Books tagged with: slavery

  • Red Smoke RisingRick Anthony
    Red Smoke Rising
    by Rick Anthony
    Fantasy

    Red Smoke Rising is a fantasy novel and the debut of Rick Anthony. Over a centrury has passed since the Mia's homeland was occupied and the drug stolen. Once the secrets of Ku became clear, the Nor army was unstoppable and Mia’s people were completely overwhelmed and enslaved. Over time a resistanc...

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

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

  • Servant of the underworldAliette de Bodard
    Servant of the underworld
    by Aliette de Bodard
    Fantasy

    Servant of the Underworld is the debut novel from a rising star in the fantasy world, Aliette de Bodard. Acatl is the high priest of the Dead for the Aztec capital city of Tenochtitlan. It is his role to oversee the dead making sure they receive the correct rituals and rites of passage into the nex...

  • Ancillary JusticeAnn Leckie
    Ancillary Justice
    by Ann Leckie
    Science Fiction

    Ancillary Justice has won more awards this year than any book before it. Not only that but the awards it has won are most of the major ones in science fiction. The Hugo, the Nebula, the BSFA, the Arthur C Clarke and the Locus award (for first novel). It's clear to see that the science fiction...

  • 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...

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

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

  • Jack GlassAdam Roberts
    Jack Glass
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

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

  • Man over MindDean Warren
    Man over Mind
    by Dean Warren
    Science Fiction

    Man over Mind is a science fiction novel by Dean Warren. After about a thousand years of expansion, humanity has pretty much conquered the Milky Way with their FTL ships. The Plastowich – descendants of the guy who invented the hyperdrive – are doing a good job of running the show. Not really ruler...

  • 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...

  • Prophets of the Ghost AntsClark Thomas Carlton
    Prophets of the Ghost Ants
    by Clark Thomas Carlton
    Science Fiction

    Prophets of the Ghost Ants is about as different a story as you are ever going to read (and given the sheer breadth of works around nowadays that is saying something). It's already been optioned for a film trilogy and has been lauded by such people as Lawrence Bender - the Oscar winning film produce...

  • RUR & War with the NewtsKarel Capek
    RUR & War with the Newts
    by Karel Capek
    Science Fiction

    R.U.R. (Russum's Universal Robots) is a "play" written almost 100 years ago and first introduced the world to the word "robot" which was derived from the Czech word "robota" meaning serf labor or hard work. ?apek has actually credited his brother (the painter and writer Josef ?apek) as the actual in...

  • Sky CityCarl Eddy Skovgaard
    Sky City
    by Carl Eddy Skovgaard
    Science Fiction

    In Denmark there is a thriving science fiction subculture with many short stories being written every year. Since 2007 the Danish science fiction association (Science Fiction Cirklen) has published an annual anthology of a selection of these original stories, written by Danish authors. For the very...

  • Son of the TreeJack Vance
    Son of the Tree
    by Jack Vance
    Science Fiction

    Son of the Tree is a science fiction novel by Jack Vance. SON OF THE TREE-Jack Vance. I loved this story even more. Head in the clouds the arrogant druids of Kyril fed and nutured the 5 mile wide by 12 mile tall tree that was the cornerstone of their religion. They have a full slave society with ma...

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

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

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

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

  • TribesCarmen Webster Buxton
    Tribes
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    Hob is a slave, abandoned as a baby to be brought up with no hope of freedom or any chance of a normal life. On the world of Tribes any male babies born without a father figure to welcome him into his tribe becomes enslaved. Eventually Hob manages to escape and is rescued by a woman from a fighting...

  • Dragonfly FallingAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Dragonfly Falling
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

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

  • EmpressKaren Miller
    Empress
    by Karen Miller
    Fantasy

    Empress is the first volume in the Godspeaker trilogy, written by Australian author Karren Miller. Hekat is a girl treated worse than a slave with a violent father who beats her mother and rapes her repeatedly on the insistence that she should give him more sons. Not even named, she is eventually s...

  • FoundationMercedes Lackey
    Foundation
    by Mercedes Lackey
    Fantasy

    A veteran of the fantasy scene, Mercedes Lackey has enjoyed a great deal of success in the US but until now hasn't really had a great deal of exposure over here in the UK. This is set to change however thanks to Titan Books with the release of Foundation, the first volume in the Collegium Chronicle...

