Books tagged with: secret identity

  • A Scanner DarklyPhilip K Dick
    A Scanner Darkly
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    A Scanner Darkly is the only Philip K Dick novel that I have been the slightest bit reluctant to read so far - to say I am not a fan of drugs would be a vast understatement and Scanner is PKD's exploration into drugs. My youngest brother has waxed lyrical on a number of occasions about the novel tho...

  • Brothers in ArmsLois McMaster Bujold
    Brothers in Arms
    by Lois McMaster Bujold
    Science Fiction

    Brothers in Arms is a novel in the Miles Vorkosigan Adventures by Lois McMaster Bujold. Admiral Naismith (aka. Miles Vokosigan) and the Dendarii mercenaries are taking a well-earned rest at Earth. Did I say rest? Ha! There's never any rest for Miles, who's forced to juggle his identities, the Denda...

  • Earth HiveSteve Perry
    Earth Hive
    by Steve Perry
    Science Fiction

    In 1992, Steve Perry wrote the first novels based on the Dark Horse comics Aliens. Somehow, I missed these books as a teen. Although, I was familiar with the comics. Aliens: Earth Hive is the first exciting, action-packed thriller in the series. The story is unique from the movies, so I won’t compa...

  • Flow my tears, the policeman saidPhilip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Flow my tears, the policeman said is a science fiction novel by the legendary award winning author Philip K Dick, has been nominated for the Nebula and Hugo awards and won the 1975 John W Campbell Award for the best science fiction novel of the year. Jason Taverner is a TV idol, singer and host and...

  • 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...

  • Power SurgeAndy Briggs
    Power Surge
    by Andy Briggs
    Science Fiction

    Villain.net: Power Surge is the 3rd volume in the Villain.net series, one half of the merged series (with Hero.com) from the author Andy Briggs. Jake Hunter is now on the council of evil and is finally in a position to extract revenge on those most deserving. He also has a mission, to restore his f...

  • Seven WondersAdam Christopher
    Seven Wonders
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

    Have you ever wondered what happens in those years after the Superheroes have saved the planet? Would they continue to fight crime or would it all turn into a big PR exercise? While many would see them as noble warriors who are elevated far above the common man what would happen if they themselves f...

  • Spirit's DestinyKen Dawson
    Spirit's Destiny
    by Ken Dawson
    Science Fiction

    Spirit's Destiny follows the path of one Ella Bland, who having just finished a degree is looking forward to living on earth (a right for attending 4 years of university). The very last thing she ever expected was to become embroiled in an ancient, bloody and quite secret war between a genocidal ar...

  • 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 Duke of UraniumJohn Barnes
    The Duke of Uranium
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    The Duke of Uranium is the first volume in the Jak Jinnaka series by the American author John Barnes. The Duke of Uranium introduces Jak Jinnaka. Jak is Barnes try at an arse-kicking, undercover agent for the thirty-sixth century. Somebody who can compete with Miles Vorkosigan, The Stainless Steel...

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

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

  • The Other Log of Phileas FoggPhilip Jose Farmer
    The Other Log of Phileas Fogg
    by Philip Jose Farmer
    Science Fiction

    The Other Log of Phileas Fogg is very much a "literary mashup" novel which fills in the blanks from Jules Verne's classic novel "Around the World in 80 Days". It's being given a new lease of life thanks to Titan Books, originally published almost 40 years ago. As the title suggests the novel introd...

  • 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 attenti...

  • The Vor GameLois McMaster Bujold
    The Vor Game
    by Lois McMaster Bujold
    Science Fiction

    The Vor Game is a science fiction novel by the author Lois McMaster Bujold. The Vor Game takes place in the same universe as Mirror Dance and it has the same main character - only it takes place before Mirror Dance, so I would recommend that you read The Vor Game first. The Vor Games starts when...

  • Time out of JointPhilip K Dick
    Time out of Joint
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    On first impression Ragle Gumm is pretty much an ordinary man leading a fairly ordinary life - the only exception being that he makes his living by entering a newspaper contest every day - and winning every day, for the last 3 years. After a few strange occurances that break the otherwise relaxed mo...

  • Time's Last GiftPhilip Jose Farmer
    Time's Last Gift
    by Philip Jose Farmer
    Science Fiction

    A journey into the past that can never be repeated, travelling from 2070 AD all the way back to 12000 BC; a chance for the four passengers of the "time ship" to study the primitive man as no-one could ever do before or will be able to since. None were prepared for what they would discover, or indee...

  • Use of WeaponsIain M Banks
    Use of Weapons
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    Buying Bank's Use of Weapons was a long shot - a friend had recommended the danish translation of Player of Games, but the (American) bookstore where I mail order most of my books didn't have PoG stocked, so I decided to try another Banks book (I have been wanting to read something by him, for quite...

  • 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...

