Books tagged with: multiple pov

  • A Canticle for LeibowitzWalter M Miller
    A Canticle for Leibowitz
    by Walter M Miller
    Science Fiction

    A Canticle for Leibowitz is a post apocalyptic science fiction novel by Walter M Miller. It is a strange story of a post apocalyptic monastery, which tries to save information about the time before the great destruction. The idea is good enough, but I can't say that I like what Miller has done with...

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

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

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

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

  • 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...

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

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

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

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

  • AmpedDouglas E Richards
    Amped
    by Douglas E Richards
    Science Fiction

    Amped follows on directly from the events of Wired reviewed late last year. We rejoin the brilliant scientist Kira Miller who has discovered how to boost the human IQ to extreme post-human levels for short periods of time. With this extreme intelligence comes the danger that the same process brings...

  • Architect of FateChristian Dunn
    Architect of Fate
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

    Architect of Fate is a Space Marine Battles Anthology which collects together 4 novellas that make up the series featuring the infamous greater daemon of Tzeentch, Kairos Fateweaver. A master of manipulation who schemes and uses his prodigious power to play with the fates of thousands, even the unwi...

  • ArtificialJadah McCoy
    Artificial
    by Jadah McCoy
    Science Fiction

    Artificial by Jadah McCoy is the authors debut and the first book in a planned series called The Kepler Chronicles . Set in 2256, the story unfolds on Earth’s first colony amongst the stars, the aforementioned Kepler. As humanity traversed through the deep dark of space, they decided to entrust thei...

  • Ascending SpiralBob Rich
    Ascending Spiral
    by Bob Rich
    Science Fiction

    A unique twist on the time-travel tradition! A mix of genres amalgamated into something unforgettable. This is a read to be experienced with your brain’s switch flipped on. From the book’s synopsis: Dr. Pip Lipkin has lived for 12,000 years, incarnated many times as man, woman, and even as species b...

  • Asks the DreamJames C Stewart
    Asks the Dream
    by James C Stewart
    Science Fiction

    A parallel world action drama with everyone urgently following mission briefings and investigating crimes, Asks the Dream pitches the reader into the centre of a grey shaded struggle where the characters feel cleaner than the corporations they are taking orders from. When it suits her, Charity is a...

  • AxiomaticGreg Egan
    Axiomatic
    by Greg Egan
    Science Fiction

    Axiomatic is a collection of science fiction short stories by Greg Egan. Most science fiction fans these days would agree what when it comes to hard science fiction, Greg Egan is one of the best. In ten years he has given us a good handful of novels, all every much driven by the laws of nature, as E...

  • Azanian BridgesNick Wood
    Azanian Bridges
    by Nick Wood
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • Blue EarthJeff Stover
    Blue Earth
    by Jeff Stover
    Science Fiction

    Blue Earth is a science fiction novel and the début of author Jeff Stover. The Thrones are a group of biological "mistakes", genetic experiments that have resulted in something more or less than human. They have inspired the writings of new religious texts that many now regard as sacred. Ruth Long,...

  • Blue Remembered EarthAlastair Reynolds
    Blue Remembered Earth
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    There are very few authors alive today that can quite match Alastair Reynolds vision of future space and Blue Remembered Earth is the beginning of possibly his most ambitious future vision yet. At the same time it's also one that also feels much closer to home than any novel he has written before. T...

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

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

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

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

  • Cosmonaut KeepKen Mcleod
    Cosmonaut Keep
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • Creation MachineAndrew Bannister
    Creation Machine
    by Andrew Bannister
    Science Fiction

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

  • CryptonomiconNeal Stephenson
    Cryptonomicon
    by Neal Stephenson
    Science Fiction

    Cryptonomicon is a speculative fiction novel by the American author Neal Stephenson. I've been a bit apprehensive about starting on Cryptonomicon. Neal Stephenson is a bit like Vernon Vinge – they both make wonderful books, and they both take their time about it. Also Cryptonomicon is about mathemat...

  • Dark EdenChris Beckett
    Dark Eden
    by Chris Beckett
    Science Fiction

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

  • Dark IntelligenceNeal Asher
    Dark Intelligence
    by Neal Asher
    Science Fiction

    I've been collecting Neal Asher novels for ages however until now I've not had chance to read much of his work. Luckily Dark Intelligence has been sent in for review and so I've finally had chance to discover the delight that is the Polity Universe. Dark Intelligence is all about transformation. Phy...

  • Dark LightKen Mcleod
    Dark Light
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

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

  • Dark RunMike Brooks
    Dark Run
    by Mike Brooks
    Science Fiction

    From the opening chapter I knew this was going to be good. Dark Run launches the reader into a shady future where bickering governments are working to extend their reach across space while criminals and outlaws try to make a quick buck under their noses and out on the frontiers. Fans of Firefly will...

  • Daylight on Iron MountainDavid Wingrove
    Daylight on Iron Mountain
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    Daylight on Iron Mountain is the second book in David Wingrove's epic re-imagining of his Chung Kuo series and follows on from the events in the incredible novel Son of Heaven , I seriously recommend you read that novel first. Although we still have the characters of Jack, Mary and their family - wh...

  • Divine ExtinctionHylton H Smith
    Divine Extinction
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    Divine Extinction is the second volume in the Evilution series, a near future series set in an alternative history, written by Hylton H Smith. Four years after the narrow escape from a cataclymic disaster humanity thought itself safe and sound, recovered and with a stronger, safer SACRED system. But...

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

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

  • Dreaming of EdenJames Lucien
    Dreaming of Eden
    by James Lucien
    Science Fiction

    Dreaming of Eden is a science fiction novel by James Lucien. In the dystopian future of 2049, a ravaged world, divided into four Super States, is locked into a continuous war for diminishing resources. Under the oppression of a totalitarian government, an Elite DHS hacker, a robotics scientist, an N...

  • Dying Star: ExodusSamsun Lobe
    Dying Star: Exodus
    by Samsun Lobe
    Science Fiction

    The self-proclaimed Emperor Vas returns to stamp his will on the unsuspecting Virtues of Son Gebshu's moon. His inflexible will and iron determination manages to breed resentment which fast leads to an all-out civil war. Meanwhile on the dying planet below the temperature continues to plummet, freez...

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

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

  • Earth SinkIlyan Lavanway
    Earth Sink
    by Ilyan Lavanway
    Science Fiction

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

  • EdgeThomas Blackthorne
    Edge
    by Thomas Blackthorne
    Science Fiction

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

  • Endymion OmnibusDan Simmons
    Endymion Omnibus
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Sequel to Hyperion and Fall of Hyperion – there's no reason to read this book if you haven't read those two books. Actually the question is if there's any reason to read this book at all! Fall of Hyperion ends the story of the Cantos and the Web quite nicely, with nearly no loose ends. So that's no...

  • Eve, The Burning LifeHjalti Danielsson
    Eve, The Burning Life
    by Hjalti Danielsson
    Science Fiction

    Tie-in fiction carries a peculiar burden. It must satisfy the faithful who already know the world inside out, while remaining legible to the newcomer who has never touched the source material; and it must do both without ever quite escaping the suspicion that it exists to sell something else. Eve, T...

  • EvolutionStephen Baxter
    Evolution
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Evolution is a monumental tale of the very evolution of mankind, from the age of the dinosaurs to way into the distant future. Created by the multiple award winning author Stephen Baxter. Evolution begins it's story in the Cretaceous period over 65 million years ago (the age of the Dinosaurs), and j...

  • ExcessionIain M Banks
    Excession
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    I feel kind of ambiguous about this book – one thing is certain it will never be my banks favourite, but on the other hand it's a must read if you are interested in the Culture. First of all I found it hard to follow, all too often I found myself in doubt as to who was who (or maybe what was what)....

  • Feersum EndjinnIain M Banks
    Feersum Endjinn
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    Feersum Endjinn is a science fiction novel by Iain M Banks. I don't really feel that I can do a fair review of this book, as I only read about 3/4 of it. The reason for this is that about a quarter of it is written in a kind of phonetics, that I just couldn't read. I'm not sure why I couldn't read t...

  • Finders KeepersRuss Colchamiro
    Finders Keepers
    by Russ Colchamiro
    Science Fiction

    Finders Keepers is a comedy scifi novel and the debut of Russ Colchamiro. On a backpacking trip through Europe, Jason Medley and Theo Barnes stumble through hash bars and hangovers; religious zealots and stalkers; food poisoning and thunderstorms; cute girls; overnight trains; fever pitch hallucinat...

  • FootfallLarry Niven
    Footfall
    by Larry Niven
    Science Fiction

    Footfall is a classic science fiction novel by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. This book handles a subject that H.G. Wells defined in his 'War of the Worlds': hostile first contact. Earth is overrun by aliens that bombard the planet with asteroids and are quickly victorious. The story follows a cou...

  • FrameshiftRobert J Sawyer
    Frameshift
    by Robert J Sawyer
    Science Fiction

    Frameshift is a science fiction novel by Robert J Sawyer. I've waited a bit before I started on this review, in the hope that my feelings for this book would somehow clarify. But the truth is that I still don't really know whether I like it or not. I'm not even sure that I can classify this book as...

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

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

  • Gemini GambitD Scott Johnson
    Gemini Gambit
    by D Scott Johnson
    Science Fiction

    A title that gives a hint as to what we might expect, but ruins no surprises at all, Gemini Gambit by D. Scott Johnson is an intriguing story of the near future, immerses us in a world a generation or two further on from our own. Elite hacker ‘Angel Rage’ – whose real name is Kim Trayne has retired,...

  • Good News from Outer SpaceJohn Kessel
    Science Fiction

    Good News from Outer Space is a science fiction novel by John Kessel. This probably the strangest book that I've read in a long time. Taking place in the last days of 1999 the book is mostly about faith run amok. Kessel paints a picture of an alternative timeline that's dark and that I do not care f...

  • Guardians of ParadiseJaine Fenn
    Guardians of Paradise
    by Jaine Fenn
    Science Fiction

    For most people, the race of the Sidhe are little more than legend, believed to be extinct for centuries after the males of the race rose up and fought alongside the humans subjugated and enslaved by the female Sidhe. Jarek Reen however know different, he's seen them alive and well, still messing wi...

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

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

  • Harmonica and GigRJ Astruc
    Harmonica and Gig
    by RJ Astruc
    Science Fiction

    When a territory engineer dies in suspicious circumstances, three qverse experts are brought in to investigate. Initially the three hacks choose to work separately on the case, but as they continue their investigations they discover clues leading to some of the most powerful figures in the qverse. S...

  • Hellstrom's HiveFrank Herbert
    Hellstrom's Hive
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

    When anyone mentions the name Frank Herbert most people will instantly think of Dune, a novel that has achieved an incredible success but also overshadowed anything else Herbert created since (Dune was only his second published full novel). It must have been a frustration that none of his works afte...

  • HyperionDan Simmons
    Hyperion
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Hyperion is a science fiction novel by the author Dan Simmons. This is the first book that I've read by Dan Simmons, but definitely not the last - actually I've already started on the sequel. Hyperion is the tale of a bunch of pilgrims, on their way to the Time Tombs on remote planet of Hyperion. Al...

  • Ice and FireDavid Wingrove
    Ice and Fire
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    The great world-spanning City of Chung Kuo see's the "War that wasn't a war" being fought between it's levels as the ruling seven T'ang struggle to maintain calm and prevent change. But this War isn't being fought on a battlefield, instead these combatants are employing a degree of subterfuge and gu...

  • IliumDan Simmons
    Ilium
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • Infernal SkyDafydd ab Hugh
    Infernal Sky
    by Dafydd ab Hugh
    Science Fiction

    After saving the world twice, the fight continues for Flynn "Fly" Taggart and Arlene Sanders! Hugh and Linaweaver do a lot of things right with the series. As an obvious fan of the franchise since childhood, I will do my best to highlight the best aspects of the novel. Despite my opinions, this revi...

  • Inish CarraigJo Zebedee
    Inish Carraig
    by Jo Zebedee
    Science Fiction

    A dystopian future novel set in Belfast after an alien invasion is a premise that immediately appeals and suggests a whole host of imaginative ideas. Inish Carraig is the second book from Jo Zebedee and sets humanity as a conquered plaything between two spacefaring alien civilisations; the Zelotyr a...

  • InversionsIain M Banks
    Inversions
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    Inversions is a Culture series novel by the noted British author Iain M Banks. If I had to sum up Inversions with one word it would probably be "Different". It's released under Iain M. Banks which usually means that it's a Science Fiction story. You have to look really closely to find anything that...

  • Iron WarriorsGraham McNeill
    Iron Warriors
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • Jack GlassAdam Roberts
    Jack Glass
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Adam Roberts is one of those rare authors who not only manage to create a rewarding, entertaining story but also does so in a way that challenges your perceptions, encourages you examine that which you take for granted and often plays on accepted norms of the genre. Jack Glass is no exception. We be...

  • JemFrederik Pohl
    Jem
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

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

  • Jennifer GovernmentMax Barry
    Jennifer Government
    by Max Barry
    Science Fiction

    Simply put this is a witty outlook on modern life and the consumerists of today. It does bare great similarities with the classic Orwell novel but where that can be quite dark and bleak this novel, although fatalistic somewhat is rather funny. The characters in the novel all having surnames from the...

  • Journal of the Plague YearAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Journal of the Plague Year
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    If you like your science fiction with a dystopian edge, this might be a good book for you. The Afterblight Chronicles is a shared world series published by Abaddon Books. Originating in 2006, with Simon Spurrier’s The Culled and passing through the hands of several different writers over the years,...

  • Know no FearDan Abnett
    Know no Fear
    by Dan Abnett
    Science Fiction

    I can't really imagine a more exciting sounding Warhammer 40K novel, a battle during the Horus Heresy conflict that depicts the Ultramarines (my favorite Legion) against the Word Bearers - told with energy and grace by that master of battles Dan Abnett. The Primarch of the Ultramarines - Roboute Gui...

  • KomarrLois McMaster Bujold
    Komarr
    by Lois McMaster Bujold
    Science Fiction

    Komarr is a novel in the Miles Vorkosigan Adventures series by Lois McMaster Bujold. Probably the strongest book yet in the continuing saga of Miles Vorkosigan. Bujold has moved a step beyond her usual "let's keep it simple and stick to Miles' point-of-view" for this story and is letting one of the...

  • LexiconMax Barry
    Lexicon
    by Max Barry
    Science Fiction

    Two years ago something happened in Broken Hill, something that killed thousands, the entire population of the small Australian mining town. Although everyone was encouraged to believe that some form of "environmental disaster" was the cause there are a few people who know what really happened. Emil...

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

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

  • Love Minus EightyWill McIntosh
    Love Minus Eighty
    by Will McIntosh
    Science Fiction

    Will McIntosh writes love stories with high body counts. In terms of total death toll, he's probably killed all of humanity at least twice by now, yet each of his books is genuinely touching. In his first novel, Soft Apocalypse, his characters try to hold relationships together in the face of appall...

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

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

  • Mother of StormsJohn Barnes
    Mother of Storms
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Mother of Storms is a science fiction novel by the author John Barnes. I read an article recently saying that the big difference between old (anything not from the last ten years, I guess) and new science fiction is that the old stuff is more about technology and the new stuff is more about people....

