Books tagged with: survival

  • 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...

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

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

  • A Legend of the FutureAgustin de Rojas
    A Legend of the Future
    by Agustin de Rojas
    Science Fiction

    Agustin de Rojas was a Cuban author of science fiction. Within that country he is thought of as a legend and has even been described as "Patron Saint of Cuban science fiction". Agustin wrote A Legend of the future back in 1985, following his award winning novel Espiral (Spiral). El año 200 (The Year...

  • AlienAlan Dean Foster
    Alien
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    Alien: It’s more than just a novelization of the movie. Alan Dean Foster’s ALIEN is fantastic. That having been said, you can easily guess the direction of this book review. Normally, I do a formal review but this one just seemed to be stifled by a synopsis and straightforward critique. Instead, I w...

  • Alien: Out of the ShadowsTim Lebbon
    Science Fiction

    I've always loved the Aliens films (well at least the first two), both films work for very different reasons. The first was totally ground breaking with it's unique style, examination of claustrophobia, fear - the combination of science fiction and horror that combined with some exceptional music, d...

  • AliensAlan Dean Foster
    Aliens
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    Novelizations of movies are often jutted to the back of the bookshelf after one reading. Reviewers are critical, normally arguing that it is just an attempt to make money off a popular film franchise, and at times they do so justly. Yet, some novelizations often tell the story in a way film simply c...

  • Aliens the Female WarSteve Perry
    Aliens the Female War
    by Steve Perry
    Science Fiction

    Steve Perry recruits his daughter, writer Stephani Perry, to conclude a separate storyline to one of the best SciFi franchises of all time. Filled with plenty of Xenomorph-action and a conclusion that no one would guess, Aliens: The Female War rocks hard and entertains like a champ! Now joined by El...

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

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

  • Apocalypse: Diary of a SurvivorMatt Pike
    Science Fiction

    Apocalypse novels are all the rage these days, and with good reason, as any rational person can sense that we are rapidly approaching some kind of great calamity. There are plenty of choices: climate change, rapidly depleting resources, drug resistant disease, or even a straight up revolution of the...

  • BarricadeJon Wallace
    Barricade
    by Jon Wallace
    Science Fiction

    The future vision in Barricade shows a world torn apart by a war fought against humanity and their own artificially created super-humans, known as "Ficials". In the UK (seemingly along with the rest of the World) the results are pretty catastrophic. As you can probably imagine once humanity has crea...

  • Bringing forth the end of daysSimon Law
    Science Fiction

    Bringing forth the end of days is a science fiction novel of post apocalypse survival, and is the debut novel of Simon Law. The year is 2013 and World War 3 has scorched the earth, on top of a biological attack that has destroyed all plant life, leaving a world without life giving oxygen. Civilisati...

  • Code Name AtlasTony Evans
    Code Name Atlas
    by Tony Evans
    Science Fiction

    Code Name Atlas is a post-apocalyptic science fiction tale told by Tony Evans. A war hero trying to leave his past behind finds himself using his skills to survive after the earth is ravaged by unknown forces. In the midst of this destruction anarchy reins and he finds himself raising an army to fig...

  • Damnation AlleyRoger Zelazny
    Damnation Alley
    by Roger Zelazny
    Science Fiction

    Damnation Alley is a post-apocalytic tale of survival by the Hugo and Nebula award winner Roger Zelazny. Set in the decades after a devastating nuclear war, the former USA is a very different place. With mass destruction, dangerous mutants, large areas of deadly radiation and a worldwide wind preven...

  • Dark EdenChris Beckett
    Dark Eden
    by Chris Beckett
    Science Fiction

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

  • DreadnoughtMark Walden
    Dreadnought
    by Mark Walden
    Science Fiction

    Dreadnought is the fourth Volume in the H.I.V.E (Higher Institute of Villainous Education) Young Adult series, written by Mark Walden. Hive is a school where villains rule, students are trained to be the best at the worst in the hope they will become the next great super-villian. One of the most pow...

  • Extinction EdgeNicolas Sansbury Smith
    Extinction Edge
    by Nicolas Sansbury Smith
    Science Fiction

    Nicholas Sansbury Smith’s Extinction Edge , book two in The Extinction Cycle , is a whirl-wind of action and rapid evolution! The stakes have never been higher since the Hemorrhage virus first infected humankind. Now, the transition from modern society to a surviving-society pits Beckham and his Gho...

  • Extinction GameGary Gibson
    Extinction Game
    by Gary Gibson
    Science Fiction

    Extinction Game is a clever novel that mixes a post-apocalyptic setting with parallel worlds and a thrilling plot. It all begins with Jerry Beche who believes he is the only survivor following a viral pandemic that sweeps the globe. While eking out an existence alone in the quiet wilderness that sur...