  • Book of SecretsChris Roberson
    Book of Secrets
    by Chris Roberson
    Fantasy

    Book of Secrets is a fantasy novel by Chris Roberson. Book of Secrets by Chris Roberson is a weird mix of things you’ll have come across before. Written in the first person it tells the story of Spencer Finch, a journalist down on his luck who is following some leads which could become a good payin...

  • DroodDan Simmons
    Drood
    by Dan Simmons
    Fantasy

    Drood is an 800-page historical novel by Dan Simmons, published in 2009, and on the face of it that page count should be a warning. It mostly isn't. The premise comes wrapped in a conceit: the book purports to be a secret manuscript by Wilkie Collins, friend and rival to Charles Dickens, sealed away...

  • NocturnalScott Sigler
    Nocturnal
    by Scott Sigler
    Fantasy

    San Francisco Homicide detective Bryan Clauser thinks he may be losing his mind. What other explanation could there be for the dreams he keeps having, dreams where he witnesses some really gruesome murders that also happen to be actually carried out all over the city. As he and his partner Pookie Ch...

  • PowersBrian Michael Bendis
    Powers
    by Brian Michael Bendis
    Fantasy

    A continuation of the story from the comic books, Powers: The Secret History of Deena Pilgrim is a standalone novel, that links into the comic book story arc. Fans of the Playstation Network TV series may notice a few inconsistencies in terms of the background of its principle character, Deena Pilgr...

  • 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 sed...

  • 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...

  • The Bullet Catcher's DaughterRod Duncan
    Fantasy

    The Bullet Catcher's Daughter is set in a world that is steeped in steampunk style. Not only full of arcane machines but with a clear nod to the Victorian society and strict sexist views. This style is perfectly captured by the series name "The Gas-Lit Empire". In this tightly controlled Empire it...

  • The Complete AlcatrazBrandon Sanderson
    The Complete Alcatraz
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    The Complete Alcatraz collects the whole series of Brandon Sanderson young adult novels including Alcatraz Versus the Evil Librarians, Alcatraz Versus the Scrivener's Bones, Alcatraz Versus the Knights of Crystallia and Alcatraz Versus the Shattered Lens. These novels follow the adventures of the 1...

  • 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 RookDaniel O'Malley
    The Rook
    by Daniel O'Malley
    Fantasy

    The Rook is a surprisingly impressive piece of fiction, managing to turn a literary device often used to provide back story into an integral part of the story. Myfanwy Thomas wakes one morning in a London park surrounded by bodies wearing latex gloves, somewhat battered and bruised and with no memor...

  • 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...

  • 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 kne...

  • ViciousV E Schwab
    Vicious
    by V E Schwab
    Fantasy

    V.E Schwab’s Vicious is a superhero novel, but perhaps not the one you’d expect. There’s no comic action, no explosions, no duels in the sky before frightened citizens. Those with powers work in the background, still regarded as a myth or urban legends. Vicious is about what happen...

  • WarbladeDavid Ferring
    Warblade
    by David Ferring
    Fantasy

    Warblade is the third and final book of David Ferring's Konrad trilogy, and it arrives carrying a heavy burden. This is the volume that has to gather up every thread spun across Konrad and ShadowBreed and tie them off, and it is where my long affection for this series has to make its peace with real...

  • Darkly Dreaming DexterJeff Lindsay
    Darkly Dreaming Dexter
    by Jeff Lindsay
    Horror

    I must admit I watched the entire series of Dexter before I even picked up one of Lindsay’s novels. Did I do the right thing? Yes and no. I absolutely loved the show, one of my faves. The book? Awesome too. I will definitely be adding them to my collection in the near future. Are they the same? No....

  • RevivalStephen King
    Revival
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Now this is the Stephen King that I fell in love with seventeen years ago when I read The Shining. Since then, I have read most of what King has written. Not until Revival did I get that feeling that I last had over a decade ago when I read The Talisman, which also featured Peter Straub. Revival...

  • Space TeamBarry Hutchison
    Space Team
    by Barry Hutchison
    Science Fiction

    Space Team is one of those rare gems, a genuinely funny science fiction story that manages to entertain from beginning to end. The book follows the miss-adventures of small-time conman Cal Carver, abducted by aliens from incarceration due to a case of mistaken identity. His day goes from bad to w...

  • 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 dar...

  • 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...

  • This Body's Not Big Enough for Both of UsEdgar Cantero
    General Fiction

    The crime genre is very well established and has many shortcuts and tropes that you can use. This allows genre authors to drape their own unique ideas over familiar territory. Want to write a book about a Dinosaur PI – go ahead. Sherlock Holmes actually a Warlock – sorted. You can throw...

  • The Magnificent NineJames Lovegrove
    The Magnificent Nine
    by James Lovegrove
    Science Fiction

    Any show on the US TV network Fox has to realise that its days could be numbered. Fox have the reputation of axing cult shows before their time from Arrested Development to Family Guy. Despite their cancelation these shows are still being made. Firefly was not so lucky. This was a science fiction/we...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • How to Rule An Empire and Get Away With ItK J Parker

    I have read a lot of speculative fiction that shows humans going crazy if a major event happens; a pandemic has rioting in the street or the voice of God echoing from the heavens leads to a rise in suicides. Perhaps it is a British thing, but I think that we would just shrug our shoulders and get on...