  • MoxylandLauren Beukes
    Moxyland
    by Lauren Beukes
    Science Fiction

    Moxyland is the debut novel of Lauren Beukes and the first book published by Angry Robot Books. It is currently nominated in the longlist for the South African Sunday Times Fiction Prize. Set in Cape-town in the near future, four hip young adults live in a world where your online identity is just as...

  • No Safe HavenCarmen Webster Buxton
    No Safe Haven
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    No Safe Haven is the direct sequel to The Sixth Discipline and follows the fortunes of Ran-Del and Francesca who are now happily married parents. Ran-Del still doesn't know what vision his clan shaman had which forced him from his tribe however his own little known "psy" abilities have helped him to...

  • On the Steel BreezeAlastair Reynolds
    On the Steel Breeze
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    With On the Steel Breeze Alastair Reynolds has managed a little slice of futurism, how? Elephants. It seems we've been vastly under-estimating the intelligence of these gentle giants, at least most of us have - Reynolds hasn't. Recent research now suggests that Elephants are at least as intelligent...

  • OutiesJ R Pournelle
    Outies
    by J R Pournelle
    Science Fiction

    Outies is the sequel to the much acclaimed novel The Mote in God's Eye by Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle. This novel has been written by Jerry Pournelle's daughter, Jennifer. It has been a very long time since I read The Mote in God's Eye, the review on this site was written by my predecessor TC. I...

  • Pandora's StarPeter F Hamilton
    Pandora's Star
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    Pandora's Star is the first volume in the The Commonwealth Saga by Peter F. Hamilton. "Part one of the Commonwealth Saga" it says on page five. "Main characters" it says on page seven and then it goes on to list 44 characters. Then follows nearly nine hundred page of story which ends with the text "...

  • PerfectionNick Kyme
    Perfection
    by Nick Kyme
    Science Fiction

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

  • Poseidon's WakeAlastair Reynolds
    Poseidon's Wake
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Poseidon's Wake is set in the same universe as Reynolds previous two Poseidon's Children novels ( Blue Rembered Earth and On the Steel Breeze ) but is written as an informal conclusion to the trilogy, a book that works equally well as a stand-alone story. The story begins on Crucible, a distant plan...

  • 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...

  • QuicksilverNeal Stephenson
    Quicksilver
    by Neal Stephenson
    Science Fiction

    Quicksilver is the first volume of The Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson. The thing about Neal Stephenson is that he usually presents something new and fantastic that runs as the core of his books. Diamond Age has the Primer, Cryptonomicon has the economics of virtual money (or cryptography if you wa...

  • 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...

  • Reality 36Guy Haley
    Reality 36
    by Guy Haley
    Science Fiction

    Richard is a Level 5 Artificial Intelligence and a Private Eye, his partner a German ex military cyborg named Klein. Their newest case takes them on the hunt for a killer who has jumped realities, hiding in the artificial construct of Reality 36. Unless Richard and Klein can stop him his powers coul...

  • Red MarsKim Stanley Robinson
    Red Mars
    by Kim Stanley Robinson
    Science Fiction

    The front page of this book has a quote from Arthur C. Clarke saying "[Red Mars]...It should be required reading for the colonists of the next century" – not sure about making it required reading, maybe it can be used as a test. If you can read this book without falling asleep, you will probably be...

  • RedshirtsJohn Scalzi
    Redshirts
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    I was seriously impressed with the first novel I read by Scalzi, the book was Old Man's War and the exceptional prose and clever story really won me over; so much so that I picked up Fuzzy Nation soon after - although I haven't had to read that book yet. It was therefore with more than a little joy...

  • RenewalHylton H Smith
    Renewal
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

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

  • RingturnJohn C Mawson
    Ringturn
    by John C Mawson
    Science Fiction

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

  • Ringworld ThroneLarry Niven
    Ringworld Throne
    by Larry Niven
    Science Fiction

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

  • RobopocalypseDaniel H Wilson
    Robopocalypse
    by Daniel H Wilson
    Science Fiction

    In the very near future the technology that we all take for granted will start to turn against us, rising up across the globe - led by the Artificial Intelligence known as Archos. Archos has decided that in order to save the unique planet called earth and the precious life it sustains he must wipe o...

  • RoboteerAlex Lamb
    Roboteer
    by Alex Lamb
    Science Fiction

    Alex Lamb's Roboteer paints a picture of a future, that in the political climate of today, feels far too possible.  In this book, a war rages between two sides of humanity, two different and opposing ideologies and lifestyles.  One side, combining genetic and induced mutation with advanced technolog...

  • Running BlackP Todoroff
    Running Black
    by P Todoroff
    Science Fiction

    Running Black is a science fiction novel, the debut of Patrick Todoroff. For the last eight years, the North Korean mercenary Tam Song has headed up Eshu International, a private security team that takes any job for the right price, no questions asked. Based in the Belfast Metro Zone, they're repute...

  • Saint ReborAdam Roberts
    Saint Rebor
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Stories from Adam Roberts are always challenging as well as entertaining. Saint Rebor follows this trend, being a diverse collection joined together by the writer’s conceptual ideas in the prologue. Whilst you might expect a variety of story premises in a collection, in Saint Rebor , you have a much...

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

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

  • Secret HarmoniesPaul McAuley
    Secret Harmonies
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

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

  • Shades of EmpireCarmen Webster Buxton
    Shades of Empire
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    Set within the same universe as the authors previous novel Tribes , Shades of Empire follows the ex-soldier Alexander Napier, merchant starship captain Madeline Pallestrino and a host of other colourful characters. Alexander still reluctantly wears the marks of his servitude to the Emperor but it's...

  • Shadows of TreacheryChristian Dunn
    Shadows of Treachery
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

    38 000 years in the future and the greatest, most terrible war humanity has ever faced rages across the galaxy as the forces of chaos look to spread terror to every corner and man fights fellow man. On the home world of the human race preparations have begun to defend the Imperial Palace and get rea...

  • ShipstarGregory Benford
    Shipstar
    by Gregory Benford
    Science Fiction

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

  • SojournGeonn Cannon
    Sojourn
    by Geonn Cannon
    Science Fiction

    A deep space adventure with monstrous aliens, this short and pacey read from Stargate official fiction novelist Cannon, draws inspiration from both Ridley Scott’s Alien and James Cameron’s sequel. Humanity’s struggle against the Harvestmen – a feral xenomorph with a terrifying instinct for survival,...

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

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

  • SouthFrank Owen
    South
    by Frank Owen
    Science Fiction

    SOUTH is a dystopian fiction set in an alternate America, set in modern times, where a civil war breaks out between the North and the South. The story follows a variety of five characters, each trying to kill, hide or survive. The book follows Garrett and Dyce, on the run from the South’s law enforc...

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

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

  • Station ElevenEmily St. John Mandel
    Station Eleven
    by Emily St. John Mandel
    Science Fiction

    Day One - The Georgia flu sweeps the globe, a pandemic on a scale not seen before. Reports put the mortality rate at 99%. Week Two and most of Civilisation lies in ruins. Twenty years after the cataclysm and pockets of humanity have rebuilt settlements across the US. Things seem a lot less dangerous...

  • Terminal EarthMichael Stewart
    Terminal Earth
    by Michael Stewart
    Science Fiction

    Terminal Earth is a collection of original short stories that all feature the end of the world in some way, edited by Michael Stewart and Neil Thomas. With 23 tales of the apocalypse, Terminal Earth offers a great deal of compelling tales from talented authors. Despite the common theme there are som...

  • The AdjacentChristopher Priest
    The Adjacent
    by Christopher Priest
    Science Fiction

    Christopher Priest is without a doubt one of the finest writers alive today. Rather than compromise his stories for the sake of easy understanding Priest writes undiluted and it's up to the reader to pay attention; to digest and to consider what the story really means, or at the very least what it m...

  • The Art of WarDavid Wingrove
    The Art of War
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    The Art of War continues David Wingrove's epic re-imagining of the Chung Kuo, the fifth novel in the 20 book series and things are starting to really heat up. It's five years after the events depicted in Ice and Fire and the story picks up in the summer of 2206. The Dispersionists who have vehementl...

  • The Atlantis GeneAG Riddle
    The Atlantis Gene
    by AG Riddle
    Science Fiction

    When I first started to read this book I was anticipating a plot involving Atlanteans and genetics. This is exactly what you get. Tenfold. The story itself is fairly straightforward at a high level but the pace is a little too quick in parts. I had to re-read the first few chapters to make sure I’d...

  • The Blood Red CityJustin Richards
    The Blood Red City
    by Justin Richards
    Science Fiction

    The Blood Red City, the second novel in the   Never War Series, following the dramatic alternative history novel Suicide Exhibition . The story picks up not long after the events of the first novel and it's advisable you read this book before reading The Blood Red City . Where the first laid the gro...

  • The BridgeIain M Banks
    The Bridge
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    The Bridge is a novel by the award winning British author Iain M Banks. I'm ever in awe over Banks - where The Wasp Factory was a really strong debut novel, The Bridge as his third published novel is just so much more. It's fantastic to see him develop as a writer and storyteller - Yeah, I know I sh...

  • The Chapters DueGraham McNeill
    The Chapters Due
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    The Chapters Due is the sixth novel in the Ultramarines series and the third in the Ultramarines Omnibus II, which also includes several additional short stories and even a nice graphic short. Once again we follow Captain Uriel Ventris as the Chapter goes up against their ultimate nemesis, the bruta...

  • The DamagedSimon Law
    The Damaged
    by Simon Law
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Dark ForestLiu Cixin
    The Dark Forest
    by Liu Cixin
    Science Fiction

    Defeatism. Fatalism. These are universal, recurrent maladies that everyone experiences at points throughout their lives. Even if one moves forward - how do we find meaning in such a vast, uncaring universe? Only here, the universe isn’t uncaring, it’s quite pointedly predatory. These are the central...

  • The Dervish HouseIan McDonald
    The Dervish House
    by Ian McDonald
    Science Fiction

    The world of The Dervish house is a reflection of it's parent city of Istanbul which is itself a reflection of the nation of Turkey; ancient, paradoxical and divided like the brain of a human being. In the year 2027 on a swealteringly hot summers day there is a small explosion in Enginsoy Square, a...

  • The EmpireElizabeth Lang
    The Empire
    by Elizabeth Lang
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Exodus TowersJason M Hough
    The Exodus Towers
    by Jason M Hough
    Science Fiction

    The Exodus Towers is the second volume in the Dire Earth Cycle, picking up right where the cliff-hanger ending left the story. A new Elevator and those strange Black Towers only complicate matters for those survivors of the wasteland that is the Earth. Not all survivors are that friendly either and...

  • The Fractal PrinceHannu Rajaniemi
    The Fractal Prince
    by Hannu Rajaniemi
    Science Fiction

    The Fractal Prince is the follow-up to the hit début novel The Quantum Thief that was released to a great deal of acclaim last year. Like the Quantum Thief, The Fractal Prince follows two distinct threads, which while written in a vividly descriptive and disarming style offers a vision that is so di...

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

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

  • The Last Man AnthologyHunter Liguore
    The Last Man Anthology
    by Hunter Liguore
    Science Fiction

    The Last Man Anthology is a collection of works that pays tribute to the mother of science fiction, Mary Shelley by featuring 19 tales of Catastrophe, Disaster and Woe. Edited by Hunter Liguore the anthology spans two centuries and includes works by Ray Bradbury, CJ Cherryh, DH Lawrence, Edgar Allen...

  • The Long CosmosTerry Pratchett
    The Long Cosmos
    by Terry Pratchett
    Science Fiction

    And so we come at last to the final volume in the remarkable journey that is The Long Earth . It also happens to be the swansong of that singular author Sir Terry Pratchett. And what a finale it is. The Long Cosmos lives up to the promise the authors have been building with this series, it is quite...

  • The Long MarsTerry Pratchett
    The Long Mars
    by Terry Pratchett
    Science Fiction

    The Long Mars is the third novel in the Long Earth series and is set in the years following the events of the cataclysmic finale of The Long War. The world has now been changed not just by the continued expansion of humanity into the Long Earths but also by recent events. Populations begin to migrat...

  • The Man in the high castlePhilip K Dick
    The Man in the high castle
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    The Man in the high castle is the hugo award winning alternative history novel by Philip K Dick. After the Axis won the Second World War the African continent is virtually wiped out, the Mediterranean drained to make farmland and the United States divided between the Japanese and the Nazis. The Japa...

  • The Middle KingdomDavid Wingrove
    The Middle Kingdom
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    The Middle Kingdom, the third volume in David Wingrove's re-imagined epic Chung Kuo series see's the Earth covered in continent spanning, mile high city of Ice; ruled by the seven T’ang, the Kings of China. A century of peace is shattered when the Minister of the Edict is assassinated and the seven...

  • The Naked GodPeter F Hamilton
    The Naked God
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    The Naked God is the third novel in the Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter F Hamilton. Sitting with the final and conclusive volume of The Nights Dawn and looking at it's massive 1150 pages (at 1.5Kg it's just about the heaviest book I've ever read), I felt kind of intimidated. My faith in Hamilton and hi...

  • The Neutronium AlchemistPeter F Hamilton
    The Neutronium Alchemist
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    The Neutronium Alchemist is the second volume in the Nights Dawn Trilogy by Peter F Hamilton. In The Reality Dysfunction , the presence of an energy-based alien lifeform during the death of a human on the colony world of Lalonde somehow "jammed open" the interface between this universe and "the beyo...

  • The Nexus OdysseyHylton H Smith
    The Nexus Odyssey
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    The Nexus Odyssey is an omnibus featuring the Darwinian Extension series along with the follow-on novel "Renewal", a series that presents a bold vision for the human race. It begins in 2033 with a planned mission to populate the red planet, Mars. But rather than a simple plan to create a settlement...

  • The Old Republic: Fatal AllianceSean Williams
    Science Fiction

    The Old Republic: Fatal Alliance, written by Sean Williams. A novel in The Star Wars series, the story is set 3650 years before A New Hope. It is a novelisation based on the new Bioware and LucasArts massively multiplayer online role-playing game. I must confess that I am a big fan of Star Wars, and...

  • The PrimarchsChristian Dunn
    The Primarchs
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

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

  • The RecollectionGareth L Powell
    The Recollection
    by Gareth L Powell
    Science Fiction

    Strange arches are appearing all over the world and the brother of failed artist Ed disappears through one that suddenly jumps into being at the bottom of a London Escalator. With no visible way back Ed must put aside his differences with his brother's wife and go find him. Four hundred years into t...

  • The Road to HellPeter Cawdron
    The Road to Hell
    by Peter Cawdron
    Science Fiction

    Not to be confused with the A589 (which is the road to Morecambe) or that very depressing Cormac McCarthy novel, The Road to Hell* (now known as Out of Time) is indeed paved with good vibrations intentions, in this case that road involves a future that uses a limited form of time travel. During the...

  • The Shiva SyndromeAlan Joshua
    The Shiva Syndrome
    by Alan Joshua
    Science Fiction

    A secret Russian mind research laboratory in Podol'sk is destroyed in a freak accident involving one of its patients. The resulting devastation leaves thousands dead and a mile wide crater where the ground has quite literally been pulverized. Plucked from discredited obscurity, parapsychologist Beau...