  • Extinction HorizonNicolas Sansbury Smith
    Extinction Horizon
    by Nicolas Sansbury Smith
    Science Fiction

    Nicolas Sansbury Smith made his debut with Biomass Revolution , which was quickly followed by the Orbs Series . His latest series is The Extinction Cycle . After rereading book one for this review, I was reminded how effective military science fiction can be as a lens to watch civilization unravel....

  • Extreme DifferenceDB Reynolds-Moreton
    Extreme Difference
    by DB Reynolds-Moreton
    Science Fiction

    Waking up on a strange world with no memory of his past, our intrepid protagonist finds an unusual group of people surviving on the slope of a mountain chain that forms a ring around a vast sandy dust-bowl that appears to hold dangers unseen. Everyone else seem to also have no memories of their past...

  • 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. Eye...

  • Furnace: Death SentenceAlexander Gordon Smith
    Furnace: Death Sentence
    by Alexander Gordon Smith
    Science Fiction

    Furnace: Death Sentence is the third volume in the Furnace series, a young adult science fiction series of books, written by Alexander Gordon Smith. The Furnace is a juvenile prison located one mile beneath the surface of the earth, where kids are sentenced to life imprisonment and where dying isn't...

  • Furnace: LockdownAlexander Gordon Smith
    Furnace: Lockdown
    by Alexander Gordon Smith
    Science Fiction

    Furnace: Lockdown is a young adult science fiction novel and is the first volume in the Furnace series, written by Alexander Gordon Smith. The Furnace Penitentiary is an underground prison, buried a mile beneath the earth's surface, where juveniles are sentenced for life, with no hope and no chance...

  • Furnace: SolitaryAlexander Gordon Smith
    Furnace: Solitary
    by Alexander Gordon Smith
    Science Fiction

    Furnace: Solitary is a young adult science fiction novel, the second volume in the Furnace series by Alexander Gordon Smith. Furnace Prison is located a mile beneath the surface of the planet, a place where juveniles are sentenced to life imprisonment with no hope of release, a place where death is...

  • Future HopeDavid Gelber
    Future Hope
    by David Gelber
    Science Fiction

    Future Hope is a science fiction novel written by David Gelber. The novel is set in the year 2156 and the Earth is getting a pretty crowded place. While many of the social and economic problems have been eradicated - along with most illnesses, new problems have taken their place. Principal amongst t...

  • GreybeardBrian Aldiss
    Greybeard
    by Brian Aldiss
    Science Fiction

    Originally published in 1964, Greybeard is a post apocalyptic vision by Brian Aldiss, the version reviewed here is for the Gollancz SF Masterworks collection. Greybeard is all about the human ageing process, growing old (and being old) - an idea that reminds me of something a pessimistic friend once...

  • Hull Zero ThreeGreg Bear
    Hull Zero Three
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    A starship hurtles through the empty void of space towards an unknown destination, it's purpose and history lost in the midst of time. One man finds himself ripped from his dream of a new home and partner and awakens to the freezing cold and dark halls of Hull Zero One, a place that seems full of da...

  • I am LegendRichard Matheson
    I am Legend
    by Richard Matheson
    Science Fiction

    I am Legend is a post apocalyptic vision by Richard Matheson, created in 1954 it tells the story of Robert Neville, the last surviving human in the world, surrounded by bloodthirsty vampires - both living and undead. Part of the Gollancz SF Masterworks collection, the novel has received critical acc...

  • Ill WindKevin J Anderson
    Ill Wind
    by Kevin J Anderson
    Science Fiction

    Ill Wind is a 1995 disaster novel by Kevin J. Anderson and Doug Beason, one of nine collaborations between the two and one of the more successful of them. The Anderson credit is the one that sells the book; the Beason credit, less well known to the average reader, is the one that explains why the sc...

  • JagannathKerry Denney
    Jagannath
    by Kerry Denney
    Science Fiction

    The arrival of the Jagannath changed everything. Humanity did not have time to reflect on the fact that they were not alone in the Universe. This amorphous blob appears unstoppable, simply absorbing everyone in it's path and assimilating their identity and intellect. Growing stronger and smarter as...

  • Man PlusFrederik Pohl
    Man Plus
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

    Man Plus is a classic science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl. In the near future things will start to go bad. Really bad - international tension will rise, numerous smaller and not so small wars will flare. Resources will be scarce. Chaos will rule around the globe - even in the good old U.S. of A....