  • The PhlebotomistChris Panatier
    The Phlebotomist
    by Chris Panatier
    Fantasy

    I find that a lot of my favourite science fiction starts off as a simple What If scenario. A talented author can take a seemingly simple idea and extrapolate from there. A simple difference to our current way of life can have huge implications. Before long an entire new world has been...

  • 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 built that hum when the wind perfectly hits the building to make it vibrate. The worse thing that happens here is an annoying sound when the win...

  • Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder T A WillbergT A Willberg
    General Fiction

    Mystery is a powerful tool. You can exude a sense of power from the shadows that may not be true if a light was shined on you. The premise of T.S. Willberg’s Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder begins thus, with a mysterious detective agency, but we soon delv...

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

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

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

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

  • Ricky's HandDavid Quantick
    Ricky's Hand
    by David Quantick
    Horror

    I love science fiction, but it can sometimes be hard to relate to the characters if they are flying spaceships in far off galaxies. Sometimes it is nice to read something a little closer to home, bizarre things happening to normal people. David Quantick’s Ricky’s Hand is a twisted Twilig...

  • ScarletGenevieve Cogman
    Scarlet
    by Genevieve Cogman
    Fantasy

    There are many reasons that I am a reviewer and not a writer and one of them is that I do not have that thing in my brain to produce simple, but great ideas. Speculating about the future or past and giving it a twist has made for some great science fiction and fantasy. What about a French Revol...

  • 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...

  • Black WolfKathleen Kent
    Black Wolf
    by Kathleen Kent
    General Fiction

    With the fall of the Berlin Wall, the Cold War did not stop immediately. Perestroika was a messy business with elements of the former Soviet Union flaking away at separate times. The fracturing of a once great Superpower brought with it opportunities. Opportunities for the West to invest in new mark...

  • Starter VillainJohn Scalzi
    Starter Villain
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    Inheritance should never be something that you look forward to, but when you receive some, it can make a huge change to your life. I may be enough to pay a deposit on a house or pay for a child to go to university. It can also be a real pain in the bureaucracy. Think of the taxes that need...

  • 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...

  • SaturnaliaStephanie Feldman
    Saturnalia
    by Stephanie Feldman
    Horror

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

  • The Briar Book of the DeadA G Slatter
    Fantasy

    I have read a lot of magical books in recent years and the genre is not rigid. There are books that are steeped in magic, the reader unsure what is real and what is fake. Other books like A. G. Slatter’s The Briar Book of the Dead have a sense of magical realism to them. Yes, the witches can c...

  • Sherlock Holmes and Dorian GrayChristian Klaver
    Sherlock Holmes and Dorian Gray
    by Christian Klaver
    Fantasy

    Forget Marvel and their Marvelverse, the place that I want to be is in Christian Klaver’s Victorianverse. This is an alternative history of the era, but also of the fiction of the time. In the author’s 'The Classified Dossier’ series, Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson have already...

  • 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 d...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • TeslamancerMatthew Donald
    Teslamancer
    by Matthew Donald
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction is fun in so many ways and one of the most entertaining games to play is to think about if. What is Nickola Tesla invented a way to harness an all-powerful energy? Would such power be safe to use, not only for an individual, but for a nation? This was an era of World Wars; more power...

  • Jekyll & Hyde: Consulting DetectivesTim Major

    I always forget how unpleasant some of the antiheros were in Victorian era fantasy and science fiction. In my mind I think of the era being full of ladies and gentlemen, but there were plenty of loathsome people too. Looking back on the working conditions and how society treated its poor, perhaps I...

  • The VengeanceEmma Newman
    The Vengeance
    by Emma Newman
    Fantasy

    I have not read the synopsis of a book I am about to read for over twenty years, ever since I read a spoiler on the back of the novel that revealed the massive twist that occurred two thirds of the way through. I will have to add Series Titles to the list of things not to read as The Vengeance by Em...

  • The Perfect StrangerBrian Pinkerton
    The Perfect Stranger
    by Brian Pinkerton
    Science Fiction

    I have come across the argument that people do not read science fiction as they cannot connect it to their own lives. Most sci fi fans know that even a book set in deep space or thousands of years in the future is often just using images of tomorrow to discuss the issues of today. However, if a read...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Paved With Good IntentionsPeter Mclean
    Paved With Good Intentions
    by Peter Mclean
    Fantasy

    They say never judge a book by its cover and this is a good lesson to take heed of with Peter McLean’s Paved With Good Intentions, as the UK cover stars Eline dressed in regal splendour. You see, Eline is also someone you should not judge from by her looks. She may be presenting as a member of...