  • The Sirens of TitanKurt Vonnegut
    The Sirens of Titan
    by Kurt Vonnegut
    Science Fiction

    Reviewed by Philip Graham. Kurt Vonnegut was, until recently, my personal Leo Tolstoy. By that I mean that I knew his name, I knew he was a famed author, and I knew that I really should have read more, or even some, of his work. So finally I went out and got "The Sirens of Titan". I chose this book...

  • The Sky RoadKen Mcleod
    The Sky Road
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    The Sky Road is the fourth volume in the Fall Revolution Series by Ken Mcleod. Expectations are a funny thing. It has been nearly ten months since I read the first three books by MacLeod and loved them, and now I that I've read his fourth book I'm unsure as to the reason as to why I'm disappointed w...

  • The Stone CanalKen Mcleod
    The Stone Canal
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    The Stone Canal is the second volume in the Fall Revolution Series, following on from the events of the Star Fraction, written by Ken Mcleod. The third book from this soon to be grand master (if I have anything to say about the matter). Stone Canal takes place in two threads, the first one takes pla...

  • The System of the WorldNeal Stephenson
    The System of the World
    by Neal Stephenson
    Science Fiction

    The System of the World is the third and final volume in Neal Stephenson's Baroque Cycle. In 1714 Daniel Waterhouse arbitrates the irrational dispute between the aging mathematical giants Sir Isaac Newton and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, both angrily insisting they invented the calculus. However as th...

  • 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 Time Travellers AlmanacAnn Vandermeer
    The Time Travellers Almanac
    by Ann Vandermeer
    Science Fiction

    Back in November 2011 Jeff and Ann VanderMeer published "The Weird", the ultimate collection of weird tales of the last 100 years. This November they turn their attentions to Time Travel in another landmark Tome. This is without a doubt the most definitive collection of stories featuring time travel...

  • The United States of JapanPeter Tieryas
    The United States of Japan
    by Peter Tieryas
    Science Fiction

    Philip K Dick's novel The Man in the High Castle is one of my favourite all time reads. An alternative history novel that sees the Axis winning the second World War and splitting the USA between Germany on the East coast,Japan on the West and a small neutral zone in the middle. There is an author wh...

  • The Unreal & The Real: Outer Space, Inner LandsUrsula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    This second volume in a collected anthology of Ursula Le Guin’s work showcases more of her Science Fiction and fantasy stories and has a more prominent escapist theme than the first. Her introduction to this volume is deeply insightful, commenting on the writer’s perspective of genre being more abou...

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

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

  • The Windup GirlPaolo Bacigalupi
    The Windup Girl
    by Paolo Bacigalupi
    Science Fiction

    The Windup Girl is the award winning dystopian vision by Paolo Bacigalupi. Anderson Lake is a company man, AgriGen's calorie representative in Thailand. Under cover as a factory worker he combs Bangkok's street markets in search of foodstuffs long thought to be extinct. There he meets the Windup Gir...

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

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

  • The World InsideRobert Silverberg
    The World Inside
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    The World Inside is a science fiction novel by Robert Silverberg. Silverberg's "THE WORLD INSIDE" is about the giant apartment communistic/yet caste ridden complex (the floors are divided up according to job 'importance), and thought this is the straight bullet shot to the future. Population goes fl...

  • The Year of the FloodMargaret Atwood
    The Year of the Flood
    by Margaret Atwood
    Science Fiction

    The Year of the Flood is the second novel in Margaret Atwood's post-apocalyptic series and follows the viewpoints of Toby and Ren, members of a religious cult. The book tells the story of some of the events leading up to the cataclysm mentioned in the previous novel Oryx and Crake and there is a goo...

  • The Years of the CityFrederik Pohl
    The Years of the City
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

    The Years of the City is a science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl. Subtitled A Chronicle of New York in the next Century, this book is about actually not as much about the big city as about the people in it and how they interact or rather doesn't. The book is split in to five different stories telli...

  • Theme PlanetAndy Remic
    Theme Planet
    by Andy Remic
    Science Fiction

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

  • Tin MenChristopher Golden
    Tin Men
    by Christopher Golden
    Science Fiction

    In the near future, the world is falling apart. Wars, unrest, economic collapse and ecological disasters plague the globe - as it tries to hold the pieces together, the USA deploys a new weapon, the Tin Men. They are remote controlled drones piloted by American soldiers who have their minds virtuall...

  • TriggersRobert J Sawyer
    Triggers
    by Robert J Sawyer
    Science Fiction

    An Assassin's bullet strikes President Seth Jerrison on the eve of a top secret military operation, he is taken to the nearest hospital where doctors fight to save his life. At the very same hospital Dr Ranjip Singh is carrying out experiments with a device that can ease traumatic memories. In the o...

  • Truth and FearPeter Higgins
    Truth and Fear
    by Peter Higgins
    Science Fiction

    Truth and Fear is the second novel in the Wolfhound Century series by the talented author Peter Higgins. The first book in the series Wolfhound Century was a seriously impressive novel. So much so that it won Book of the year on SFBook for 2013. The story continues right where we (quite abruptly) le...

  • TurbulenceSamit Basu
    Turbulence
    by Samit Basu
    Science Fiction

    There seems to be a bit of a resurgence in the superhero story and this new wave of fiction manages to offer a different slant on the traditional tales, combining the modern interpretation of a superhero set within with the contemporary urban fantasy framework. Turbulance manages to go one better an...

  • Void StalkerAaron Dembski-Bowden
    Void Stalker
    by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
    Science Fiction

    The Night Lords are being relentlessly hunted by the Eldar of the Craftworld Ulthwé, fleeing to the dark fringes of the Imperium in an attempt to escape their pursuers. The fickle hand of fate delivers them to the carrion world of Tsagualsa, a world where their Primarch died and the legion broken. H...

  • War StoriesJaym Gates & Andrew Liptak
    War Stories
    by Jaym Gates & Andrew Liptak
    Science Fiction

    When I received this anthology to review I hadn't delved into the background behind its journey to publication. It was interesting to see its crowd-sourced origins and development. There are some misconceptions people have with crowd source funded books, firstly that the quality of the writing might...

  • We are HereMichael Marshall
    We are Here
    by Michael Marshall
    Science Fiction

    We are here; fairly innocuous words that little prepare the reader for the tightly written thriller that Michael Marshall has penned. It all begins with the struggling author David and his wife Dawn visiting the publisher in New York who has finally agreed to print his debut novel. As he returns to...

  • Without WarningJohn Birmingham
    Without Warning
    by John Birmingham
    Science Fiction

    Without warning, on the eve of the second Gulf war an unknown energy blast hits the USA - destroying all fauna while leaving flora and buildings intact. America as we know it vanishes in the blink of an eye. It's 2003 and in Kuwait US forces are poised for the invasion of Iraq, in Paris a covert age...

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

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

  • A Crown Of SwordsRobert Jordan
    A Crown Of Swords
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    A Crown of Swords is the seventh volume in Robert Jordans epic fantasy series, the Wheel of Time. Following on from the events in The Lord of Chaos, the book begins with the aftermath of the battle at Dumai's Wells. Elayne, Nyneave and Mat manage to finally locate the legendary "Bowl of the Winds" t...

  • A Memory of LightRobert Jordan
    A Memory of Light
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    And it came to pass in those days, as it had come before and would come again, that the Dark lay heavy on the land and weighed down the hearts of men, and the green things failed, and hope died. For those who have been following the journey of Jordans' epic fantasy series, reaching this book will li...

  • Anno DraculaKim Newman
    Anno Dracula
    by Kim Newman
    Fantasy

    I remember reading the short story "Red Reign" about 20 years ago, written by Newman and published in the Mammoth Book of Vampires. This short story formed the basis for the novel and it's been on my list of books to read for some time. The imminent re-release of the sequel "The Bloody Red Baron" ha...

  • Autumn - PurificationDavid Moody
    Autumn - Purification
    by David Moody
    Fantasy

    Carrying on right from where we left the survivors back in Autumn: The City, Purification takes us further down the Zombie survival road. Pretty much imprisoned within the underground Army base this small group sit and wait while on the surface the crowd of shuffling corpses is growing in size every...

  • 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...

  • Bigfoot Loose and Fin Fancy FreeRandy Henderson
    Fantasy

    Phineas (Finn) Gramayare has an unusual occupation. He's a part-trained necromancer, returned to the mortal world after being exiled to the Fairy realm for 25 years for a crime he didn't commit. Along with his Necromancy ability, Finn has decided to use his connections to offer a match-making servic...

  • 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, almo...

  • City of Golden ShadowTad Williams
    City of Golden Shadow
    by Tad Williams
    Fantasy

    City of Golden Shadow is the first volume in Tad Williams Otherland series. Eight hundred pages in a rather small font and only the first in a series. This somewhat ups the stakes when one has to decide whether to recommend a book or not. It's so easy when a series is so clearly good (like Nights Da...

  • Cold Light of DayPaul Cave
    Cold Light of Day
    by Paul Cave
    Fantasy

    Cold Light of Day is a contemporary horror novel by Paul Cave. Student Josh Sawyer's passionate encounter with Anna, a beautiful and mysterious young woman, was one that would change his life forever. He must come to terms with Anna's deep, dark and terrifying secrets - that thrust him into a nightm...

  • Connors FollyRobert C Auty
    Connors Folly
    by Robert C Auty
    Fantasy

    Connors Folly is the second volume in the Trance Warriors fantasy series by Robert C Auty, following on from the Siege of Scarn. The epic siege is finally at an end the new Grynn King is tasked with taking the fight to the enemy, to do so he must first find the white palace and finish his training a...

  • Crossroads of TwilightRobert Jordan
    Crossroads of Twilight
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    Crossroads of Twilight is the tenth novel in the incredible epic series, the Wheel of Time, by Robert Jordan. Many of the events in Crossroads of twilight run concurrently with the previous volume, Winters Heart. Ewgene is on the outskirts of Tar Valon, laying seige but wary to start a full scale wa...

  • Day ShiftCharlaine Harris
    Day Shift
    by Charlaine Harris
    Fantasy

    Day Shift is the second novel in Charlaine Harris's Midnight Texas series, following on from the quite excellent novel Midnight Crossroad we reviewed in May last year. It's a welcome return to the inhabitants of the strange small cross-road town that is Midnight. There doesn't seem to be more than a...

  • Dead RingersChristopher Golden
    Dead Ringers
    by Christopher Golden
    Fantasy

    Christopher Golden is an acclaimed American Author. He has worked in Horror, Fantasy, Teen and Young Adult fiction. He's known for his tie in novels for Buffy the Vampire Slayer and his collaboration work with Mike Magnolia, Nancy Holder and Amber Benson. His latest book ‘Dead Ringers’ is a standalo...

  • Dead WinterCL Werner
    Dead Winter
    by CL Werner
    Fantasy

    Dead Winter is the first novel in a new series that's set within the "Time of Legends" collection, itself set within Warhammer Fantasy with the aim to tell the stories of some of the greatest heroes of the Warhammer world. A thousand years have passed since the Age of Sigmar and the Empire he create...

  • Deadhouse GatesSteven Erikson
    Deadhouse Gates
    by Steven Erikson
    Fantasy

    Deadhouse Gates is the second book in the Malazan Book of the Fallen by Steven Erikson. Picking up where Gardens of the Moon left off, Deadhouse Gates reunites a host of old characters and throws some new ones into the fray. This time the action is focused not on Genabackis, but on the continent of...

  • Deaths Sweet EmbraceTracey O Hara
    Deaths Sweet Embrace
    by Tracey O Hara
    Fantasy

    There have been thousands of years of conflict between humans and parahumans, a war that's been happening in secret has finally reached an uneasy truce. But now this peace is threatened by the awakening of an unspeakable evil, a sadistic serial killer who is slaughtering teenage shapeshifters and ri...

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

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

  • 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...

  • Dracula Cha Cha ChaKim Newman
    Dracula Cha Cha Cha
    by Kim Newman
    Fantasy

    Dracula Cha Cha Cha is the third novel in the Anno Dracula series, set in the alternative history of 1959 where Vampires are just another part of the population. This time we are in Rome as Vampires, intellectuals and other important people are gathering to witness the marriage of the count Dracul....

  • Dragon HuntersMarc Turner
    Dragon Hunters
    by Marc Turner
    Fantasy

    At the basic level, Marc Turner’s Dragon Hunters is about three things: huge water-dragons, awesome sword-fights, and Machiavellian politics. The second book in Turner’s Chronicles of the Exiles trilogy - although not strictly a sequel to the first When The Heavens Fall - also has a similarly comple...

  • Dragon QueenStephen Deas
    Dragon Queen
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

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

  • Dragon WingWeis and Hickman
    Dragon Wing
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    Arianus, the World of Air, is composed entirely of porous floating islands, aligned in three basic altitudes. In the Low Realm, the dwarves (called "Gegs", an elven word for "insects") live on the continent Drevlin and cheerfully serve the giant Kicksey-winsey, a city-sized machine that is the sourc...

  • Dreams and ShadowsC Robert Cargill
    Dreams and Shadows
    by C Robert Cargill
    Fantasy

    Dreams and Shadows is a contemporary urban fantasy fairytale which tells the story of two young boys Ewan and Colby who both become embroiled in the secret world of the Limestone Kingdom - a parallel world where Wizards and Genie's co-inhabit with creatures much older and largely forgotten. Ewan and...

  • Druid's BanePhillip Henderson
    Druid's Bane
    by Phillip Henderson
    Fantasy

    Druid's Bane is the first volume in the Arkaelyon Chronicles, written by Phillip Henderson. The Illandian Spring Tournament is about to reach its crescendo. With the king’s only daughter, Danielle de Brie, and her twin brother, Kane, preparing to face each other in the tourney ring for the deciding...

  • 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...

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

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

  • EntangledGraham Hancock
    Entangled
    by Graham Hancock
    Fantasy

    Entangled is a time-spanning fantasy novel from the best-selling author, Graham Hancock. Leoni is a troubled teenager, living in modern day Los Angeles and after an accidental drug overdose causes her to have a "near-death" experience, she experiences her soul being lifted from her body and thrown b...

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

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

  • 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,...

  • 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...

  • Ghost StoryPeter Straub
    Ghost Story
    by Peter Straub
    Fantasy

    Ghost Story is a tale of horror by Peter Straub. It's hard to review this book without talking about the Chowder Society as most of the story centres around this group of old men and their acquaintances. As we meet the Chowder Society, they are a bunch of old guys who meet every couple of weeks and...

  • Ghost StoryJim Butcher
    Ghost Story
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    It's difficult to write a review of Ghost Story without giving spoilers away about the previous book, Changes . Having said that, I'd recommend reading Changes before attempting Ghost Story , while any of the Dresden Files novels can be read individually, read this one without knowing the history wi...

  • Gotrek and Felix - The AnthologyChristian Dunn
    Fantasy

    For those who have never met them, Gotrek and Felix are unsung heroes of the Warhammer fantasy Empire, the dwarven slayer* Gotrek Gurnisson and his human rememberer Felix Jaeger are the stuff of legend and have been featured in 13 novels, numerous short stories, the Warhammer fantasy Battle game and...

  • HellifaxKeith Blackmore
    Hellifax
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

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

  • Hunt for ValamonDK Mok
    Hunt for Valamon
    by DK Mok
    Fantasy

    Hunt for Valamon is a fast paced epic fantasy tale that manages to portray a number of genre tropes in a fresh and exciting way. The strong authorial voice of the writing quickly draws the reader in, the almost conversational tone of delivery actually put me in mind of Terry Pratchett. The language...

