Books tagged with: sacrifice

  • The FiremanJoe Hill
    The Fireman
    by Joe Hill
    Fantasy

    Joe Hill is one of those authors who improve with each book ,and The Fireman is nothing short of spectacular. A highly contagious spore has begun to spread across the World, a pandemic that sees people break out in beautiful gold and black marks before spontaneously self-combusting. Draco Incendia T...

  • Alien 3Alan Dean Foster
    Alien 3
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    WOW! I have not said that in a while and this reviewer surely did not expect that word to come from Alan Dean Foster’s 247-page novelization of Alien 3. Like so many—like millions— who were disappointed with David Fincher’s 1993 film, I did not expect Foster’s novel to change my mind about the “orig...

  • AllegiantVeronica Roth
    Allegiant
    by Veronica Roth
    Science Fiction

    I will be honest—I was not thrilled about the idea of thinking about this book again in order to write a review. I was so bothered by the end of this series that I felt depressed about it for a week after I finished the novel. I loved Divergent. I thought that Insurgent was a pretty strong follow-u...

  • 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,...

  • Eye of VengeanceGraham McNeill
    Eye of Vengeance
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    This is a first for SFBook, in it's 13 year history not once has an Audio book been reviewed, it's long before time this changed and I hope to review at least a few novels in this format over the coming months. Honour of the first goes to a specially created audio only book by the Black Library. Ey...

  • First and OnlyDan Abnett
    First and Only
    by Dan Abnett
    Science Fiction

    It has been nearly 20 years since I first read a Warhammer 40K novel, way before Games Workshops publishing company Black Library was formed. I was and always will be a big fan of anything Games Workshop related, spending a vast amount of my formative years playing a myriad number of games and paint...

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

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

  • MoonFallAG Wyatt
    MoonFall
    by AG Wyatt
    Science Fiction

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

  • State of BeingSven Michael Davison
    State of Being
    by Sven Michael Davison
    Science Fiction

    State of Being is the third novel in the God Head trilogy and follows directly on from the cataclysmic events in State of Union. Jake Travissi is on the run, having lost everything he cared for and the future looks bleak with AI taking over the surviving population; the only hope may mean going into...

  • The BeesLaline Paull
    The Bees
    by Laline Paull
    Science Fiction

    Bees are quite complicated little creatures and most of us know very little about them. Those that practice apiculture are becoming worth their weight in gold (or bees). We've been collecting their honey for over 15,000 years and we are just beginning to understand just how important to our survival...

  • The Company of the DeadDavid Kowalski
    The Company of the Dead
    by David Kowalski
    Science Fiction

    The 15th April 2012 marks a century after the RMS Titanic (operated by the White Star Line) sank after colliding with an iceberg during her maiden voyage from Southampton to New York. 1517 people died in those freezing waters. It's as much a lesson in human arrogance as it is in maritime disasters...

  • The ExplorerJames Smythe
    The Explorer
    by James Smythe
    Science Fiction

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

  • The LiberatorsNathan Elliot
    The Liberators
    by Nathan Elliot
    Science Fiction

    Hood and his army of freedom fighters are ready to start their counter attack against the K'Thraa invaders of Earth. By sabotaging a huge mirror which the aliens have placed in space to raise the temperature on the planet, hood is able to plunge Earth into a mini ice age overnight. Seriously weakene...

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

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

  • Time and Time AgainBen Elton
    Time and Time Again
    by Ben Elton
    Science Fiction

    Ben Elton is a talented fellow. I've loved most of the TV programs he's been involved in from the Young Ones and Blackadder to Blessed and the Thin Blue Line. His humour is often satirical, off-the-wall and almost always makes me laugh. The only novel I've read of his prior to Time and Time Again i...

  • Winter SongColin Harvey
    Winter Song
    by Colin Harvey
    Science Fiction

    Winters Song is a science fiction novel and has been written by Colin Harvey, published by Angry Robot Books. When Karl Allman's spaceship crashes on an unknown god-forsaken and forgotten planet he finds himself hunted by an ancient, primitive yet powerful race. The descendants of a Viking culture...

  • Beautiful Dead: ArizonaEden Maguire
    Beautiful Dead: Arizona
    by Eden Maguire
    Fantasy

    Beautiful Dead: Arizona is the second volume in the Beautiful Dead series of novels by Eden Maguire. Following on from the events in "Jonas", Darina has seen no sign of the Beautiful Dead for weeks and is missing Phoenix all over again. With so much still to resolve, surely they will retu...

  • Blood ReactionDL Atha
    Blood Reaction
    by DL Atha
    Fantasy

    Asa, the century old, vindictive and cruel vampire invades the home of single mother and physician Annalice forcing her to strike a bargain for her daughters life as the monster takes control of her own life and home. Caught in a race against a genetic timeline she must rely on her skills as a phys...

  • 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 throw...

  • 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...