  • MoonfallJack McDevitt
    Moonfall
    by Jack McDevitt
    Science Fiction

    The subtitle on this, my first book by McDevitt is "It's time to panic". I don't know about you, but a subtitle like that tells me a lot about what to expect from a book. It tells me that McDevitt or more probably his editor, didn't think that this was a serious piece of literature, aspiring to win...

  • 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...

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

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

  • Nightmare AsylumSteve Perry
    Nightmare Asylum
    by Steve Perry
    Science Fiction

    Crazy fun! But not as good as Aliens: Earth Hive. Nightmare Asylum picks up immediately where Earth Hive ended. Wilks, Billie, and what remains of Bueller are headed back to Earth. Their previous encounter with a separate alien life form, one that possesses the power to effortlessly destroy Xenomorp...

  • No Time Like TomorrowBrian Aldiss
    No Time Like Tomorrow
    by Brian Aldiss
    Science Fiction

    No Time Like Tomorrow is a collection of science fiction short stories by Brian Aldiss. This little book is all Aldiss shorties that end real abrubtly or have sort of nice wrapped up endings that are reflecting on the rest of the story in this light of 'well that was...ok'. There is one particular s...

  • NodAdrian Barnes
    Nod
    by Adrian Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Like all the best novels, Nod develops from a simple premise. Imagine that the vast majority of people around the world suddenly stopped being able to sleep. No deep sleep, no cat-naps and no snoozing at all. It's only a matter of time before society collapses. How many times have we had a bad night...

  • Oryx and CrakeMargaret Atwood
    Oryx and Crake
    by Margaret Atwood
    Science Fiction

    I've been meaning to grab this series for quite some time — the combination of Atwood's evocative prose and a post-apocalyptic setting is a highly promising one. Oryx and Crake tells the story of an altered world through the eyes of a man once known as Jimmy. Now known as Snowman and clothed in dete...

  • OxygenJohn B Olson
    Oxygen
    by John B Olson
    Science Fiction

    Oxygen is the first novel in a Christian science fiction series written by John B Olson and co-Written with Randall Ingermanson. This is a review by the previous owner of SFBook.com - TC. What intrigued me about Oxygen was the fact that it was labelled as "Christian science fiction" - never having m...

  • Pilgrims' MoonStacey S Thompson
    Pilgrims' Moon
    by Stacey S Thompson
    Science Fiction

    Scott is going to Terranova to begin a new life. Most of the trip is supposed to be done in biostasis, so Scott is rather surprised to be awoken in the middle of nowhere, just to be told that their ship has been thrown five hundred years into the future and far away from their intended target. Soon...

  • Planet JanitorChris Stevenson
    Planet Janitor
    by Chris Stevenson
    Science Fiction

    Planet Janitor Custodian of the Stars is a science fiction novel by Chris Stevenson. The Planet Janitor Corporation are experts in the handling of environmental clean-ups and close system jumps to pick up precious ores and space trash, led by Captain Zachary Crowe they have won a number of accolades...

  • PureJulianna Baggott
    Pure
    by Julianna Baggott
    Science Fiction

    I do so love a post apocalyptic tale and they often seem not very far from the reality in these times of economic turmoil. It therefore gives me great pleasure to inform you dear reader of another tale of survival after a world altering cataclysmic event. Pressia can barely remember a time before th...

  • Ringworld ThroneLarry Niven
    Ringworld Throne
    by Larry Niven
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • SilverhairStephen Baxter
    Silverhair
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Silverhair is a science fiction novel by the award winning author Stephen Baxter. This book is very quirky in that it forces us to see from a new perspective. For anyone who's ever read Raptor Red the concept of this book will most likely be familiar. Baxter has decided to craft a story centering ar...

  • SojournGeonn Cannon
    Sojourn
    by Geonn Cannon
    Science Fiction

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

  • SouthFrank Owen
    South
    by Frank Owen
    Science Fiction

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

  • Spaceship EarthTom Schwartz
    Spaceship Earth
    by Tom Schwartz
    Science Fiction

    Spaceship Earth is a science fiction novel by Tom Schwartz. Scientists have discovered that the universe is a "closed system" and that the rate of expansion is slowing. This means that eventually the universe will stop expanding and begin collapsing upon itself, ultimately resulting in the opposite...

  • Star SplinterJohn Cressey
    Star Splinter
    by John Cressey
    Science Fiction

    Lieutenant Callum (called California, Cal or Harper) Harper punches his Captain, Laurence Decker for being incompetent and letting soldiers die on a mission we (initially) don’t learn much about. Cal has time and the option to finish things off but backs down and so gets re-assigned back to Earth. O...