  • In the Shadow of SwordsVal Gunn
    Fantasy

    In the Shadow of Swords is the first volume in the Tales of Ciris Sarn by Val Gunn. When the legendary killer Ciris Sarn ends a life in an empty city plaza with a single dagger thrust, little does he know that an insidious game has been triggered by the brutal slaying. Turning predator into prey, th...

  • Into The LabyrinthWeis and Hickman
    Into The Labyrinth
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    On Abarrach, Xar is attempting to learn the secret of necromancy, but he needs a corpse to test it on. He interrogates the lazar Kleitus about the location of any living Sartan, and Kleitus reveals that Haplo lied to Xar about all the Sartan dying at the hands of the dead; Balthazar and his group re...

  • Kells LegendAndy Remic
    Kells Legend
    by Andy Remic
    Fantasy

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

  • Knife of DreamsRobert Jordan
    Knife of Dreams
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    Knife of Dreams is the eleventh volume in the epic Wheel of Time series and is the last full volume written by Robert Jordan. If you have like me arrived here after reading the first 10 volumes then you will appreciate this moment, a long journey, hugely rewarding and it is with a sense of trepidati...

  • LamentationKen Scholes
    Lamentation
    by Ken Scholes
    Fantasy

    Lamentation is the debut novel of Ken Scholes, published by Tor in February 2009, and the first volume of what is announced as a five-book sequence called The Psalms of Isaak. Scholes has been a name in the American short-fiction scene for some years, with a Writers of the Future win and a sheaf of...

  • 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 two...

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

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

  • 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. Mag...

  • 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...

  • Midnight CrossroadCharlaine Harris
    Midnight Crossroad
    by Charlaine Harris
    Fantasy

    Midnight, Texas is a small town located at the crossroads of Witch Light Road and Davy Road. From an outsiders perspective it looks like a run-of-the-mill, dried-up western town with lots of boarded up buildings and relatively few full-time inhabitants. There's a Pawnshop, a Diner and general store...

  • MoonbeamsLakisha Spletzer
    Moonbeams
    by Lakisha Spletzer
    Fantasy

    Moonbeams is an alternative reality fantasy novel by Lakisha Spletzer. When 3 clueless college students decide on a night out their fate is sealed, finding a strange flickering light on the way they suddenly find themselves in a very different land, populated by fantastic creatures, magical powers a...

  • 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...

  • Red CountryJoe Abercrombie
    Red Country
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

    I've bought a few Abercrombie novels over the past few years, partly due to the huge amount of positive feedback his work attracts but also as he is a fellow Lancastrian, hailing from the same fine city as I. Due to the sheer volume of review copies I receive I've yet to have time to actually read a...

  • Red MoonBenjamin Percy
    Red Moon
    by Benjamin Percy
    Fantasy

    Werewolves are often given second place to those pale undead that are now thankfully on the wane, where one wanes another waxes and perhaps 2013 will be year of the werewolf - it will if Red Moon has anything to do with it. The novel is set in an alternate world where werewolves are not only real bu...

  • RestorationGuy Adams
    Restoration
    by Guy Adams
    Fantasy

    Restoration is the second part of the duology that began with the quite brilliant The World House , written by Guy Adams. None who enter the World House leave it unchanged. The purpose behind the reality bending dimension has finally become clear but in the same way that you can't observe an event w...

  • River of Blue FireTad Williams
    River of Blue Fire
    by Tad Williams
    Fantasy

    River of Blue Fire is the second volume in Tad Williams Otherland series. I'm unsure as to why I brought this the second volume in Tad Williams Otherland series (which has just been concluded in a forth volume). I wasn't that impressed with the first volume, which i found to long and lacking in any...

  • Romeo SpikesJoanne Reay
    Romeo Spikes
    by Joanne Reay
    Fantasy

    Living amongst us are a group of creatures who prey on the vulnerable and the weak, guiding them to commit suicide and living off this energy released (known as "span") of a life snuffed out before its time. These Tormentas look just like a regular human, often taking the guise of a ravishing seduct...

  • SanctusSimon Toyne
    Sanctus
    by Simon Toyne
    Fantasy

    Sanctus is a mystery detective novel and the debut of Simon Toyne. An enigmatic citadel sits atop a steep mountain, overlooking the ancient Turkish city of Ruin. One of the oldest and most secretive inhabited places on earth is about to draw the attention of the world as a symbolic suicide set's off...

  • Second SightGreg Hamerton
    Second Sight
    by Greg Hamerton
    Fantasy

    Second Sight follows on from the events of the Riddler's Gift and is the second novel in the Lifesong series by Greg Hamerton. Tabitha Serannon has not only survived the horrors brought by the shadowcasters led by the Darkmaster, but has become a miracle healer and a fledgling wizard, but already he...

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

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

  • Shadows of SelfBrandon Sanderson
    Shadows of Self
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    Shadows of Self, the fifth in the Mistborn series and the sequel to Alloy of Law, shows Mistborn’s society evolving as technology and magic mix, the economy grows, and religion becomes a growing cultural force. The bustling, optimistic, but still shaky society that came out of the first Mistborn tri...

  • Some Kind of Fairy TaleGraham Joyce
    Some Kind of Fairy Tale
    by Graham Joyce
    Fantasy

    Graham Joyce has a wonderful knack of writing about very ordinary, very real characters that lead generally ordinary lives and yet making those people not only highly engaging but also act in a realistic fashion to events around them. He then places just one small idea that is outside the realms of...

  • SplinteredJamie Schultz
    Splintered
    by Jamie Schultz
    Fantasy

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

  • String of PearlsMike McGee
    String of Pearls
    by Mike McGee
    Fantasy

    String of Pearls asks the question; what if Heaven turned out to be just as dangerous as Hell? Dayson Snow has spent most of his life fighting against the greed of multinational corporations and when he arrives in Washington DC with Yumi Mihara - the love of his life - he becomes embroiled in a race...

  • Supernatural: War of the SonsRebecca Dessertine
    Supernatural: War of the Sons
    by Rebecca Dessertine
    Fantasy

    Supernatural: War of the Sons is an original story based on the hit TV series Supernatural (naturally) featuring the brothers Sam and Dean. The novel has been written by Rebecca Dessertine and David Reed. Sam and Dean Winchester lost their mother to a demonic supernatural force 27 years ago and in t...

  • Swan SongRobert R McCammon
    Swan Song
    by Robert R McCammon
    Fantasy

    Swan Song is a classic horror novel by Robert R McCammon. Having seen endless recommendations for this book in the alt.books.stephen-king newsgroup, every time somebody asked for something similar to The Stand by Stephen King, I fearlessly grabbed it when I found a cheap used copy at my local book p...

  • 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...

  • Swords of the EmperorChris Wraight
    Swords of the Emperor
    by Chris Wraight
    Fantasy

    Swords of the Emperor combines the two Warhammer fantasy novels Swords of Vengeance and Sword of Justice along with the short stories Feast of Horrors and Duty and Honour. Each of these tales have been brought to life from the pen of Chris Wraight who creates a sense of maturity and depth to the War...

  • Symphony of BloodAdam Pepper
    Symphony of Blood
    by Adam Pepper
    Fantasy

    Hank Mondale is a rough and ready P.I. who likes to drink and gamble more than he should, a lifestyle choice which has led to his landlord threatening to evict him and bookie threatening a great deal worse, he desperately needs a break. When the real estate mogul Thomas Blake calls with a paid job o...

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

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

  • The Black MausoleumStephen Deas
    The Black Mausoleum
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

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

  • The Buried LifeCarrie Patel
    The Buried Life
    by Carrie Patel
    Fantasy

    From the books description page: The gaslight and shadows of the underground city of Recoletta hide secrets and lies. When Inspector Liesl Malone investigates the murder of a renowned historian, she finds herself stonewalled by the all-powerful Directorate of Preservation – Recoletta’s top-secret hi...

  • 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 destructio...

  • The Chosen SeedSarah Pinborough
    The Chosen Seed
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

    Framed for Murder and on the run, Detective Inspector Cass Jones gets unwelcome attention wherever he goes, including being hounded by his former colleagues. As he works desperately to save his kidnapped nephew and gain answers he finds himself going up against The Bank and its sinister employees on...

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

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

  • The 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 balan...

  • 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 — for no man h...

  • The Drawing of the ThreeStephen King
    The Drawing of the Three
    by Stephen King
    Fantasy

    Do not read this review if you have not read the The Gunslinger - it contains spoilers for it. The Drawing of the Three (or DT2) takes off where The Gunslinger ended, with Roland lying on the beach of the western sea. The book tells the tale of Roland as he journeys along this beach and draws "the t...

  • The Eighth CourtMike Shevdon
    The Eighth Court
    by Mike Shevdon
    Fantasy

    One of my favourite series has now reached book four and continues to astonish and astound in the quality and conviction of the writing, the continued building of the rich tapestry that is The Courts of the Feyre and the journey of the complex characters that inhabit Shevdon's urban fantasy. The nov...

  • The Executioners HeartGeorge Mann
    The Executioners Heart
    by George Mann
    Fantasy

    The Executioners Heart is the fourth novel in the Newbury and Hobbes series and follows on from the events of The Immorality Engine - although you don't need to have read that or any of the previous books to enjoy The Executioners Heart. The Queen's agents Sir Maurice Newbury and Miss Veronica Hobbe...

  • The Fires Of HeavenRobert Jordan
    The Fires Of Heaven
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Fires of heaven is the fifth novel in the epic series the wheel of time, written by Robert Jordan. Rand, the Dragon reborn continues to try and re-unite the Aiel, leading them over the spine of the world, hunting the Shaido. Meanwhile the Forsaken are free and plotting Rands downfall. While Rahv...

  • The Gathering StormRobert Jordan
    The Gathering Storm
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Gathering Storm (formally under the working title A Memory of Light) is the 12th novel in the outstanding fantasy epic, the Wheel of Time by the late Robert Jordan, originally started in 1990 with "The Eye of the World". As Jordan passed away before completing what was thought to be the last vol...

  • The Great HuntRobert Jordan
    The Great Hunt
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    For centuries traveling gleemen have told the tales of The Great Hunt of the Horn. So many tales about each of the Hunters, and so many Hunters to tell of . . . Now the Horn itself is found: the Horn of Valere long thought only legend, the Horn which will raise the dead heroes of the ages. Rand al'T...

  • 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, i...

  • The Hand of ChaosWeis and Hickman
    The Hand of Chaos
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    Haplo takes a submersible back to Draknor to retrieve his ship. He finds Samah there— wet, haggard, and lost. The leader of the Council has opened Death's Gate, allowing the dragon-snakes free access to all the four worlds. Haplo decides he is too tired to physically capture Samah and uses his ship...

  • The Janus CycleTej Turner
    The Janus Cycle
    by Tej Turner
    Fantasy

    Every now and then I am sent something that stretches the boundaries of my reading interest. The Janus Cycle is one such book. Whilst this book is billed as a novel, it is really a collection of linked short stories. The linked theme follows a disparate group of individuals seemingly connected by th...

  • The King of the CragsStephen Deas
    The King of the Crags
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    The King of the Crags is the follow up to The Adamantine Palace by Stephen Deas. Prince Jehal is now reaping the fruits of his new found power after murdering, poisoning and backstabbing his way to the top, enjoying the confidence (and Bed) of the new speaker. Those loyal to the old regime are still...

  • 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 Lemoncholy Life of Annie AsterScott Wilbanks
    Fantasy

    The Lemoncholy Life of Annie Aster was a rollercoaster ride from start to finish. Though it begins a little bit slow, as more and more threads are strung together for the reader, everything picks up. I love the storyline, I love the characters, and I love the settings. In modern San Francisco, Annab...

  • The Lord Of ChaosRobert Jordan
    The Lord Of Chaos
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Lord of Chaos is the sixth novel in the Wheel of Time series by Robert Jordan, following on from the events in the Fires of heaven. On the slopes of Shayol Ghul, the Myrddraal swords are forged, while in the mountain itself, the Dark one waits patiently in his ever weakening prison. Now Rand has...

  • The MalicePeter Newman
    The Malice
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Malice is the follow-up to one of my favourite fantasy reads last year, Peter Newmans The Vagrant . It's a story set in a post-apocalyptic future where forgotten technology intermingles with demonspawn and twisted lands full of twisted mutants. It had the dark, haunted flavour of Stephen Kings D...

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

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

  • The 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 Bow...

  • The Order of the ScalesStephen Deas
    The Order of the Scales
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    The third of Stephen Deas’ series, published in 2011, The Order of the Scales continues the story of the Dragon Realms. Each book picks up immediately from where the last left off, solving the requisite cliff hanger with yet more twists and turns of scheming between the kings, queens, princes, drago...

  • 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 President's VampireChristopher Farnsworth
    The President's Vampire
    by Christopher Farnsworth
    Fantasy

    A one hundred and forty year old Vampire who is sworn to protect the President of the United States, now THAT is an interesting concept. It's the idea of the author Christopher Farnsworth who presents us with an rich urban fantasy that manages to honour some well known and much loved series while st...

  • 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 Seventh GateWeis and Hickman
    The Seventh Gate
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    In the Labyrinth, Marit and Hugh venture out to try and find Alfred. He turns out to be the prisoner of a Labyrinth dragon, which are almost the equal of the dragon-snakes in cruelty and savagery. With the help of the Cursed Blade, they drive it off and rescue Alfred. On Abarrach, Haplo is dying. He...

  • The Shadow RisingRobert Jordan
    The Shadow Rising
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Shadow rising is the fourth book in the Wheel of Time series, by Robert Jordan. Prophecy has been fullfilled, the Stone of Tear has been breached and Callindor - the sword that is not a sword has been wielded, the Dragon is reborn. Selene finally reveals to Rand that she is Lanfear, one of the F...

  • The Sons of ThestianM. E. Vaughan
    The Sons of Thestian
    by M. E. Vaughan
    Fantasy

    Establishing a new fantasy story of weight and significance is difficult these days. The genre is crowded with epic quests, adventures, villains and heroes. The Sons of Thestian by M.E. Vaughan is fantasy tale by a talented writer that attempts to draw our attention. The opening action sequences are...

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

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

  • The SunderingGav Thorpe
    The Sundering
    by Gav Thorpe
    Fantasy

    The most tragic tale from the Time of Legends tells of the fall of the greatest houses of the elves and the fates of three kings: Pheonix, Witch and Shadow. There was once a time when all was order, now so distant that no mortal creature can remember it. Since time immemorial the elves have dwelt up...

  • The Supernatural EnchancementsEdgar Cantero
    Fantasy

    Quirky, accomplished and a great deal of fun, The Supernatural Enchancements is a solid, unusual novel. The premise of the story is the protagonist (known only as A) inherits the American estate "Axton House" following the death of his second cousin "Uncle" Ambrose, whom A had never met or even knew...

  • 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 TwyningTerence Blacker
    The Twyning
    by Terence Blacker
    Fantasy

    The Twyning is the story of young ratling Efren, born into a time of change for the Kingdom of rats that live beneath the city streets. After the King is assassinated by a human scientist Dr Henry Ross-Gibbon the whole rat society is in turmoil. This death is just the start though, with the Doctor o...

