Books tagged with: political intrigue

  • CetagandaLois McMaster Bujold
    Cetaganda
    by Lois McMaster Bujold
    Science Fiction

    Cetaganda is a science fiction novel in the Miles Vorkosigan Adventures series by Lois McMaster Bujold. This time Miles go to Cetaganda to attend the funeral of the Empress and ends up in a lot of trouble (now where have I heard that before?). The Cetagandan empire is build on a power division betw...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Elite - ReclamationDrew Wagar
    Elite - Reclamation
    by Drew Wagar
    Science Fiction

    Elite - Reclamation is the third book in our ongoing review of the Elite: Dangerous novels. 10% of the proceeds of this book are being donated to the Ashford Dyslexia Centre. Elite - Reclamation is quite different to the previous stories, it feels much more of a slow burn - a political thriller set...

  • Elite: Lave RevolutionAllen Stroud
    Elite: Lave Revolution
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    I first discovered Elite growing up in the Eighties. It was a simpler time and Elite made a huge impact, the freedom to travel to distant stars and meet or trade with Alien races was irresistable. Sadly even back then entertainment companies were already trying out crazy methods of protecting their...

  • 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)....

  • Fardwor, RussiaOlec Kashin
    Fardwor, Russia
    by Olec Kashin
    Science Fiction

    Oleg Kashin’s debut novel ‘Fardwor, Russia’ takes its reader on a surreal journey through the political landscape of Russia’s seedy underbelly. Drawing on his experience as an award-winning journalist and polemicist, Kashin skilfully blends fact and fiction, shining a light on some of the most sinis...

  • Floating WorldsCecelia Holland
    Floating Worlds
    by Cecelia Holland
    Science Fiction

    The only science fiction novel that the immensely talented Cecelia Holland has written, Floating Worlds is taking it's rightful place within the halls of Gollancz SF Masterworks collection. The novel tells the story of humanity 2000 years in the future where capitalism has been overthrown and anarc...

  • Galileo’s DreamKim Stanley Robinson
    Galileo’s Dream
    by Kim Stanley Robinson
    Science Fiction

    Galileo’s Dream is a brand new novel from Kim Stanley Robinson and follows Galileo on an amazing journey from the dawn of the modern age to a future on the brink of a scientific breakthrough. While on the brink of the modern world, Late Renaissance Italy is still surrounded by Alchemy and the teach...

  • 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...

  • HeadsGreg Bear
    Heads
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    Heads is a science fiction novel, written by Greg Bear. A hundred years in the future, Michael Sandoval is the manager at Ice Pit Station – a research station on the Moon. Two projects are taking place here. His brother in-law is trying to reach absolute zero in a small piece of copper. His siste...

  • 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...

  • 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 scr...

  • OdysseyJack McDevitt
    Odyssey
    by Jack McDevitt
    Science Fiction

    First Impressions: Odyssey took some getting used to in order to plow through it! My only other introduction to the author Jack McDevitt is through his excellent novel, "Time Travelers Never Die" so I was hoping this book was going to be a continuation of the excellent style I was used to. "Not so...

  • Path of the RenegadeAndy Chambers
    Path of the Renegade
    by Andy Chambers
    Science Fiction

    Asdrubael Vect has ruled the dark city of Commorragh for millennia, ruthlessly disposing of any who would dare cross him. His reach is long and his position unassailable... or so he thinks. The ambitious Archon (highest ranking member of a Dark Eldar Kabal) Yllithian thinks otherwise and joins forc...

  • 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...

  • Radio Free AlbemuthPhilip K Dick
    Radio Free Albemuth
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Radio Free Albemuth is a science fiction novel by the legendary author Philip K Dick. Radio Free Albemuth is like Valis but without Horselover Fat. Just Phil Dick and his buddy Nick getting too involved with Valis and the gestapo political system that is sending the commies to work camps. Like MAN...

  • 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...

  • Resident FearHylton H Smith
    Resident Fear
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    It's the year 2018 and Britain has been expelled from the European Union. Over in the Northeast of the country the body of a wealthy Industrialist is found, draped at the base of the iconic sculpture - The Angel of the North. D.C.I. Jack Renton soon begins to understand that this isn't a simple mur...

  • Rockets, Redheads and RevolutionJames P Hogan
    Science Fiction

    Rockets, Redheads and Revolution is a short story collection by James P Hogan. RR&R is a mixed bag of science fiction short stories and non-fiction essays. The mix is a bit too heavy on the essay side for me, but that doesn't make it a bad book as HogRockets, Redheads and Revolution is a short stor...