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

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

  • SteepleJon Wallace
    Steeple
    by Jon Wallace
    Science Fiction

    Steeple is the sequel to the quite brilliant novel Barricade which we reviewed back in June last year. It describes a post-apocalyptic world torn apart by a war of human against their artificial, super-human constructs, the "fiscials". As you can imagine, fighting against a superior force of artific...

  • TeranesiaGreg Egan
    Teranesia
    by Greg Egan
    Science Fiction

    Teranesia is a science fiction novel by the Australian author Greg Egan. As per my usual routine I never read about a book before I start on it. I never read the back of a book before I start on it and I never, ever read other peoples reviews. If I had done any one of those things I wouldn't have be...

  • The Bohr MakerLinda Nagata
    The Bohr Maker
    by Linda Nagata
    Science Fiction

    The Bohr Maker is a science fiction novel by the writer Linda Nagata. This is the first book that I have read by Linda Nagata and I'm not quite sure what I feel about it. The basis for the book is interesting enough - it takes place in a world where nanomachines, bio-engineering and neural computer...

  • The Carhullan ArmySarah Hall
    The Carhullan Army
    by Sarah Hall
    Science Fiction

    The Carhullan Army is a dystopian science fiction novel set in an around the cumbrian fells, written by Sarah Hall. With much of Britain underwater due to a biblical level of flooding, the surviving population exist in concentrated pockets and ruled by the rather sinister sounding "Authority". While...

  • The Death of GrassJohn Christopher
    The Death of Grass
    by John Christopher
    Science Fiction

    The Death of Grass is a classic post-apocalyptic tale of a world without grass. Written in 1956 - just as the post-apocalyptic genre started to gain ground, created by the British author Samuel Youd - under the pen name John Christopher. The Death of Grass was Youd's second novel and was written in...

  • The Dog StarsPeter Heller
    The Dog Stars
    by Peter Heller
    Science Fiction

    I have read many novels about the end of the world, probably more than strictly healthy at this point. After a while, you begin to notice that most of them are what you might call loud. They want the sirens and the looting and the screaming collapse of everything. Peter Heller's The Dog Stars does s...

  • The Drowned WorldJG Ballard
    The Drowned World
    by JG Ballard
    Science Fiction

    The Drowned World is J.G. Ballards first novel. It's written more than twenty years before he writes his, probably, best known novel The Empire of The Sun. Ballard actually wrote about 10 SF novels (and countless shorts) before he writes Empire of the Sun, and if you enjoyed Empire of the Sun and yo...

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

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

  • The GenocidesThomas M Disch
    The Genocides
    by Thomas M Disch
    Science Fiction

    The Genocides is a classic science fiction novel by Thomas M Disch. In this post apocalyptic tale of vegetable domination, the earth has been overtaken by a strain of alpha plants... massive and imposing, they suck up all the resources and wreak major havoc on the ecosystem. In just 7 years these gr...

  • The Ice Wars of DominiaHylton H Smith
    The Ice Wars of Dominia
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    Over a 100 years have passed since the annihilative events of 2045 and the world is a very different place. With the earths climate raging out of control and ice spread across much of the globe humanity is forced to survive in nomadic pockets around the narrow band of the "Temperate Zone" near the e...

  • The Inosculation SyndromeDB Reynolds-Moreton
    The Inosculation Syndrome
    by DB Reynolds-Moreton
    Science Fiction

    Another novel being published by those good people at Scifi Cafe, The Inosculation Syndrome is something of a surprise. The book tells the story of the astronaut Kal who becomes stranded on an alien planet due to a series of errors after losing touch with his star ship while charting regions of spac...

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

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

  • The MartianAndy Weir
    The Martian
    by Andy Weir
    Science Fiction

    The Martian is one of those books that if many authors had attempted it, wouldn't have worked. The majority of the novel follows one man surviving on Mars with little more than a shelter, 2 rovers, a few space suits, air, water and potatoes. There are no monsters, no antagonists (unless you count th...

  • The PassageJustin Cronin
    The Passage
    by Justin Cronin
    Horror

    I've been aware of The Passage for years but never had chance to pick it up - even though I have family connections to the Cronin surname (although doubtfully any connection to the author!). Recently the final novel in the series was released which prompted me to begin reading. The book describes a...

  • The Seed GardenDB Reynolds-Moreton
    The Seed Garden
    by DB Reynolds-Moreton
    Science Fiction

    A while ago now I reviewed a surprisingly entertaining novel called "The Insoculation Syndrome" which detailed a tale of an astronaut stranded on a alien planet. The Seed Garden starts in a very similar fashion, Jed's ship malfunctions and his only hope for survival is to jump in an escape pod and l...