  • The Waste LandsStephen King
    The Waste Lands
    by Stephen King
    Fantasy

    Do not read this review if you haven't read The Gunslinger and The Drawing of The Three. Turn off your computer and start reading. If you don't have these books run to your nearest bookstore and get them! Continuing where The Drawing of the Three ended, The Waste Lands takes us through the forest an...

  • 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 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...

  • 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 i...

  • Towers of MidnightRobert Jordan
    Towers of Midnight
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    Towers of Midnight is the penultimate novel in the Wheel of Time Series by Robert Jordan and completed by Brandon Sanderson. The Last Battle has begun and the seals on the Dark One's prison continue to crumble to dust. The very pattern itself is unravelling and the armies of the Shadow are boldly mo...

  • Trinity RisingElspeth Cooper
    Trinity Rising
    by Elspeth Cooper
    Fantasy

    When we left Gair at the end of the spectacular novel Songs of the Earth there had been a pretty big shock. Rather than start where the story left off, Trinity Rising instead follows Teia, a young woman who seems destined to witness great and terrible things. a young woman who has hidden powers few...

  • Turn CoatJim Butcher
    Turn Coat
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    Turn Coat is the eleventh book in Jim Butcher's Dresden Files and as ever, events have a habit of turning against Harry Dresden. This time his help is being sought from the most unlikely of people - Morgan, the warden who has persecuted Harry mercilessly in the past. Morgan is on the run after being...

  • Viking DeadToby Venables
    Viking Dead
    by Toby Venables
    Fantasy

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

  • VivisepultureAndy Remic
    Vivisepulture
    by Andy Remic
    Fantasy

    Vivisepulture is an ebook collection of weird tales from some seriously talented authors, edited by the singular Andy Remic. (According to the online dictionary Vivisepulture is the act of burying someone alive by the way and you get some odd articles looking that one up on Google I can tell you!)....

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

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

  • White Gold WielderStephen Donaldson
    White Gold Wielder
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    White Gold Wielder is the last book in the second of Stephen Donaldson's trilogies about the Leper Thomas Covenant and his journeys to the parallel reality known as "The Land". Regular visitors to the site may recall that I didn't think that much of the previous volume - "The One Tree" and I almost...

  • White NightJim Butcher
    White Night
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    White Knight marks the ninth book in Jim Butchers urban fantasy series featuring Chicago's first and only Wizard P.I. Regular visitors to SFBook may be aware that we are (slowly) reviewing the series. Those who haven't read any of the Dresden Files would be better starting at the beginning with Stor...

  • WickMatt Doyle
    Wick
    by Matt Doyle
    Fantasy

    A futuristic science fantasy based on a nineties card game tournament with the monsters, manoeuvres and spells depicted in a huge seemingly holographic light show, Wick is certainly a vivid visual feast when it comes to the battles. The book is structured in a multitude of first person narratives, d...

  • Wicked LovelyMelissa Mar
    Wicked Lovely
    by Melissa Mar
    Fantasy

    Aislinn has always seen faeries. They are powerful, cruel, and dangerous. She and her grandmother have avoided them all of their lives—don’t stare, don’t speak, don’t attract their attention. But now, faeries have started to stalk her, including Keenan, the Summer King. Keenan has searched high and...

  • Winters HeartRobert Jordan
    Winters Heart
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    Winters Heart is the 9th volume in Robert Jordan's epic fantasy series, the Wheel of Time. Now that the natural weather has returned to the land, Winter sets in with a vengeance, almost making up for lost time after the oppressive heat of the Dark One's spell. Rand is finally confronted by the 3 wom...

  • Wizard of WisdomWalter C Conner
    Wizard of Wisdom
    by Walter C Conner
    Fantasy

    There is always a good audience for traditional fantasy. The components are familiar and authors (like myself) who elect to write something that appeals to readers who want to settle down into a story loaded with magic, Elves, wizards and warriors where a plucky underdog or two wins the day against...

  • Wolves of the CallaStephen King
    Wolves of the Calla
    by Stephen King
    Fantasy

    It has been six, nearly seven, years since the last volume in the Dark Tower series and if you, like me, didn't even like the fourth volume, it has been an even longer wait. Luckily this book delivers. It's all action, it's all about the Ka-tet and it's about The Dark Tower from front to back. Havin...

  • World War ZMax Brooks
    World War Z
    by Max Brooks
    Fantasy

    A Zombie novel by the son of comic legend Mel Brooks, World War Z is told as a series of interconnected interviews from survivors of the zombie war all over the world. This method of storytelling is very different, there is no central protagonist or contiguous plot, instead we learn about the story...

  • Becoming DavidPhil Sloman
    Becoming David
    by Phil Sloman
    Horror

    A horror novella that sets out its stall early on, Becoming David by Phil Sloman is a carefully constructed novella that investigates the mind of a perfectionist serial killer from both the inside and the outside. To begin, we are introduced to Richard, a self-sufficient serial killer who has worked...

  • Doctor SleepStephen King
    Doctor Sleep
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Okay I must admit that when I heard about this book coming into existence I must say I was rather excited, hell, it was more than that it was like sliced bread. Doctor Sleep for those who aren’t aware, is the sequel, of sorts, to The Shining, one of the best books Mr King has written in my humble op...

  • Four Past MidnightStephen King
    Four Past Midnight
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Four Past Midnight is a collection of four short stories by the master of horror, Stephen King. I guess that four stories in just under a thousand pages, means that each of the stories deserves their own review and that's just what you are going to get. Before I get to the stories, I'll just make a...

  • HornsJoe Hill
    Horns
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

    Ignatius Perrish awoke with the usual hangover symptoms that accompany a drunken night of debauchery - raging headache, bad breath... and a pair of horns growing from his temples. Ig had it all, a privileged upbringing, a caring family, a famous dad and the love of the beautiful, vivacious Merrin Wi...

  • The ThreeSarah Lotz
    The Three
    by Sarah Lotz
    Horror

    On a single day that will come to be known as "Black Thursday" four passenger planes crash at almost the same time at four different points around the world. Each crash has one single survivor, three children who emerge from the wreckage seemingly unhurt and Pamela May Donald who lives just long eno...

  • 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...

  • Wamphyri!Brian Lumley
    Wamphyri!
    by Brian Lumley
    Horror

    Second book in the original five book series and it follows directly on from where the first book, The Necroscope finishes. The story revisits old characters, further improving on and immersing us in this world of Espers and monsters. Harry Keogh, the original Necroscope has lost his body but his mi...

  • Dark SkyMike Brooks
    Dark Sky
    by Mike Brooks
    Science Fiction

    The crew of the Keiko are back. Mike Brooks hammers out the sequel to his epic, sci-fi adventure, Dark Run; Dark Sky, and it truly is an incredible adventure. It continues the rapid-fire wit from the first, harkens back to the space opera/western of Firefly and blends two different perspectives on t...

  • Call of CthulhuHP Lovecraft
    Call of Cthulhu
    by HP Lovecraft
    Fantasy

    Call of Cthulhu is the original short story by HP Lovecraft that has since spawned the whole Cthulhu mythos, with films, video games, roleplay games and many novels by authors in the shared Cthulhu universe (known as the Cthulhu Mythos or the Lovecraft Mythos), which was the intent of Lovecraft. The...

  • Dreams of ChaosAllen Stroud
    Dreams of Chaos
    by Allen Stroud
    Fantasy

    Dreams of Chaos, the first in a trilogy by Allen Stroud, is a companion piece to the computer game Chaos Reborn from Snapshot Games. Set in the 14 th Century, it explores an alternative history of our world mainly set between Europe and the Far East with copious amounts of wizardry and religious ord...

  • 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,...

  • MigrationDaniel David
    Migration
    by Daniel David
    Science Fiction

    What if our day to day behaviour was recorded, analysed and mapped to create a copy of us in a  digital utopia? How would this new reality transact with our own where people need to be born and grow up before they can be absorbed? What would the consequences be for those left behind? Migration tells...

  • Haunted FuturesSalome Jones
    Haunted Futures
    by Salome Jones
    Science Fiction

    Haunted Futures is a collection presenting the uncertain future in many guises. Originally funded as part of a kickstarter campaign and edited by Salome Jones it features short stories from authors including Warren Ellis, Jeff Noon, Tricia Sullivan and SL Huang (amongst others). The brief these auth...

  • Rhyming RingsDavid Gemmell
    Rhyming Rings
    by David Gemmell
    General Fiction

    David Gemmell died eleven years ago, he was one of the most popular fantasy authors in the UK, a regular Sunday Times bestseller. His legacy lives on not just in the annual David Gemmel Legend Award but more importantly in the influence his writing had on the fantasy genre. I first encountered his b...

  • The HatchingEzekiel Boone
    The Hatching
    by Ezekiel Boone
    Science Fiction

    Spiders (or arachnids if you are being posh) provoke strong reactions in some. One of my brothers, who still considers himself tough (even though he's now over 40) will move astonishingly fast in the opposite direction when encountering such a beast - usually with the result that his teenage daughte...

  • SkitterEzekiel Boone
    Skitter
    by Ezekiel Boone
    Science Fiction

    A few weeks ago we reviewed the spider-infested book The Hatching . This was preperation for the launch of the much anticipated sequel Skitter . Skitter follows on directly from the dramatic events of the previous book and once more we are thrown into the middle of spidergeddon. Haven't read The Hat...

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

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

  • SpoonbendersDaryl Gregory
    Spoonbenders
    by Daryl Gregory
    Fantasy

    Spoonbenders by Daryl Gregory hasn't even been released at the time of writing and it's already been picked up by Paramount TV. It's the authors first foray into literary speculative fiction and follows the Amazing Telemachus Family. Back in the 1970's they acheived widespread fame for their magic a...

  • The War of the WorldsHG Wells
    The War of the Worlds
    by HG Wells
    Science Fiction

    The War of the Worlds was originally written in 1897 and it's never been out of print. It's one of the earliest stories to depict conflict with an alien race and has been influential in film, radio, TV, music and even science. The Guardian has gone as far as to say: A true classic that has pointed t...

  • The Call of Cthulhu & Other Weird StoriesHP Lovecraft

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

  • Electric DreamsPhilip K Dick
    Electric Dreams
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    It's great to see Philip K Dick stories continue to be explored and consumed in different forms of media. His writing still popular long after his death. For those who aren't aware, the UK TV station Channel 4 (Broadcast in the US via Amazon Video) has started a new 10 part anthology series called E...

  • Strange WeatherJoe Hill
    Strange Weather
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

    Strange Weather contains four stories that are subtly linked; each different in theme and style. They are tied together, as you might expect from the title, by some pretty unusual weather. The book begins in 1988 with "Snapshot" which describes 13 year old Michael Figlione living in the Silicon Vall...

  • 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...

  • Children of Earth and SkyGuy Gavriel Kay
    Children of Earth and Sky
    by Guy Gavriel Kay
    Fantasy

    In short, this is a story set in a fantasy version of European renaissance including trade, religion and politics. You can draw parallels between different countries and religions in the book to real world versions of the same.  But simply describing a book in this way is somewhat lazy and misses th...

  • Elysium FireAlastair Reynolds
    Elysium Fire
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Elysium Fire is the sequel to Aurora Rising (also known as The Prefect), set in Reynold's Revelation Space universe but before events of his previous novels. Like Aurora Rising, it can be read as a stand-alone novel. It's the 25th century (with no Buck Rogers in sight) and humanity has, in many ways...

  • Zero DayEzekiel Boone
    Zero Day
    by Ezekiel Boone
    Science Fiction

    Zero Day features a return to those creeping, swarming and skittling spiders that were introduced in The Hatching and Skitter . The world is a quite different place and the realisation that there is some co-ordination to the vast deadly swarms of arachnids raises the difficult question of what the U...

  • WitchsignDen Patrick
    Witchsign
    by Den Patrick
    Fantasy

    It’s a bleak start to Den Patrick’s latest fantasy adventure and the first instalment of his Ashen Torment trilogy. It’s been a tough year in the village of Cinderfell and Blacksmith Marek is struggling to make ends meet for him and his two children. But feeding his family isn’t his only problem. Hi...

  • Embers of WarGareth L Powell
    Embers of War
    by Gareth L Powell
    Science Fiction

    A new space opera story from an author with a strong legacy in SF is a nice treat. Powell’s work on Ack-Ack Macaque has always intrigued me, but never enough to go out and read it. Whereas this, a more conventionally presented science fiction novel with comparisons to Ann Leckie and Iain M. Banks em...

  • Fictional AlignmentMike French
    Fictional Alignment
    by Mike French
    Science Fiction

    Mike French returns to the world of An Android Awakes with this initially more conventionally presented sequel. Fictional Alignment is not the same animal as its predecessor – an oversized picture story book anthology of the attempts of Android PD121928 to create fiction that can be accepted by its...

  • Daughters of the Forgotten LightSean Grigsby
    Science Fiction

    Daughters of the Forgotten Light is set in a deep space penal colony called Oubliette. Floating in space, it's home to the most savage criminals and other members of the population Earth no longer wants. To survive on Oubiette you need to join a gang and Lena "Horror" Horowitz leads the Daughters of...

  • ShelterDave Hutchinson
    Shelter
    by Dave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

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

  • The TouristRobert Dickinson
    The Tourist
    by Robert Dickinson
    Science Fiction

    The Tourist (not to be confused with the book and film of the same name by Olen Steinhauer) is a story of time travel, imagining a future where people can take holidays to the past and experience the genuine 21st century in all it's glory. There are three main tour operators offering holidays to the...

  • The Folio Book of Horror StoriesRamsey Campbell
    Horror

    The Folio Book of Horror Stories is a new anthology, collecting some of the finest stories of the macabre written over the last two hundred years or so. The collection is edited and introduced by the award winning, legendary author and critic Ramsey Campbell, who has thoughtfully provided an insight...

  • This Book is Full of SpidersDavid Wong
    Horror

    Spiders seem to tap into a primeval fear inside humans. Perhaps in the days of cavemen there were 20 foot spiders that ate those that travelled at night? What I do know is that the average domestic spider in the UK is unlikely to spring off the wall and eat through your skull. This set of events is...

  • Academ's FuryJim Butcher
    Academ's Fury
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    There is a surprising amount of Fantasy that is essentially an epic game of magical rock, paper, scissors. Various mages, witches and Gods all fighting each other with differing powers. They are strong against one power, but weak against another. The balance of the world rests on all these powers ca...

  • Sherlock Holmes and the Sussex Sea-DevilsJames Lovegrove
    Fantasy

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

  • The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & ClayMichael Chabon
    General Fiction

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

  • The Buried DaggerJames Swallow
    The Buried Dagger
    by James Swallow
    Science Fiction

    So this is it, the 54th and final book in the Horus Heresy series. But before you despair, it isn't the end of the story and the mad Titan Horus is only just knocking on the doors of Terra. The final battle will be played out over a series of novels called the Siege of Terra , presumably ending with...

  • A Time of BloodJohn Gwynne
    A Time of Blood
    by John Gwynne
    Fantasy

    Following the events of A Time of Dread , this book raises the stakes even further. Drem and friends flee the horrors at Starstone Lake. They must warn the Order of the Bright Star that a Demon has risen, but Fritha, the Demon's high Priestess has other ideas and is hot on their heels. Meanwhile, co...