  • 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 BusinessIain M Banks
    The Business
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    The Business is a science fiction novel by the acclaimed British author Iain M Banks. Thinking that it maybe was about time for something not so spectacular, I grabbed this book by Iain Not-M Banks while I was at the bookstore (getting The Naked God). Good thing. Even with it's high finance settin...

  • The Caves of SteelIsaac Asimov
    The Caves of Steel
    by Isaac Asimov
    Science Fiction

    The Caves of Steel is a classic science fiction novel by Isaac Asimov and could be considered the first in the Robot series. It has been about twenty years since I read this book first and ten years since I read it last. I've grown older and hopefully wiser since then and The Caves of Steel is cree...

  • The Darwinian Extension: TransitionHylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    The Darwinian Extension: Transition is the second volume in the science fiction trilogy from author Hylton H Smith, and follows on from the events in Initiation. Transition begins in the year 2038, 2 years have passed since the return of the Copernicus, the ship carrying the first Mars colonisation...

  • The DispossessedUrsula K Le Guin
    The Dispossessed
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The Dispossessed, a novel by the distinguished and award winning author Ursula K Le Guin It's been some time since I last read anything by LeGuin (I think that it was The Word for World is Forest, which I liked); I've never really been much into her for some reason. Got no idea why. She writes quit...

  • The Human DivisionJohn Scalzi
    The Human Division
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    John Scalzi is a household name as character-driven sci-fi goes. The Human Division, 5th in his Old Man’s War series detailing the fate of the Colonial Union and it’s increasingly tenuous relationship with the Earth, is actually the first I’ve read. This sequel to Zoe’s Tale concerns the new diploma...

  • The Left Hand of DarknessUrsula K Le Guin
    The Left Hand of Darkness
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The Left Hand of Darkness was first published almost 50 years ago, receiving critical acclaim and firmly establishing Le Guin as a serious, talented author. It's known as one of the first examples of feminist science fiction and retrospectively won the Hugo and Nebula awards. I don't think i...

  • 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 Sixth DisciplineCarmen Webster Buxton
    The Sixth Discipline
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    Trained in the mental and physical disciplines of his people, Ran-Del Jahanpur is a warrior of the Sansoussy Forest. Overconfident in his abilities he is all too easily caught when he sets off a high tech trap. He finds himself transported to a strange alien city where machines speak, metal boxes ca...

  • 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...

  • The Stainless Steel Rat for PresidentHarry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    The Stainless Steel Rat and Angelina enjoy a belated honeymoon on a planet run by a dictator who rigs elections to get into office, so they set the Rat up as a candidate instead. Very much a satire on banana republic politics and a parody of adventures set in Latin America I regretted buying this...

  • 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 t...

  • 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 tell...

  • 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...

  • 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) l...

  • Uplift WarDavid Brin
    Uplift War
    by David Brin
    Science Fiction

    Uplift War is the third volume in the Uplift Series by David Brin. The Uplift War is not exactly a follow up to Startide Rising, but it does take place in the same universe as Startide Rising and it takes place chronologically right after it. There are a few small spoilers in The Uplift War for SR,...

  • BitterblueKristin Cashore
    Bitterblue
    by Kristin Cashore
    Fantasy

    Bitterblue is the third novel in the Seven Kingdoms series, following on from the events of Fire and Graceling. The story begins eight years after the events of Graceling and is more a direct follow up to this novel with only the occasional crossover from the Fire storyline. The focus is placed on...

  • Closer to the HeartMercedes Lackey
    Closer to the Heart
    by Mercedes Lackey
    Fantasy

    Closer to the Heart is listed as The Herald Spy book 2, it is worth noting, however , that while the characters do appear in Closer to Home (The Herald Spy book 1) the book is itself a complete story, rather than a continuation of the existing story arc. In fact, the characters life before these boo...

  • Cold DaysJim Butcher
    Cold Days
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

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

  • 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 creat...

  • 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...

  • ElantrisBrandon Sanderson
    Elantris
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

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

  • FireKristin Cashore
    Fire
    by Kristin Cashore
    Fantasy

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

  • 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,...

  • JingoTerry Pratchett
    Jingo
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    One of the newer books in the (never-ending) Discworld saga. I'm finding it extremely hard to say anything interesting about this book – not because it's bad, but it's a Discworld novel and …well that's it. It's no worse and no better than all the other Discworld novels. Pratchett is funny, as alway...