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

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

  • HellifaxKeith Blackmore
    Hellifax
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

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

  • Medusa's WebTim Powers
    Medusa's Web
    by Tim Powers
    Fantasy

    Medusa’s Web by Tim Powers follows the story of siblings, Scott and Madeline, required to stay for a week in their aunt’s house by her recently amended will.  Their cousins Claimayne and Ariel, who live in the house are less than pleased by this requirement. The story has a creepy atmosphere,...

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

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

  • 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 rac...

  • The Emperor's EdgeLindsay Buroker
    The Emperor's Edge
    by Lindsay Buroker
    Fantasy

    The Emperor's Edge is a speculative fiction novel by Lindsay Buroker. Amaranthe Lokdon is one of the first ever female watch officers in the city, she works harder than anyone else and yet is overlooked for promotion while others rise in the ranks around her. When ravaged bodies begin to show up o...

  • 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 Ra...

  • 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....

  • Demon SeedDean Koontz
    Demon Seed
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

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

  • The Long WalkRichard Bachman
    The Long Walk
    by Richard Bachman
    Horror

    Review by Arron Clegg. Wow, what a novel. Not my first time for reading it, but I just seemed to enjoy it even more this time around. Now, most of you out there are already aware that Richard Bachman was a pen name for Stephen King. He chose to do this purely because in his early days, even as today...

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

    Live roleplaying, ritual sacrifice and 14th 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...

  • The Woods are DarkRichard Laymon
    The Woods are Dark
    by Richard Laymon
    Horror

    Now it has been many a year since I have picked up a book by this author, and although he was considered a great horror writer by many fans, I can't remember why. Now I don’t want to give the author a complete disservice, after all this book was one of his earliest and there are elements to the book...

  • FrankensteinMary Shelley
    Frankenstein
    by Mary Shelley
    Science Fiction

    Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus, is a novel by Mary Shelley, first published anonymously in London in January 1818. It is a book that almost everyone in the English-speaking world has an opinion on, and a surprising number of them have never read. Most of those opinions are about the wrong ch...

  • The SevenPeter Newman
    The Seven
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Seven is Peter Newman's stunning conclusion to the post-apocalyptic Vagrant Trilogy, following on from the events of The Vagrant and The Malice. A number of years have passed since the Vagrant journeyed to the Shining City with a baby Vesper and Gamma's sword. Following in her fathers...

  • 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...

  • Smoke EatersSean Grigsby
    Smoke Eaters
    by Sean Grigsby
    Science Fiction

    Fire fighter Sean Grigsby’s near future debut sees the world infested with dragons risen from beneath the ground. The wingless wyverns rise up to destroy cities and take lives, leaving only the shadows of people - ‘wraiths’ - behind. It’s up to the ‘smoke. Cole Brannigan, a patriotic, hard-workin...

  • 131 DaysKeith Blackmore
    131 Days
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    Blackmore is a vastly under-appreciated author. His Mountain Man novels are a superb example of a post-apocalyptic / zombie series. 131 days does for heroic, gladiatorial fantasy what Mountain Man did for Zombies, a charged, fast-paced story that has confidence, style and plenty of GrimDark. Ever...

  • The HungerAlma Katsu
    The Hunger
    by Alma Katsu
    Horror

    The hardback version of The Hunger was originally launched last year and it drew some critical acclaim from authors including Sarah Pinborough and Joanne Harris. Both the Observer and the Guardian loved it. Stephen King said of it: Deeply, deeply disturbing, hard to put down, not recommended...

  • Captain America: Dark designsStefan Petrucha
    Captain America: Dark designs
    by Stefan Petrucha
    Science Fiction

    There is an inherent problem with superheroes. Sometimes they are just too super. How is any mortal person meant to take down a being that can fly into the sun or bounce bullets off their bracelets? It is up to the comic creators to come up with an enemy that will match the super heroics with super...

  • Captain's DaughterPeter David
    Captain's Daughter
    by Peter David
    Science Fiction

    There are many things that I want to be in life, but I don’t want to be the relation of a famous Star Trek character. You are only there to be killed off at some point e.g. Kirk’s Son or Father depending on what Universe you are in. Now in Star Trek: The Captain&...

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

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

  • 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 society. The fantasy books of the 80s and 90s differ greatly from Tolkien and...

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

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

  • All the Murmuring BonesA G Slatter
    All the Murmuring Bones
    by A G Slatter
    Fantasy

    Have you ever sat down and read some Fairy Tales to your children? Not the sanitised versions that we read today, but the originals. If you have, you gave the kids nightmares as these are stories not about happiness and magic but of creatures and con...

  • A Perfect HarvestBill Fitzhugh
    A Perfect Harvest
    by Bill Fitzhugh
    General Fiction

    If you don’t laugh, you will cry. One way that people cope with bleakness is to try and find the funny things in life. Recent lockdowns would have been a lot harder for me without my family to keep me smiling. Diagnoses of terminal illness is no laughing matter, but you still fi...

  • 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 b...