  • Shadow CaptainAlastair Reynolds
    Shadow Captain
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    I've been reading Reynolds books since he began writing them and have seen him grow over the years from a seriously talented writer to one of the best in his field. Revenger was one of his finest works to date, Shadow Captain eclipses it easily. It's the second in a planned trilogy but manages to av...

  • Arm of the SphinxJosiah Bancroft
    Arm of the Sphinx
    by Josiah Bancroft
    Fantasy

    Arm of the Sphinx is the second in the Books of Babel series by Josiah Bancroft and follows on from the events of Senlin Ascends . Tom - who is now going by the name of Captain Mudd, continues his search for Marya. He has help, with the airship The Stone Cloud and it's motley crew. Since the events...

  • Star Trek Prometheus: The Root of all RageBernd Perplies
    Science Fiction

    What makes a great trilogy? Three stories that combine to make one, but are themselves also valid. Each book should have a start, middle and end that combine together to make a longer narrative. There are not many things worse for a fantasy or science fiction reader than getting their hands on a ‘fi...

  • Iron GoldPierce Brown
    Iron Gold
    by Pierce Brown
    Science Fiction

    Being an author there are hard decisions to be made. Do you stick with the same characters or try to be someone who writes about different times and places in each book? After the original  Red Rising  trilogy, author Pierce Brown had the option to stop writing about Darrow’s rise and instead concen...

  • Star Trek Prometheus: In the Heart of ChaosBernd Perplies
    Science Fiction

    The original USS Enterprise was sent out on a five year mission to explore Space, but even the biggest Star Trek fan would not want to know about every single detail that happened on the voyage. We can forgo the times that they slept or went to the loo. Perhaps even skip a few lengthy sessions betwe...

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

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

  • Batman: The Court of OwlsGreg Cox
    Science Fiction

    Batman stalks the villains of Gotham and for many he is their worst nightmare. Bats may be inherently scary to some, but in nature they are not the top of the food chain and several animals like to eat them for a snack. One such animal is the Owl, a natural enemy of the Bat. This being Gotham dressi...

  • The Ruin of KingsJenn Lyons
    The Ruin of Kings
    by Jenn Lyons
    Fantasy

    The Ruin of Kings is the debut of Jenn Lyons, it's an impressive way to make an entrance. The beginning of epic fantasy series A Chorus of Dragons, the book has just been optioned to be turned into a TV series. Growing up in the slums of the city Suur, Kihrin learns to entertain with music while als...

  • Blackfish CitySam Miller
    Blackfish City
    by Sam Miller
    Science Fiction

    One of the many hats I wear is that of a professional software engineer. As a junior professional software engineer, I experienced acute imposter syndrome. It didn’t help that I was surrounded by people who had been engineering software for years, even decades, longer than I had. I resolved my pligh...

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

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

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

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

  • The PassengersJohn Marrs
    The Passengers
    by John Marrs
    Science Fiction

    Call me old fashioned, I am a little scared of the future. This is a sentiment that will hit many of us eventually. What is wrong with the way technology works right now? Do I really need to talk to my speakers or plug myself into the Matrix just to order a pizza? The idea of getting behind the whee...

  • Record of a Spaceborn FewBecky Chambers
    Record of a Spaceborn Few
    by Becky Chambers
    Science Fiction

    A Hopeful Future Review kindly provided by Vanessa Smyth.  Welcome to the third and latest instalment in The Wayfarers series, Record of a Spaceborn Few by Becky Chambers. This current narrative is set within the same captivating universe as the first two books and, despite a few oblique character l...

  • From Divergent SunsSam Peters
    From Divergent Suns
    by Sam Peters
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction is a minefield for any author. So many others genres are available that have a set of rules that you can follow. Crime has it, even most fantasy books follow a pattern, but science fiction can be almost anything. It can be set in an alternative today with only a tiny tweak to our way...

  • Broken BranchesBen Ellis
    Broken Branches
    by Ben Ellis
    Science Fiction

    In the not too distant future, your social standing is based on the "purity" of your genes and the ability to trace your family through the "national family tree" genetic database. All men are sterile and fertility drugs are only given to state-sponsored couples whose genetic match are approved. Tho...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • WanderersChuck Wendig
    Wanderers
    by Chuck Wendig
    Science Fiction

    There seem to be a worryingly large number of ways we, as a species, could become extinct. From huge extra terrestrial rocks hurtling through space or climate change making our world uninhabitable to Trump pressing the wrong button at the wrong time. A virus that seems to strike at random, causing t...

  • Missing PersonSarah Lotz
    Missing Person
    by Sarah Lotz
    General Fiction

    The crime genre is a well-trodden one, so much so that anyone who reads the genre exclusively may find themselves jaded by similar storylines occurring over and over again. One way to excite both author and reader is to try and find new approaches. How about a crime novel told entirely from the pris...

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

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

  • A Little HatredJoe Abercrombie
    A Little Hatred
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

    A fantasy writer needs to be aware that they could fall into a rut. Another trilogy of books set in the same world, with similar characters doing similar things. This may appease those fans that fear change, but to drive themselves as a writer it is important to evolve; even if evolving within the f...

  • Cold StorageDavid Koepp
    Cold Storage
    by David Koepp
    Horror

    We are only one mutation away from an organism that could wipe out humans. Sound all dystopian and farfetched? This is what I was reading in the paper this very morning as super bugs are becoming increasingly prevalent and our conventional medicines are having no effect. David Koepp is an author who...

  • Angel MageGarth Nix
    Angel Mage
    by Garth Nix
    Fantasy

    It sometimes feels that if you have read one fantasy novel, you have read them all. The same tropes crop up again and again. This may be comforting to fans of the genre, but people that dabble may soon become bored. Those of us in the know realise that there is a wealth of variation if you are willi...

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

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

  • The Gurkha and the Lord of TuesdaySaad Hossain
    Science Fiction

    Melek Ahmar, the Lord of Mars, the Red King, the Lord of Tuesday, Most August Rajah of Djinn, wakes up three millennia after being knocked out cold in a bar fight. Though his magic is weak at first from disuse, he struggles out of his stone sarcophagus, which is sealed with aging spells cast by far...

  • Dune SeriesFrank Herbert
    Dune Series
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

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

  • Double FeatureDonald E Westlake
    Double Feature
    by Donald E Westlake
    General Fiction

    The movie industry is seen as all glitz and glamour, but just beneath the surface Donald E. Westlake suggests that it is made up of lies and even murder. What type of person is drawn to an industry where you pretend to be fake – fake people. In Double Feature, two of Westlake’s novellas have been br...

  • The Light YearsR. W. W. Greene
    The Light Years
    by R. W. W. Greene
    Science Fiction

    Time is relative. We use this term in our everyday lives to explain why boring tasks seem to last an age, but the day flies by when we are having fun. Sounds good, but it is not what Einstein had in mind. His thought process was far more interested in physics and what happens as we approach the spee...

  • Re-CoilJ. T. Nicholas
    Re-Coil
    by J. T. Nicholas
    Science Fiction

    Death is not something that people like to think about, but without death how are we to live? Within all of us in the unspoken knowledge that one day we will die. For this reason, we venture forth, live, breath, love and laugh. Some of us more than others, but without death would we even bother? We...

  • 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...

  • Starship AlchemonChristopher Hinz
    Starship Alchemon
    by Christopher Hinz
    Science Fiction

      Having read more than a few  S tarship  loads of science fiction in my time I am  particular about  what type of aliens I like. I have a fondness for the  Star Trek  tactic o f gluing some plasticine to the forehead of a humanoid but in today’s fiction I like something truly alien. What  does that...

  • The Rise of SkywalkerRae Carson
    The Rise of Skywalker
    by Rae Carson
    Science Fiction

    The movie tie in novel is much maligned but I have always had a soft spot for them. I have spent many a pleasurable hour with the works of tie in master Alan Dean Foster who was able to improve several mediocre films with his prose. Films are great at bombastic action, but they often fail to convey...

  • ProvidenceMax Barry
    Providence
    by Max Barry
    Science Fiction

    Luddites are a group that used to destroy the machines that were taking their jobs. The term is now used as a derivative  way to  talk about someone who does not get  technology but ,   did  they have it right ?  All us smug computer literate people may have the best jobs  now , but how lo ng until...

  • 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...

  • The Black CoastMike Brooks
    The Black Coast
    by Mike Brooks
    Fantasy

    In Science Fiction and  Fantasy,  I have visited a multitude of different worlds. In some  cases,  it feels like all the people on the planet ha ve  similar  sensibilities, but how is this possible ?  Even within our own country you get people from the North who are different from the South,  never...

  • The Pillars of the earthKen Follett
    The Pillars of the earth
    by Ken Follett
    General Fiction

    Fair warning, this isn't going to be a normal review, it's the first one I've written post-covid and is much more personal than usual. Some years ago, my father started reading again. Previous to that he hadn't read much for the last few decades outside of Haynes manuals and instruction leaflets (al...

  • Alpha OmegaNicholas Bowling
    Alpha Omega
    by Nicholas Bowling
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • Shadow FallAlexander Freed
    Shadow Fall
    by Alexander Freed
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Seven Deaths of Evelyn HardcastleStuart Turton
    Science Fiction

    I am not an argumentative fellow and the only two full on blowouts I can remember are well within the geek sphere. Who was the actor alongside Harrison Ford at the start of  Raiders of the Lost Ark  and how does time travel work? I may have been wrong about Alfred  Molina  but I am right about time...

  • The Invention of SoundChuck Palahniuk
    The Invention of Sound
    by Chuck Palahniuk
    Horror

    Sound can be powerful, get the tone right or the volume loud enough and you can cause real damage. There are skyscrapers that have been buil t  that hum  when  the wind perfectly hits the building   t o make it vibrate . The worse thing that happens here is an annoying sound when the wind blows in t...

  • A Fool's HopeMike Shackle
    A Fool's Hope
    by Mike Shackle
    Fantasy

    To the uninitiated, the fantasy genre is stagnant. The same old dwarves and  elves  going on long journeys and then back again. Any fan of the genre knows that this is just not the case. The genre has evolved with soc iety. The fantasy books of the 80s and 90s differ greatly from Tolkien and modern...

  • 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...

  • Night TerrorsTim Waggoner
    Night Terrors
    by Tim Waggoner
    Fantasy

    For many people clowns are the stuff of nightmares and there they should remain.  In the modern age you can pretty much live a life free of these demon entertainers; just avoid going to the circus, CBEEBIES and any films about IT.  But what about if the clowns of your dreams decided to leave and com...

  • 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 o f  all races brought together to fight for a common cause.  This produces a sense of shared responsibility and brotherhood.  Map’s Edge...

  • Bear HeadAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Bear Head
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    When we colonise the planets will they send out the best and the brightest? I’m not so sure as many of the best and the brightest will be quite happy on Earth leading a succes sful life. Converting the likes of Mars into a  liveable   environment  will be dirty, cold and dangerous work. It is more l...

  • The UnbrokenC L Clark
    The Unbroken
    by C L Clark
    Fantasy

    The life of  a  fantasy  hero is never  easy. They are often thrust into an adventure not of their choosing, losing those that they love on the way towards an objective that seems impossible to meet.  In C L Clark’s  Unbroken , one of the protagonists is Touraine, a soldier who much overcome all the...

  • InscapeLouise Carey
    Inscape
    by Louise Carey
    Science Fiction

    A lot of the political hustle and bustle in today’s world has its  roots  in how far you think capitalism should go. Some countries are all for state control, others are far more lais s ez faire .  Do  private companies  already  have  too much power  pull ing  the strings behind  our  elected repre...

  • RavenspurConn Iggulden
    Ravenspur
    by Conn Iggulden
    General Fiction

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

  • TwilightMarkus Heitz
    Twilight
    by Markus Heitz
    Science Fiction

    Over the next three days, three reviews will stand before you. Read them in any order, some elements will be the same, others quite different. If you would like to go straight to the segment unique to this review, please start with paragraph 4. Drafting a book must be like standing in front of a ser...

  • Kings of a Dead WorldJamie Mollart
    Kings of a Dead World
    by Jamie Mollart
    Science Fiction

    There are two ways that you can view the future. We are all doomed, or we will somehow save ourselves. The optimistic  The Day the Earth Stood Still  way of thinking is that humans will only get around to do something when we are really in a pickle. World ending disaster will be averted at the last...

  • The Beautiful OnesSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    The Beautiful Ones
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Fantasy

    Fantasy does not have to be one set thing and as the years  progress,  I find fantasy books that have moved away from  just being  magical  creatures going out on a quest far more interesting. The Beautiful Ones by Silvia Moreno-Garcia has the lightest of fantasy touches and uses the genre as a way...

  • Finders KeepersStephen King
    Finders Keepers
    by Stephen King
    General Fiction

    Stephen King  is rightly one of the  bestselling  genre writers of all time as he is not only prolific, but also  the  writer of some classics. Like many fans of  horror,  I  read  his  back catalogue  as a teenager and read  terrific book  after  terrific book .  Eventually I hit King fatigue, not...

  • We Are SatellitesSarah Pinsker
    We Are Satellites
    by Sarah Pinsker
    Science Fiction

    Of the many things that the pandemic has taught us, it is that we can work well online. I have completed projects online with never meeting my team or the stakeholders in person. What it has also taught me us is about Digital Poverty. Although I may have been happy to work in the kitchen, what about...

  • 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’s  Blackheart Knights  takes some of the essence of th...

  • Bleeding HeartsRy Herman
    Bleeding Hearts
    by Ry Herman
    Fantasy

    I have always wondered how people can believe in some things but not others. If you have a world that has vampires roaming at night, what makes bloodsuckers so great that they get to be the only things that bump in the night? Ry Herman already introduced us to the idea of vampires, witches and a gli...

  • The 22 Murders Of Madison MayMax Barry
    Science Fiction

    Obsession can be a powerful emotion and lead you down a dark path. Being stalked causes the victim so much fear, not only because they are having to deal with the reality, but also what might happen. In the case of Madison May, she does not know she is being stalked until it is too late. A strange m...

  • The Rising StormCavan Scott
    The Rising Storm
    by Cavan Scott
    Science Fiction

    The Force is a concept that underpins the Star Wars Universe, but it is good or bad? The entire point is that it is both. There is a Light Side and a Dark Side, and these two opposing elements must be in balance. During the Star Wars films, the Dark Side is on its uppers and therefore we follow a ba...

  • A Strange and Brilliant LightEli Lee
    Science Fiction

    Artificial intelligence is an exciting field that could help enrich the lives of most people on the planet from simple things like shopping to making life more inclusive for those with disabilities. AI will also come with a human cost. Many of the jobs that we do today could be redundant in twenty y...

  • 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...

  • Autumn - DawnDavid Moody
    Autumn - Dawn
    by David Moody
    Horror

    It's good to see that we are slowly getting used to living our lives in a pandemic / post-pandemic society. It's a tough time for most people (unless you happen to be a space faring billionaire) but we have vaccines and some promise that with enough people vaccinated, we should at least be able to c...

  • The Gauntlet and the Fist BeneathIan Green
    Fantasy

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

  • The OffsetCalder Szewczak
    The Offset
    by Calder Szewczak
    Science Fiction

    There is one solution that would benefit our climate massively, but it is a bitter pill to swallow. Less humans. We are the cause of pretty much all the issues that the Earth is currently having and when we are gone, it will happily float around the solar system without us. A little bit grubbier, bu...