  • 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 trepidat...

  • 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...

  • Nine Princes In AmberRoger Zelazny
    Nine Princes In Amber
    by Roger Zelazny
    Fantasy

    I read this book in three nights because I could barely put it down. The story line is exellent, as is the world Zelazny creates. He is no doubt one of my favourite authors and I plan to read all 10 of the novels in this series The story starts with the main character waking in a hospital bed and h...

  • Out of OzGregory Maguire
    Out of Oz
    by Gregory Maguire
    Fantasy

    I must admit that I missed the first 3 novels in this series although I have heard a lot about them (all good) and remember hearing about the (Tony winning) Broadway musical that was based on the first book "Wicked". The books themselves are inspired by Frank Baum's childrens classic "The Wonderfu...

  • Shadows SonJon Sprunk
    Shadows Son
    by Jon Sprunk
    Fantasy

    In the holy city of Othir treachery and corruption are rife, the ideal breeding ground for any freelance assassins with no scruples. Caim is one of the best, living on the edge of a blade he has carved out an impeccable reputation but when he reluctantly takes on a job at very short notice he finds...

  • Son of the MorningMark Alder
    Son of the Morning
    by Mark Alder
    Fantasy

    What would happen if you combined a detailed historical fiction novel that includes the politics of, Countries, Kings and Queens with that of the manipulation by Angels and Deamons and Devils? You probably end up with something like Son of the Morning. Set in an alternative history where Angels and...

  • 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...

  • The Adamantine PalaceStephen Deas
    The Adamantine Palace
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    The first of Stephen Deas’ dragon series and published in 2009, The Adamantine Palace sets the stage of scheming between the noble factions and royal houses. Prince Jehal, Queen Sheriza, Queen Zafira, Speaker Hyram and others battle for power. Like many fantasy works, Deas’ society does appear top-...

  • The Boy who wept bloodDen Patrick
    The Boy who wept blood
    by Den Patrick
    Fantasy

    The Boy who wept blood is the sequel to Den Patrick's impressive novel, The Boy with the Porcelain Blade. Set some time after the events of the first book, the Queen Anea now rules Demense. A fairer society is being built on the ashes of the old regime however many of the old players are reluctant t...

  • The Boy with the Porcelain BladeDen Patrick
    Fantasy

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

  • The 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 h...

  • The Crown of the BloodGav Thorpe
    The Crown of the Blood
    by Gav Thorpe
    Fantasy

    The Crown of the Blood is the first volume in the series of the same name, written by Gav Thorpe and published by Angry Robot Books. Ullsaard is a warrior and General of the fierce and deadly Askhor troops. All have fallen beneath his mighty army, helping to create the greatest empire the land has...

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

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

  • The Hundred Thousand KingdomsNK Jemisin
    Fantasy

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

  • The IncorruptiblesJohn Hornor Jacobs
    The Incorruptibles
    by John Hornor Jacobs
    Fantasy

    The Incorruptibles is a tightly paced novel that feels fresh, leaving behind characters to be pondered long after the story ends. Synopsis: On the edge of the Empire, a motley group of mercenaries protect a gluttonous governor and his family from the twisted evil that exists beyond the safety of th...

  • 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 h...

  • 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 ScarChina Mieville
    The Scar
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    The Scar returns us to the wonderful world of Bas Lag, first encountered in the award winning novel Perdido Street Station. This time however we are far removed from the dirty, winding streets of New Crobuzon and thrust into the wider world, adrift on strange tides and weird seas. The floating metr...

  • The TruthTerry Pratchett
    The Truth
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    The 25th. Discworld Novel the cover proudly states. And that makes it a fitting moment to take a closer look at Pratchetts Discworld and ask if there's something to be proud of. In my opinion (and I seem to be the only one writing this piece): Yes! I've read most of the Discworld novels, and while...

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

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

  • Traitor's BladeSebastien De Castell
    Traitor's Blade
    by Sebastien De Castell
    Fantasy

    Traitor’s Blade is a rare treat for the fantasy reader, it follows Falcio Val Mond, First Cantor of the Greatcoats as he and his loyal comrades Kest and Brasti struggle to survive in a world that has turned against them, valiantly trying to follow the last orders of their fallen king. Facing off aga...

