fantasy

    The relationship that humans have with the land has always been critical for our survival from the hunter gatherers to the farmers, to the post-industrial world we live in today. Living as one with the planet will help it sustain itself and us, but in recent decades it does not take much more than a...

  • 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...

  • SaturnaliaStephanie Feldman
    Saturnalia
    by Stephanie Feldman
    Horror

    What happens when the world ends? Do we as a species rally together to save the day at the last possible moment, or do we fiddle whilst Rome burns? If recent history has shown us nothing else, the rich will party, and the poor will die. Nothing new there then. Stephanie Feldman does not see the tren...

  • The Burning LandDavid Hair
    The Burning Land
    by David Hair
    Fantasy

    Epic fantasy novels are filled with fellowships from the OG to the 700-page opuses of today. What differs across all these books is how close the fellows are. Multiple character perspectives do not a fellowship make if they never meet each other, you want a close group of people all setting out on t...

  • The Case of the Scandalous TicketBenoit Dahan
    General Fiction

    The term Graphic Novel is a grandiose one, but well deserved in some cases. A collection of comics in one place helps to reveal the arc, but often I read Graphic Novels that were too short and did not contain enough to be seen as a novel, a short story or novelette perhaps. Inside the Mind of S...

  • 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...

  • The BrandedJo Riccioni
    The Branded
    by Jo Riccioni
    Fantasy

    There are all types of fantasy from the high to the low, but for some fans it can be tricky to enjoy one type or the other. For someone interested in starting to read low fantasy they may be turned off by the violence and darkness that this part of the genre emits. On the other hand, high fantasy ca...

  • SeabornMichael Livingston
    Seaborn
    by Michael Livingston
    Fantasy

    Who doesn’t love a good pirate story? What about a story that has flying ships that drop gunpowder bombs? Or a story that has magic and mysterious civilisations living on remote islands? These all sound great and are wrapped together in a lovely fantasy package in Michael Livingston’s Se...

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

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

  • What If... Wanda Maximoff and Peter Parker Were SiblingsSeanan McGuire

    As comic book fans, we really are living in the best of days, not because there is so much content to read or watch, but because the artform is established. The concept of comics, superheroes and, in this case, Marvel are well enough known that we can play with the format. Marvel has been doing it f...

  • The Sorcerer and the NecromancerSusan Ann Walker
    The Sorcerer and the Necromancer
    by Susan Ann Walker
    Fantasy

    I adore the fantasy genre and as someone who reads it a lot, I have seen the ebbs and flows in the genre over the years. There have always been outliers, but there is a certain style of fantasy that dominated for each of the decades. Until recently, I have read a lot of Low Fantasy, a genre low on m...

  • Spells, Strings and Forgotten ThingsBreanne Randall
    Fantasy

    In some books there is more one thing that a reader can focus on. It could be the characters that draw the reader in, or the narrative, or the world building. As a long-term fantasy fan, one element that I often end up focussing on is magical systems. How magic works in a fantasy world can chan...

  • Seven Recipes for RevolutionRyan Rose
    Fantasy

    The fantasy genre is a form of comfort reading for me. The genre often follows similar tropes, and you can get into the rhythm of the story quickly. However, increasingly often in modern fantasy, authors are creating new and challenging ideas to shake up the genre. Magical systems are an area you ca...

  • 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...

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

    I love a good magic system in a fantasy novel, one that sets the rules in an interesting way and is still able to amaze. It is one of the reasons that I am not a huge fan of Fae magic with all its side clauses and tricks. You never know what you are really going to get or what you can trust, therefo...

  • 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...

  • Pretenders to the Throne of GodAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Pretenders to the Throne of God
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    A lot can happen during a siege, enough so that you do not have to have a book full of battles, you could have just one about the siege itself. This is the setting of Adrian Tchaikovsky’s latest in the The Tyrant Philosophers series, Pretenders to the Throne of God. We will meet new friends an...

  • The Killing SpellShay Kauwe
    The Killing Spell
    by Shay Kauwe
    Fantasy

    Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me, but in Shay Kauwe’s The Killing Spell, words will very much hurt you. In fact, words can be fashioned into spells to kill. Not the best in an everyday family situation where words can fly thick and fast, nor in a society where...