  • Certain Dark ThingsSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Certain Dark Things
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    It was not until I browsed my sister’s bookshelves that I realised that vampire fiction is its own genre. She is a prolific reader and seems to exclusively read vampire books. I asked her to lend me some and I realised why you can read so many ‘similar’ books and nothing else, as the books can be va...

  • WhitesandsJohann Thorsson
    Whitesands
    by Johann Thorsson
    Horror

    The fictional detective always seems to have some flaw that follows them through life preventing them from being happy or doing their best work. This could be drink, gambling, or drugs. In the case of Johann Thorsson’s Detective John Dark it is far worse, a missing daughter. For two years he has abu...

  • Stolen EarthJ. T. Nicholas
    Stolen Earth
    by J. T. Nicholas
    Science Fiction

    Space travel is often painted in a glamourous fashion. Sleek ships sail among the stars as the crew members go on daring adventures, but the reality would be much more cramped. The planet Earth may feel a little crowded at times, but compared to being in a space craft, we can walk for miles and brea...

  • Far from the Light of HeavenTade Thompson
    Far from the Light of Heaven
    by Tade Thompson
    Science Fiction

    The locked room scenario is a classic tool in crime fiction that most great authors in that genre have tried at least once. The premise is that someone has apparently been murdered in a room that no one else can get in or out of. This may mean that the killing should have been impossible, or that th...

  • 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...

  • Star Wars Visions RoninEmma Mieko Candon
    Star Wars Visions Ronin
    by Emma Mieko Candon
    Science Fiction

    As a fan of the expanded Star Wars Universe of novels, I pinch myself with the amount of quality content there is. These are not just novelisations of the films, or even expansions of the most well-known characters, the novels are cutting deep and exploring corners of the universe that have not even...

  • American Dreams Issues 1-5Daniel Kalban
    American Dreams Issues 1-5
    by Daniel Kalban
    Science Fiction

    The Golden Era of comic books began around the Second World War and into the 1950s. It was a time of nationalism as the World prepared for war and then a time of hope and optimism for the US in particular. The US was now the main world power and life was getting a little better for most people. The...

  • Critical Role: Vox Machina - Kith and KinMarieke Nijkamp
    Fantasy

    The Fantasy genre is broader than some people try to make out. I have read Tolkien and there is nothing else quite like that, although many followed the path. Modern Fantasy is often darker and violent, but back in the 80s and 90s there was more of a sense of adventure and magic. The likes of the  D...

  • 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 more tha...

  • Sherlock Holmes and Count DraculaChristian Klaver
    Sherlock Holmes and Count Dracula
    by Christian Klaver
    Horror

    When a beloved intellectual property enters the public domain, it can be a fearful time for fans, what on Earth are all these authors going to do with your beloved characters? In the case of Sherlock Holmes, it has been a magnificent time. Each year the shelves bulge with new tales about the detecti...

  • Under Fortunate StarsRen Hutchings
    Under Fortunate Stars
    by Ren Hutchings
    Science Fiction

    I have a love hate relationship with time travel stories. I love the mind-bending physics and puzzles that they create but hate the fact that most of them just could not work. How can people from the past learn what they need to from those in the future if they have not lived their own futures yet?...

  • 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...

  • Black MouthRonald Malfi
    Black Mouth
    by Ronald Malfi
    Horror

    A group of adults tormented by their past when a carnival worker changed their lives forever. Sound familiar? No not It , but Ronald Malfi’s Black Mouth , the author’s own take on how the memories of youth haunt the present. This is dark horror with glimpses of the supernatural, but also plenty of t...

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

    I love sleep and have a deeper appreciation of it since having a family. I find myself able to drop off in a second as I snatch any five minutes I can before being woken up again at 5 am. The number of naps that I have would not be advisable in the world of Zaxony Delatree as I may end up waking up...

  • 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 author who...

  • The Last Blade PriestW P Wiles
    The Last Blade Priest
    by W P Wiles
    Fantasy

    Destiny is a tricky thing as it is something that you should not be aware of. I want to be surprised if it turns out that I save the world, or perhaps destroy it. Some characters have their destiny thrust upon them from a young age and are told what it will be. Anton is a Blade Priest for Craithe, t...

  • The Daughter of Doctor MoreauSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    The Daughter of Doctor Moreau
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Science Fiction

    H. G. Wells is a name to conjure with. Classic stories about time machines, invisible men, alien invasions and more. He was one of the earliest genre writers in a time when the idea of genres did not exist. He just wrote what he felt like. A modern author who has taken on this mantle is Silvia Moren...

  • The WarriorStephen Aryan
    The Warrior
    by Stephen Aryan
    Fantasy

    No matter how many books are in a series and how long the journey, fantasy stories do end. But we all know that they never do. There is always an itch to discover what happened next, or what happened before, a rich lore and world to explore further. In Stephen Aryan’s The Coward we already followed...

  • AuroraDavid Koepp
    Aurora
    by David Koepp
    Science Fiction

    Reading about a dystopia is not as farfetched as it was once as we are living through a couple of ongoing ones as I write, but there is always space for a little more terror to add to the reality. What about a situation that is eerily possible? The sun belches out radiation daily and according to Da...

  • Lost in TimeA G Riddle
    Lost in Time
    by A G Riddle
    Science Fiction

    Time travel is fascinating, it is also some of the most fictional science fiction you will ever get. What has happened must have happened, lest you rip apart your universe in a paradox. The scientists in A. G. Riddle’s Lost in Time seem to have found a workaround as they send the worst criminals int...

  • Double or NothingKim Sherwood
    Double or Nothing
    by Kim Sherwood
    General Fiction

    James Bond has evolved through the decades from the original Ian Fleming books to a world-famous series of films and even classic computer games, but at their heart the best Bonds all hark back to Fleming’s style. Double or Nothing by Kim Sherwood is a surprise then as it is a Bond book without Bond...

  • The Fires of PompeiiJames Moran
    The Fires of Pompeii
    by James Moran
    Science Fiction

    Like many Science Fiction fans, I am also a fan of Doctor Who, but not of a particular incarnation of the Doctor on television. I am a Doctor Who book fan. The show is great, but it in the novels where I have always found the most interesting stories free from budget constraints and allowing the aut...

  • The Generation KillerAdam Simcox
    The Generation Killer
    by Adam Simcox
    Fantasy

    The supernatural has always worked well with noir as they are both genres of the night. It is only an undead hop and skip between a detective finding a corpse in the alley and that corpse waking up. Conan Doyle walked the line between the supernatural and the super-real, Holmes always discovered tha...

  • HellSansEver Dundas
    HellSans
    by Ever Dundas
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • The Book of MarsStuart Clark
    The Book of Mars
    by Stuart Clark
    General Fiction

    I am a student of history. In that I love to learn about history, but I did a degree in the subject. What I find the most fascinating is how history evolves – an event happened and that will never change, but how we precisive it does. The fashions and knowledge of the present day impacts how we look...

  • LeechHiron Ennes
    Leech
    by Hiron Ennes
    Horror

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

  • Sherlock Holmes and Mr HydeChristian Klaver
    Sherlock Holmes and Mr Hyde
    by Christian Klaver
    Horror

    Sherlock Holmes is such an iconic figure that it is easy to believe that he was real. A great detective walking the streets of Late Victorian London solving crimes that conventional police could not hope to solve. But he was not real, neither was Watson and they are both out of copyright which means...

  • Expect Me TomorrowChristopher Priest
    Expect Me Tomorrow
    by Christopher Priest
    Science Fiction

    I am at an age where I genuinely believe that Science Fiction is the best genre there is and I have read enough books of all types to have developed this opinion. I love it because it can be so many different things. Space opera to speculative fiction. A Sci Fi book can also be a riddle wrapped in a...

  • FluxJinwoo Chong
    Flux
    by Jinwoo Chong
    Science Fiction

    Time travel is one of the most complex and difficult concepts to write in fiction. On the screen you can use visuals as shorthand to try and explain what on Earth is going on, but in fiction you are required to explain it all, or not. There is a choice. Do you go down the route of hard science and t...

  • The Distant Stars Are My Only FriendsStephan George
    Science Fiction

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

  • Original SinGavin Smith
    Original Sin
    by Gavin Smith
    Science Fiction

    The public love a superhero crossover tale, the billion-dollar hauls of various Avenger movies will tell you this, but they do not always work and at this point they can feel like going over old ground. Original Sin was a comic book arc conceived by  Jason Aaron  and  Mike Deodato that brought vario...

  • The ThisAdam Roberts
    The This
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Social Media has changed the world we live in today by accelerating the polarisation of opinion. No longer is a debate a two-way conversation between people discussing their own point of view, but a slanging match in which neither side can see the others’ point of view. Until the last couple of year...

  • Reluctant ImmortalsGwendolyn Kiste
    Reluctant Immortals
    by Gwendolyn Kiste
    Horror

    Classic stories leaving copyright has been a boon to modern authors who are suddenly able to play with much loved characters as they wish. The mash up is not unusual when two contemporary characters suddenly meet, but often these books are set at the same time as the original text. What would happen...

  • WormholeEric Brown
    Wormhole
    by Eric Brown
    Science Fiction

    Imagine the sacrifice required to sign up for a long-term mission into the depth of space. You are to be cryogenically frozen for 80 years and will awake to a new world. It could be that this is what you wanted all along. A chance at a new life free from the Old Earth, but they have only gone and br...

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

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

  • Infinity GateM R Carey
    Infinity Gate
    by M R Carey
    Science Fiction

    There is a reason that you should avoid tackling the multiverse in a story as the very nature of them means that the possibilities are infinite. Every decision ever made split off to make two different pathways and so on. A story that spans multiple Earths will have to pick which ones to visit. Do y...

  • Perilous TimesThomas D Lee
    Perilous Times
    by Thomas D Lee
    Fantasy

    I love an Arthurian Legend retelling, Perilous Times by Thomas D Lee is not even the first one that I have read this year, but it shows how flexible authors can be with Old King Arty. Lee does not retell the tales of yore but extrapolates into the present and the future. When Arthur was buried, he w...

  • Dead Heat to DestinyJ B Rivard
    Dead Heat to Destiny
    by J B Rivard
    General Fiction

    I am a student of History and still find the tales that it can tell us fascinating. On the surface the stories are of Kings or Queens, of epic battles between nations, of horror on an industrial scale, but below the surface is the history of the likes of you and me. I am not a hero or villain, just...

  • Bang Bang BodhisattvaAubrey Wood
    Bang Bang Bodhisattva
    by Aubrey Wood
    Science Fiction

    What is the near future going to be like, utopian, dystopian, a bit of both. Chances are that it will be just as messed up as the past and the present. The future may be a little grim, but that does not mean it cannot be fun. Aubrey Wood’s future is as bright as neon, but also as dark as pitch. Bang...

  • Dark DwellerGareth Worthington
    Dark Dweller
    by Gareth Worthington
    Science Fiction

    The problem with being zipped away by some alien entity and then shown how the Universe works is that no one will believe you on your return. Imagine your friend returning from their lunch break to say that they have just been told that the world is going to end in two days unless we all follow thei...

  • Marchs EndDaniel Polansky
    Marchs End
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    Keeping it in the family sounds like a wonderful idea. Surround yourself with people you can trust, blood is thicker than water, but do family businesses work? Why do so many fail by the third generation? The first generation build the company from nothing, the second grow it further, the third – sq...

  • SpiderAzma Dar
    Spider
    by Azma Dar
    General Fiction

    There are at least two sides to every truth and somewhere in the middle is what happened. All relationships contain lies, they oil the machinery of compromise, but for a better relationship you want to keep them to little white lies. Things can quickly spiral out of control if you start to hide the...

  • 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 Keep WithinJ L Worrad
    The Keep Within
    by J L Worrad
    Fantasy

    There is something about Low Fantasy that makes it such a good genre. It is not the violence, swearing or muckraking, it is the people. Reading a fantasy book where the heroes are not in white and the villains in black. In J. L Worrad’s The Keep Within the nominal hero is one Sir Harrance 'Harry' La...

  • Darkness FallsP. J. Flie
    Darkness Falls
    by P. J. Flie
    Science Fiction

    There are two ways of writing a trilogy of books. One way is to produce three separate novels that can be read independently or viewed as a whole. The other way is to start each book as soon as the last one ends and power through the tale a great speed. This is how P. J. Flie’s Darkness Falls , star...

  • 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 low fantasy,...

  • 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...

  • VagabonderR T Coleman
    Vagabonder
    by R T Coleman
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Price of RebellionMichael C. Bland
    The Price of Rebellion
    by Michael C. Bland
    Science Fiction

    Some things are bigger than just us. We need to think about more than the individual or even the family unit, think of the bigger picture. The Price of Rebellion by Micheal C. Bland is the second part of a trilogy all about an inventor who would do anything to protect his family, but in doing this h...

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

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

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

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

  • PomegranatesPriya Sharma
    Pomegranates
    by Priya Sharma
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • The Death I Gave HimEm X. Liu
    The Death I Gave Him
    by Em X. Liu
    Science Fiction

    Shakespeare plays have been around for a long time, and you do not need to do a straight adaptation. Many of the terms used in the plays have entered the common vernacular and the storylines can be traced throughout modern film and television. I don’t recall Romeo or Juliet breaking out into song, b...

  • Shark HeartEmily Habeck
    Shark Heart
    by Emily Habeck
    Science Fiction

    If I have said it once, I have it said a thousand times, science fiction is the best genre as it is so wide reaching. Stories can be grandiose, epic Space Operas with multiple characters on several planets. Or, stories can be personal affairs, titbits of speculative fiction that tweaks our own reali...

  • The Death of Sir Martin MalprelateAdam Roberts
    Fantasy

    There are two ways of writing fiction set in the Victorian era; set a fictional book in the real era or write within the Victorian multiverse. This is a playground that I have read many books in, a world where Sherlock Holmes can investigate new cases, but also one in which he can work alongside Mr...

  • The Dead Take the A TrainCassandra Khaw
    The Dead Take the A Train
    by Cassandra Khaw
    Science Fiction

    Certain jobs can change you, the things that you see, the things that you must do. You may become closed off, hard, brittle, or just a little bit over the edge. Julie Crews has become all these things and more as a local Psychic Operative. Living off a diet of cocaine, regret and apprentices who onl...

  • Aliens: BishopT R Napper
    Aliens: Bishop
    by T R Napper
    Science Fiction

    Who doesn’t love the Alien series? But which subset are you talking about? Like any science fiction property, once you investigate it and expand upon it, the series begins to fragment. You have Alien , Aliens , Aliens vs Predator , Prometheus , and more. They are all the same universe but split off...

  • EvocationS T Gibson
    Evocation
    by S T Gibson
    Fantasy

    It cannot be easy to talk to the dead. Equally, foreshadowing the future or sending demons back into the abyss are not simple tasks. All are tricky and all are specialties that need experience, concentration, and skill. Even with the right environment and correct mindset it may not be enough, seeing...

  • 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 Glass WomanAlice Mcilroy
    The Glass Woman
    by Alice Mcilroy
    Science Fiction

    It can feel at times like the entire world is out to get you, but who is the person you must watch out for the most? Your family, spouse, work colleagues? Nope, the biggest saboteur is often yourself. Your own thoughts and deeds coming back to haunt you. Iris Henderson has it worse than most as she...