  • SmokeDan Vyleta
    Smoke
    by Dan Vyleta
    Fantasy

    Smoke is a book that presents the idea - what if your stronger emotions were visible? People's Anger, Lust and Lies all visible as real smoke and soot that settles around them, permeating their clothes and the space around them. Within this world Children are born carrying "the seeds of evil" wi...

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

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

  • 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 wor...

  • And I DarkenKiersten White
    And I Darken
    by Kiersten White
    Fantasy

    This book, by Kiersten White, is a gender flipped historically based story of the early life of Vlad the Impaler or in this case, Lada  Dracul. White takes the bones of the historical accounts and layers it with a rich imaginings of characters and quirks, to give the reader some insight into a be...

  • 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...

  • The WolfLeo Carew
    The Wolf
    by Leo Carew
    Fantasy

    The Wolf is the debut of Leo Carew, a graduate of Cambridge University with a degree in Biological Anthropology, specialising in the Palaeolithic. The authors knowledge and perspective colours the story, providing a rich and detailed backdrop of an alternative world that somewhat resembles the Vi...

  • Sleeping GiantsSylvain Neuvel
    Sleeping Giants
    by Sylvain Neuvel
    Science Fiction

    I missed reviewing Sleeping Giants when it first came out. I've finally got round to picking up a copy to find out it's now been out long enough that there are two further novels in the series: Waking Gods and Only Human. Back in 2016 It was one of those break-out novels such as The Martian...

  • The Grey BastardsJonathan French
    The Grey Bastards
    by Jonathan French
    Fantasy

    The clue to what makes the Fantasy genre so great is staring you straight in the face; it is fantastical. It gives author the chance to transport their readers to a different time and place. Lands full of wonder, populated by creatures only seen in your dreams. So, it is sometimes a little sad to se...

  • 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...

  • The Monster Baru CormorantSeth Dickinson
    The Monster Baru Cormorant
    by Seth Dickinson
    Fantasy

    A Question. If something hurts, does that make it true? With this intriguing opener of a question begins Seth Dickinson’s The Monster Baru Cormorant, the first of three planned sequels to 2015’s The Traitor Baru Cormorant. Dickinson burst onto the fantasy scene with Traitor, a geopolitical epic whic...

  • A Memory Called EmpireArkady Martine
    A Memory Called Empire
    by Arkady Martine
    Science Fiction

    A Memory called Empire is the debut of Arkady Martine, although reading the book you'd be forgiven for thinking she's been writing best-sellers for years. The vast, interstellar Empire of the Teixcalaanli have appointed Mahit Dzmare as new Ambassador to the capital. When she arrives she realises th...

  • Star Trek Prometheus: Fire with FireBernd Perplies
    Science Fiction

    It is feels increasingly complex to be a Star Trek fan. Things started off being about Kirk and co, then Picard, then Sisko etc. By now there are various TV shows that have been and gone, but also films that are set in parallel universes and I have no idea what is happening in Discovery ha...

  • 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 &ls...

  • 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...

  • 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 m...

  • 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 i...

  • Molten HeartUna McCormack
    Molten Heart
    by Una McCormack
    Science Fiction

    Back in the day the Doctor Who spin off novels had a real advantage over the TV show as they had no budget. The limit to what could happen in these books was not down to the pen pushers at the BBC or the naivety of special effects. The only limit to the books was the author’s imagination. Go b...

  • Master & ApprenticeClaudia Gray
    Master & Apprentice
    by Claudia Gray
    Science Fiction

    With the new films, TV shows and cartoons it is sometimes hard to keep up with the Star Wars Universe and all its moving parts. Some of the less fashionable elements could be ignored in favour of big flashy characters like Han Solo or Boba Fett. Thankfully, the Star Wars books are continuing to expl...

  • Thrawn - TreasonTimothy Zahn
    Thrawn - Treason
    by Timothy Zahn
    Science Fiction

    When the Star Wars sequels were announced a world of fandom got very excited. What happened to Han Solo, Luke and Leia et al? Many Star Wars fans already had an inkling having read the many Star Wars tie in book that released from the early 90s onwards. However, like many a Star Wars film, there was...

  • HeartstoneC J Sansom
    Heartstone
    by C J Sansom
    General Fiction

    Offer me a time machine and I would travel no further back than the 1980s. This would allow me to place loads of bets on sporting events I know the results to and invest in Apple Computers. You would not see me travelling hundreds of years into the future or the past, are you mad? The 1980s were saf...