  • The Greatest Show Off EarthRobert Rankin
    The Greatest Show Off Earth
    by Robert Rankin
    Fantasy

    The Greatest Show Off Earth is a comic fantasy tale by Robert Rankin. Raymond has an adventure. It starts of when he gets kidnapped by an interplanetary slave merchant called Abdullah, who just happens to be giant starfish. Soon he's on sale at the Venusian meat marked, where he narrowly escapes an...

  • Captain Marvel: Liberation RunTess Sharpe
    Science Fiction

    It is not hard to see where Marvel Studios get all their ideas from as they sit upon a rich heritage of characters and storylines that will take decades to exhaust. I am somewhat of an old school Marvel fan and know the classic runs. Therefore, the newer creations flummox me. Captain Marvel is more...

  • Echoes of WarCheryl Campbell
    Echoes of War
    by Cheryl Campbell
    Science Fiction

    In Cheryl Campbell's vision of the future, humanity finds itself enslaved by a genocidal faction of an alien race known as the Wardens. Decades of war has left much of the planet in ruins and threatens the existence of any human (or alien) who offer any form of resistance. Dani thought she had surv...

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

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

  • 84KClaire North
    84K
    by Claire North
    Science Fiction

    Despite repeated and continued efforts by the UK government (amongst others) of turning it into a reality, I still enjoy the odd dystopian fiction. More and more often though it does feel like things that will be rather than things that may. 84K is a good example. Set in a future where the inevitabl...

  • Echo CyclePatrick Edwards
    Echo Cycle
    by Patrick Edwards
    Science Fiction

    Above all genres, science fiction is my favourite. Why? Because anything can happen. You can have epic space battles between alien races you cannot pronounce or go in the other direction and create a subtle alternative reality where words have the power to kill. Ideas run the entire gamete and they...

  • Legacy of SevenP. J. Flie
    Legacy of Seven
    by P. J. Flie
    Fantasy

    One of the remarkable things about genre fiction is that it can blend so well. Why have a straight fantasy novel when you can mix it with science fiction or horror? How far are we as a human race from backsliding to a medieval style life? A few dirty bombs, no elec...

  • MisruleHeather Walter
    Misrule
    by Heather Walter
    Fantasy

    Everyone knows the story of Sleeping Beauty, or do they? Malice by Heather Walter retold the story leading up to Aurora falling asleep, but with far more detail on Aurora and her relationship with Alyce, the person responsible for her curse. Misrule opens 100 years later and tells the second pa...

  • 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...

  • VagabonderR T Coleman
    Vagabonder
    by R T Coleman
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • Planet of the OodKeith Temple
    Planet of the Ood
    by Keith Temple
    Science Fiction

    It can be hard for the casual Doctor Who viewer to see the character as alien. They may have two hearts, regenerate once in a while, but fundamentally the Doctor looks human. It does not help that they are obsessed with human culture and like to hang around on Earth a lot (cheap sets). But fundament...

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

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

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

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

  • The BrandedJo Riccioni
    The Branded
    by Jo Riccioni
    Fantasy

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

  • Alien ClayAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Alien Clay
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    There is no doubt that Tchaikovsky is a prolific author - I'm counting at least 38 novels and many novellas and short stories. Every few months, there seems to be a new book on the horizon. But that regularity of releases doesn't seem to impact the quality of his writing or the sharpness of his visi...

  • The Intergalactic Empire of WakandaSuyi Davies Okungbowa
    The Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda
    by Suyi Davies Okungbowa
    Science Fiction

    The sheer number of comic books out there are a blessing and a curse. There are so many stories to catch up on and different versions of the same characters. It is wonderful for the explorer, but for the casual fan it can be daunting. We all know something about Black Panther, the character, Wakanda...

  • UltimartCarl Wilhoyte
    Ultimart
    by Carl Wilhoyte
    Science Fiction

    There was a time in my life that I would sit down and read some Dystopian Fiction and not consider at all that it would happen in my lifetime, but all I need to do is some doomscrolling on my social medias to think that elements of Carl Wilhoyte’s Ultimart may not be long in our future. This i...

  • Caesar's SpyJean-Pierre Pecau
    Caesar's Spy
    by Jean-Pierre Pecau
    General Fiction

    There are certain historic events that I return to in fiction as no matter how many times I have read about them, authors have found new ways of exploring the past. I must have read about Caesar’s rise and fall twenty times or more, but there is room for more retellings. Caesar’s Spy wri...