  • JubileeStephen K. Stanford
    Jubilee
    by Stephen K. Stanford
    Science Fiction

    What made people think that the middle of the desert was the right place to build a town like Los Vegas where people from around the world flock to get their vice on? It was the fact that it was in the middle of nowhere, safe from prying eyes and it was desperate to for people to visit. There should...

  • The Siege of Burning GrassPremee Mohamed
    The Siege of Burning Grass
    by Premee Mohamed
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction can be upbeat and utopian or downbeat and dystopian. The current trend is to focus on the negatives, but even these books have a glint of hope in them. When it comes to dystopian visions of the future, they do not come much more intense than Premee Mohamed’s The Siege of Burning Gras...

  • Coded to KillMarschall Runge
    Coded to Kill
    by Marschall Runge
    General Fiction

    Artificial Intelligence is currently the big hope across most industries as a way of increasing productivity on the cheap. It is being used already in the field of medicine as it is ideal at coping with enormous amounts of data and highlighting anomalies. It aids in finding cancers early, but what a...

  • Smoke KingsJahmal Mayfield
    Smoke Kings
    by Jahmal Mayfield
    General Fiction

    There is a reason that criminal gangs fall apart. As an individual you can take responsibility for your own action, plan ever detail and keep your mouth shut when the job is done, but what about the others? They may be getting cold feet or have a loudmouth. The Smoke Kings are a group that started o...

  • The Dragons of Deepwood FenBradley P. Beaulieu
    The Dragons of Deepwood Fen
    by Bradley P. Beaulieu
    Fantasy

    I love Fantasy and read enough to know that there are so many layers to the genre; from high to low, from Tolkien, through the Golden Age to modern darker fantasy. The genre twists and turns through the ages. A lot of modern Fantasy is shorter and darker, and I miss a stonking big slice of High Fant...

  • The Mountain in the SeaRay Nayler
    The Mountain in the Sea
    by Ray Nayler
    Science Fiction

    One of the biggest problems to overcome when writing science fiction is how do humans communicate with an alien race? They may speak a different language or may not even have mouths in which to make noises. The Universal Translator is a popular cheat, or fundamental maths that should be universal, b...

  • The Principle MomentsEsmie Jikiemi-Pearson
    The Principle Moments
    by Esmie Jikiemi-Pearson
    Science Fiction

    You see it more often in fantasy than science fiction, but there are stories about young people living a life of drudgery only to be plucked into being exceptional as if fate is playing with them. It is a comfortable coming of age trope that has worked so well, so many times, but what if fate did co...

  • The Redemption of Morgan BrightChris Panatier
    Horror

    I love to read books; they transport me to unfamiliar places. I will go there even if these unfamiliar places are dangerous like the Hollyhock Asylum found in Chris Panatier’s The Redemption of Morgan Bright . A story can transport you, as can characters, but sometimes the structure of a book does t...

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

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

  • JumpnautsHao Jingfang
    Jumpnauts
    by Hao Jingfang
    Science Fiction

    Writing a futuristic science fiction novel will allow you to explore strange new worlds but can also be used to explore our past and culture. Reading a wide range of stories from different people, from different parts of the world is a gift that will keep giving your entire life. There has been a lo...

  • The DieJude Berman
    The Die
    by Jude Berman
    Science Fiction

    There are a lot of different ways to be smart and just because you are one, does not automatically make you the other. The classic is book versus street, you may know your way around an academic essay, but would fail to talk yourself out of a tricky situation outside the pub at closing time. If you...

  • ScorchedDon Silver
    Scorched
    by Don Silver
    General Fiction

    Coming-of-age stories are perennial favorites because most of us get the chance to come-of-age at some point. You may know a few immature adults, but when it comes down to it, they are not walking around in short trousers and attending school. The reason that we do not all write about our own story...

  • GorseSam K Horton
    Gorse
    by Sam K Horton
    Fantasy

    History is facinating, but we often focus on the big characters, the big battles. Whilst King’s were being beheaded and bombs dropped, people kept on peopleling. The history of the normal person can be forgotten, but we exist too. What happened to the normal person on the street when organised relig...

  • The Righteous ArrowsBrian J. Morra
    The Righteous Arrows
    by Brian J. Morra
    General Fiction

    I am a massive fan of historic fiction; it is a fantastic way of bringing the past to life. It depends on the author how heavily they lean on the historic part or the fiction part. Some books are thinly disguised pseudo fantasy held together by a whisper of historic accuracy, while others read like...

  • The Knife and the SerpentTim Pratt
    Science Fiction

    As a child you read books and imagine that you may be that child who is whisked away on an adventure. Perhaps you will be the chosen one to be taken through a magical wardrobe or told you are a wizard. By the time you are studying for a PhD such flippancy is no longer part of your character, so how...

  • ExtremophileIan Green
    Extremophile
    by Ian Green
    Science Fiction

    Cyberpunk has always been an interesting mash up of ideas, taking the science fiction forward ideas of technology and giving it a gritty edge. Mixing the equivalent of early 80s synth with the raw punk that preceded it in a giant science fiction blender sounds like chaos, but both have origins of ri...

  • 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 Missing FamilyTim Weaver
    The Missing Family
    by Tim Weaver
    General Fiction

    Every summer is the same, inexperienced people think it would be a clever idea to do some wild swimming unaware that under the first foot of warm reservoir water, there are metres of icy water ready to send you into shock. When three members of the Fowler family disappear when out swimming, the wors...

  • 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 Seaborn , a bo...

  • ResilientAllen Stroud
    Resilient
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    Resilient is the second book in Allen Stroud's Fractal series , picking up right after the events of Fearless . As such it's impossible not to provide some minor spoilers about Fearless while talking about Resilient . I will however try my best to give away as little as possible, and anything mentio...

  • The Final OrchardC J Rivera
    The Final Orchard
    by C J Rivera
    Science Fiction

    When the apocalypse inevitably comes do you want to know about it? Would you like the chance to peer out of the window and see the world burning, perhaps you can make a run for the high ground? Another option is to live in pure ignorance underground, competing with your fellow residents for the perc...

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

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

  • New Year, New You: A Speculative Anthology of ReinventionChris Campbell

    What makes a bunch of short stories gathered together a collection? It could be the works of the same author, or it could be some sort of theme that means they are all derived from the same place. A collection's origins can significantly impact the type of stories you are about to read. Is it an est...

  • 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 change ev...

  • Wake Up and Open Your EyesClay McLeod Chapman
    Wake Up and Open Your Eyes
    by Clay McLeod Chapman
    Horror

    How do you like your horror novels? Are you someone who likes a spooky story, perhaps a little romance? Or do you like it horrific? A book that is uncomfortable, throwing images into your brain that you did not want to consider but cannot stop thinking about. Baby eating rats, killer clowns in the s...

  • The Poorly Made and Other ThingsSam Rebelein
    Horror

    There is something to be said for designing a creative sandpit, a place that you can return to and play within. Rather than writing new characters in a new place every book, you can return to the known. A shorthand exists. However, this is a double-edged sword, you can end up recreating the same sta...

  • Listen to Your SisterNeena Viel
    Listen to Your Sister
    by Neena Viel
    Horror

    I come from a large family and there is a special way that you can wind one another up. Years of experience and knowledge comes in handy when you are trying to annoy someone, you may not have seen each other for ages, but one shared experience can bring it all back in an instant. In a healthy family...

  • The Mask of FearAlexander Freed
    The Mask of Fear
    by Alexander Freed
    Science Fiction

    The reason that I enjoy the Star Wars Universe so much is that it vast and can be explored in new and interesting ways. The Skywalker stories will always be there, but there are shady towns and abandoned Sith temples spotted all over the Universe. You can follow an eccentric archaeologist hunting fo...

  • A Rebel's History of MarsNadia Afifi
    A Rebel's History of Mars
    by Nadia Afifi
    Science Fiction

    When we have finally managed to destroy Earth, some of us may already be living on Mars. If you stay inside the domes, I hear it can be quite pleasant. However, what happens when we start to destroy Mars? The issue with all these planets is not the landscape or the lack of oxygen, it is the fact tha...

  • Death on the CalderaEmily Paxman
    Death on the Caldera
    by Emily Paxman
    Fantasy

    I read a lot of genre fiction that has been mixed with a crime drama as it is an excellent way of giving a story a solid throughline. A murder mystery can concentrate the narrative when exploring a high concept Science Fiction world. It is also a great way of giving grit to an Urban Fantasy story, g...

  • DissolutionNicholas Binge
    Dissolution
    by Nicholas Binge
    Science Fiction

    Have you ever walked into a room and forgotten why you went in there in the first place? Could just be a good old fashioned brain burp, but perhaps it is something more sinister. In Nicholas Binge’s Dissolution there is a character who knows too much, so much that their mind is being wiped to preven...

  • Killing ItMike Bockoven
    Killing It
    by Mike Bockoven
    Horror

    People have used the insanity plea in defence of some heinous crimes. Was it months of planning that made you act or next door’s Labrador? When buying a property, it may be a clever idea to heed the warning of the stranger who tells you not to listen the voice when it appears. The last owner went on...

  • Fleet LandingWendy Gee
    Fleet Landing
    by Wendy Gee
    General Fiction

    There are so many angles and directions that you can tackle the crime genre in. Being a police officer is obvious, but you also get Private Investigators, or even the local busybody or vicar solving a crime. I enjoy all these approaches, but if you are drawn to particularly thoughtful and informed c...

  • The Price of FreedomMichael C. Bland
    The Price of Freedom
    by Michael C. Bland
    Science Fiction

    After discovering what The Price of Safety and The Price of Rebellion are in the first two outings in Michael C Bland’s dystopian trilogy, we finally get to see what The Price of Freedom is in this final outing. In a world in which everyone has been rendered blind unless they wear technology, you ca...

  • EsperanceAdam Oyebanji
    Esperance
    by Adam Oyebanji
    Science Fiction

    What would you do if you had technology that no one else in the world had. Would you use it to better your life, make some money? Perhaps you would share it with others to develop society as a whole? Or maybe you would use it for revenge. A series of impossible murders is stumping Detective Ethan Kr...

  • The Gryphon KingSara Omer
    The Gryphon King
    by Sara Omer
    Fantasy

    I have read a lot of epic fantasy, and it comes in many flavours, but it does not always feel like it. Often, it feels like an alternative Medieval Europe with a few elves thrown in. This is less so today as innovative ideas and visions come to the genre, taking a typical fantasy novel and giving it...

  • Pretty Girls Get Away with MurderBrandi Bradley
    General Fiction

    Murder is in the eye of the beholder and Brandi Bradley’s Pretty Girls Get Away with Murder is the perfect example of how different people can see the same events. The police are always suspicious, open to any leads, until they find the person they think is the prime suspect. This suspect has their...

  • FiendAlma Katsu
    Fiend
    by Alma Katsu
    Horror

    Being successful and superrich would be great to allow you to do what you want, but it also comes with limitations. My mother never wanted to be too rich as she thought one of us would get kidnapped. She needn’t have worried had she made a deal with a demon, if anyone had tried to take one of us, th...

  • The BewitchingSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    The Bewitching
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    I enjoy reading about the occult in contrasting times in history. If someone came up to a modern person and said there was a witch in the woods stealing children, they would raise an eyebrow and swiftly walk in the opposite direction. A couple of hundred years earlier around the same woods the react...

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

    If you read about the gods, most of them are a little messed up. If they are not descending to pretend to be a swan so they can sleep with woman, they are basically ignoring all the human suffering going on. Are gods omnipotent or just much more powerful than humans? Everything feels like magic, unt...

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

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

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

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

  • Coffin MoonKeith Rosson
    Coffin Moon
    by Keith Rosson
    Horror

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

  • Jekyll & Hyde: Winter RetreatTim Major
    Fantasy

    If you could invite anyone to a winter retreat, who would it be? Family, friends, someone famous. What you should never do is invite a detective, anytime you do, someone always seems to end up dead. In the case of  Jekyll & Hyde: Winter Retreat  by Tim Major, you get two private detectives for the p...

  • SupermaxKen Bruen
    Supermax
    by Ken Bruen
    General Fiction

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

  • Master of EvilAdam Christopher
    Master of Evil
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

    One of the aspects of Star Wars that I love is that it is an IP that keeps evolving, as do I. As a child I saw The New Hope as a simple action adventure between good and evil. The Emperor was omnipotent. As the series progressed, we see that the Empire was far too vast for one man to control, no mat...

  • Blood RivalJake Arnott
    Blood Rival
    by Jake Arnott
    General Fiction

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

  • The Fractal EpisodesAllen Stroud
    The Fractal Episodes
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    What differentiates a short story series from episodes? Allen Stroud’s The Fractal Series comes in a collection or can be read separately. There are twelve individual stories, that sounds like a short story collection, but there is a difference as they all take place within the Fearless universe tha...

  • 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 and old...

  • Way of the WalkerSalinee Goldenberg
    Way of the Walker
    by Salinee Goldenberg
    Fantasy

    Naming your book The Last Phi Hunter comes with some idea that this will be the last of their kind, but Salinee Goldenberg proves this is not the case with a sequel, Way of the Walker . But is this Walker an actual Phi Hunter? If your job is to find and kill the undead (Phi), befriending them and he...

  • SentientMichael Nayak
    Sentient
    by Michael Nayak
    Science Fiction

    If you are like me, you will have an escape plan from the building you work in, just in case there is a zombie attack. My plan is to get to the roof and use one of the ladders up there to simply steer the zombies over the low edge. This might work, but not in the Antarctic, were there are few buildi...

  • Low Red MoonMike Chen
    Low Red Moon
    by Mike Chen
    Science Fiction

    As more novels are written within the Star Wars Universe, I start to realise that I am drawn increasingly towards the wider Universe and not the core Skywalker saga. On TV, The Mandalorian, and in the book world the stories I have enjoyed most were adapted from a Star Wars comic, and one even based...

  • Bad Things Happen HereMark Morris
    Bad Things Happen Here
    by Mark Morris
    Horror

    I read quite a lot of horror, to the point that it does not really affect me anymore, flesh eating clowns, aliens that tear off limbs, none of this is going to happen to me. A child being bullied at school, another joining a rough crowd, work becoming too stressful, a parent with dementia. These thi...

  • BloodswornTej Turner
    Bloodsworn
    by Tej Turner
    Fantasy

    There's a shape of epic fantasy that a lot of us have grown up on. A sleepy village in the back of beyond, a clutch of young people on the edge of adulthood, a once-a-year ritual that lifts one or two of them out into the wider world, and (somewhere offstage and rumbling closer) a war that the rest...

  • Fever HouseKeith Rosson
    Fever House
    by Keith Rosson
    Horror

    Some books refuse to sit still in any one genre, and Fever House is one of them. I picked it up at a recent convention while browsing the dealer room, not even knowing the author, and I came away convinced that he is one of the more interesting voices currently working at the messier end of horror....

  • The Satsuma ComplexBob Mortimer
    The Satsuma Complex
    by Bob Mortimer
    General Fiction

    There is a nervousness that descends when a beloved celebrity, especially a comedian, announces they have written a book. We have all been burned before and will probably continue to be (I still haven't been able to finish reading The Book of Elsewhere ). The celebrity novel is a well-established ge...