  • 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 (198...

  • 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 have similar sensibilities, but how is this possible? Even within our own country you get people from the North who are differe...

  • 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 (a...

  • Peace TalksJim Butcher
    Peace Talks
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    A short warning before the review: Peace Talks is the first half of a single story that concludes in Battle Ground, and certain late-book events spill across both volumes. I have kept the major plot resolutions and the ending out, but if you want to come to the book entirely cold, bookmark this and...

  • 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 sold...

  • The Moonsteel CrownStephen Deas
    The Moonsteel Crown
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    Life in a Fantasy novel is often epic. A grand journey to destroy a ring or a fight to the death against an invading force. Our heroes rush from one end of the land on a mission, but if you look behind them you may see some of the normal people pass in a blur. The shopkeepers, the local police, the&...

  • 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 bu...

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

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

  • 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...

  • Liege-KillerChristopher Hinz
    Liege-Killer
    by Christopher Hinz
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction does not have to be epic. It can tell a small story about a single person or family as they struggle against a strange new world, but sometimes you want to read a stonking great space opera where an individual's actions can alter worlds. Liege-Kille...

  • DuneFrank Herbert
    Dune
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

    Throughout history many have searched for ways to live longer, from healthy eating and exercise to eliminating illness and seeking an elixir of life. I think it’s fair to say it’s a common goal to extend our lifespan. What would you say if I told you there was a substance that, if ingest...

  • 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&nb...

  • 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&nb...

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

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

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

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

  • PennybladeJ L Worrad
    Pennyblade
    by J L Worrad
    Fantasy

    The days of High Elves and spiffing adventures being the only choice in fantasy are long over. This is a vast genre that still has books of High Fantasy, but it also has Low Fantasy. This gritty version of the genre is more prevalent than ever with some of the best being made into TVs shows and film...

  • The Androids of TaraDavid Fisher
    The Androids of Tara
    by David Fisher
    Science Fiction

    The Doctor can travel anywhere in the Universe and at any time. He can witness the last days of existence or visit a planet of peace. Or he could visit Tara, a planet that seems like our own feudal era Britain, but with added androids. And some odd feeling 70s chauvinism. Target Books have adap...

  • 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...

  • 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 h...

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

    Endings are not easy, especially in epic fantasy series. Hundreds or thousands of pages all building up to this. Famously one TV adaptation finale did not go down very well with the fans, so if authors did not know it before, they know it now. David Hair’s Tethered Cathedral trilogy comes to a...

  • Shield MaidenSharon Emmerichs
    Shield Maiden
    by Sharon Emmerichs
    Fantasy

    The tale is often told from the perspective of the victor, distorting the truth to make them look better. In an epic poem like Beowulf, it all points to one man being the hero, but what if there is more to the story. Shield Maiden by Sharon Emmerichs retells the final part of Beowulf’s life fr...

  • 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 'Har...

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

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

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

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

  • The Red Scholar's WakeAliette de Bodard
    The Red Scholar's Wake
    by Aliette de Bodard
    Science Fiction

    Love is love and that is truer in science fiction than any other genre as you can fall in love with anyone or anything. Someone of the same species, an alien or even a spaceship. With AI advancing who is to say that one day their personality will not appeal, couple that to an avatar they can cr...

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

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

  • 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...

  • NavolaPaolo Bacigalupi
    Navola
    by Paolo Bacigalupi
    Fantasy

    What is the fantasy genre? It is not just one thing. You can have elves and orcs battling against the backdrop of high wizardry, but you can also write something simpler. Low fantasy is getting so low that it starts to feel like alternative medieval history. Like why write about real history when yo...

  • The Serpent Called MercyRoanne Lau
    The Serpent Called Mercy
    by Roanne Lau
    Fantasy

    There are shifts in the Fantasy genre that perhaps only the ardent fan will notice. The epics of Tolkien and the 80s are still being written, but now there are more intimate stories that follow one or two characters as they graft in their small way among the wider Fantasy world. These are often...

  • 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...

  • 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 givi...

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

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

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

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

  • The Debtors GameIsabelle Mongeau
    The Debtors Game
    by Isabelle Mongeau
    Fantasy

    Twas in a café they first met, Romeo and Juliet. And twas the first day they fell into debt, because Rome-owed and Juli-eat. It feels to me that the entire system is rigged so that you never have quite enough money to escape, you work to live, and if you do not work, you do not eat. It is wor...