  • Sea of DreamsLiu Cixin
    Sea of Dreams
    by Liu Cixin
    Science Fiction

    I may be biased, but I think that science fiction is the greatest of genres because you can explore so many avenues. I have read many a future dystopian that have explored human’s obsession with science or lack of care with climate change. What I have never read is a science fiction...

  • SwashbucklersDan Hanks
    Swashbucklers
    by Dan Hanks
    Fantasy

    Nostalgia is a dangerous tool to use in a novel as what people think happened is not always the case. They prefer to see the past through rose tinted glasses. The 1980s can be seen as an era of Nintendo playing and Bermuda shorts, but that was not my 80s. I remember the Spectrum, my milk being&...

  • Mercury RisingR. W. W. Greene
    Mercury Rising
    by R. W. W. Greene
    Science Fiction

    Space is for the few. You may have been trained as a professional astronaut and pushed the boundaries of science. Maybe you are a geek done good and decided to spend your billions on the vanity project of commercial space travel. Maybe, just maybe, you are a celeb or competition winner who won...

  • PodLaline Paull
    Pod
    by Laline Paull
    General Fiction

    Nature, red in claw and tooth. It is a world of the strong surviving the weak dying. Therefore, fiction that tells a story from the animal perspective can be full on. Watership Down and The Animals of Farthing Wood have managed to traumatise many a youth and even the jolly Redwall books I used to re...

  • The Shadow GlassJosh Winning
    The Shadow Glass
    by Josh Winning
    Fantasy

    If you are of a certain age, you will know that the 80s was by far the best decade for pop culture, the films, music, comics, books, all unbeatable. All the films and TV shows basking in that 80s nostalgia prove it so. But wait, what is that? A load of 90s-based films and TV shows are starting to be...

  • 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 Eaters of LightRona Munro
    The Eaters of Light
    by Rona Munro
    Science Fiction

    Doctor Who is the same, but also different, in each iteration and that is what makes the characters so interesting. The Twelfth Doctor is one of the latest incarnations and one that reflected on the Doctor’s past as much as the present. The humour was still there, but also more of the historic...

  • The Waters of MarsPhil Ford
    The Waters of Mars
    by Phil Ford
    Science Fiction

    I am a massive fan of the Target imprint of Doctor Who books. Recently they have been filling in the gaps from the older series and producing new adaptations based on the past few Doctors. Taking stories out of any given season is a risky business. It could be a standalone monster of the week story,...

  • Zero KillM K Hill
    Zero Kill
    by M K Hill
    General Fiction

    I am a genre fan, hence writing reviews for SF Book Reviews. I love the flights of fancy that horror, science fiction and fantasy give an author. Wherever the author leads, I will go. For all my willingness to suspend my disbelief with space battles or Elvish languages, I struggle in more gener...

  • The Pale House DevilRichard Kadrey
    The Pale House Devil
    by Richard Kadrey
    Horror

    I read a lot of spooky and downright horrific books in the run up to Halloween this year, but the horror books that work well stick in the mind all year round. The Pale House Devil by Richard Kadrey is not your typical horror novel, nor is it your typical comedy book, or buddy story. This is a book...

  • My Brothers KeeperTim Powers
    My Brothers Keeper
    by Tim Powers
    Horror

    The stories that the Brontë sisters wrote have an extreme gothic appeal and you only need to visit their old home in Haworth to know what inspired them. There did not seem much else to do than walk the moors and avoid dying. Whilst the town may be picturesque now, full of cobbled streets a...

  • A View from the StarsLiu Cixin
    A View from the Stars
    by Liu Cixin
    Science Fiction

    Like many science fiction fans, I have been swept away by the recent influx of Chinese writers that have been translated. Many of these writers are only new to us but have established careers back in China. The most prominent is the Hugo Award winning Cixin Liu. I have enjoyed the style of stor...

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

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

  • The 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...

  • Pay the PiperGeorge A Romero
    Pay the Piper
    by George A Romero
    Horror

    There are many unique and diverse names in horror making it, for me, one of the most interesting genres out there, but to the layperson they may only know a few names. Stephen King, maybe Dean Koontz. In film they may have heard of Wes Craven, or one of the newer horror auteurs. Zombie fans should h...

  • The Glass AbyssSteven Barnes
    The Glass Abyss
    by Steven Barnes
    Science Fiction

    I have always enjoyed the Star Wars extended universe novels, be they the Legend set, or the newer relaunched series. The books allow us to explore the Skywalker saga in more depth, but for me the most fun is exploring the deeper cuts. I have read fantastic novels that have delved into the lives of...

  • 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 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,...

  • The Coming of GalactusJames Lovegrove
    The Coming of Galactus
    by James Lovegrove
    Science Fiction

    The Marvel Universe is jammed packed with famous storylines, but one of the biggest has always been the time that The Fantastic Four took on Galactus. It resonates because it has lasted since the 1960s and appears to be having a reimagining in the latest film. The Coming of Galactus by James Lo...