  • The ShipAntonia Honeywell
    The Ship
    by Antonia Honeywell
    Science Fiction

    In a future where fossil fuels have dried up, global warming has decimated ecosystems, and governments are culling populations, Antonia Honeywell’s debut sees teenager Lalla escape the ruins of London to live on her father's utopian Ship with 500 others keen to enjoy a 'happy death'. Their destinati...

  • The Status Civilization - MindswapRobert Sheckley
    Science Fiction

    The Status Civilization - Mindswap is a collection of two science fiction stories by Robert Sheckley. This book contains two stories of about a hundred and fifty pages each. The stories are very different, so I'll review them as separate stories. The Status Civilization. Most of this story read as y...

  • The Third SideStephen Sweeney
    The Third Side
    by Stephen Sweeney
    Science Fiction

    The Pandoran war machine is on the move and Simon Dodds finds himself shot down over the luxury planet of Mythos. Separated from his team mates he soon learns that the once-popular holiday destination has become a hellish war zone, swarming with armies of seemingly unstoppable black-suited soldiers....

  • The TideAnthony J Melchiorri
    The Tide
    by Anthony J Melchiorri
    Science Fiction

    Anthony J. Melchiorri’s The Tide (Tide Series Book One) is set in the present. It ties Japan's secret attempt to prepare its people in case of a major American assault following the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Mysteriously, a protein complex capable of altering the weakest of mankind...

  • The Twilight of BriareusRichard Cowper
    The Twilight of Briareus
    by Richard Cowper
    Science Fiction

    The Twilight of Briareus is a science fiction novel by Richard Cowper. Getting bad weather as after-effects of a nearby supernova, seems quite reasonable, but the people of earth are in for a lot more that they had expected. Humanity wakes up on the brink of a new ice age and is forced to recognise...

  • The Two Faces of TomorrowJames P Hogan
    The Two Faces of Tomorrow
    by James P Hogan
    Science Fiction

    The Two Faces of Tomorrow is a science fiction novel by James P Hogan. Hogan starts of well enough in this book, where he tries to tackle the quite interesting question of whether an artificial intelligence could be a threat to mankind or not. The premis is that anything worthy of the label intellig...

  • The Venom of VipersKC May
    Science Fiction

    The Venom of Vipers is a science fiction novel by KC May. A supervirus is threatening to wipe out the human race and the only hope may be a human hybrid created by scientists, treated as sub human, locked away and hated. When a brilliant young scientist learns of this secret she must not only fight...

  • ThreeJay Posey
    Three
    by Jay Posey
    Science Fiction

    It's true that I have a soft spot for a good post-apocalyptic story, there is just something about the setting that appeals to me. I'm clearly not alone in this regard either, post-apocalyptic scenarios are dominating the film world this year while in the world of books we have excellent examples li...

  • Twilight CandlefliesScott Niven
    Twilight Candleflies
    by Scott Niven
    Science Fiction

    Twiglight Candleflies is a collection of three post apocalyptic short fiction stories, written by Scott Niven. The three stories presented here are told in different styles and set in different worlds but all have a post apocalyptic edge to them. While each is a fairly short and sweet story they all...

  • War of the Worlds: AftermathTony Wright
    Science Fiction

    War of the Worlds: Aftermath is a novel written by Tony Wright that expands on the novel by HG Wells. The original War of the Worlds was first published in 1898, 113 years ago and told the story of the alien invasion of Earth - narrated from the first person perspective of a philosophical writer who...

  • Wastelands 2John Joseph Adams
    Wastelands 2
    by John Joseph Adams
    Science Fiction

    The first Wastelands anthology, released back in 2008 was widely regarded as not only a fine collection of apocalyptic tales but one of the finest anthologies full stop. Big shoes to fill then. The Editor John Joseph Adams is clearly up to the task though and has managed to get together some of the...

  • Where Late the Sweet Birds SangKate Wilhelm
    Science Fiction

    Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang is a Hugo award winning post-apocalyptic tale of human cloning. For the Sumner family the recent droughts, floods, blighted crops, pandemic plagues and rising sterility all point to the demise of the human race. Their isolated farm in the Appalachian Mountains provide...

  • While the Gods SleepJohnny Fincham
    While the Gods Sleep
    by Johnny Fincham
    Science Fiction

    While the Gods Sleep is a science fiction novel of a dystopian future, written by Johnny Fincham, a futurologist and distinguished palmist. Not too far in the future, there is a cataclysmic event that turns nature against humanity. The air becomes poisonous, plants die and virulent strains of super...

  • Who Goes ThereJohn W Campbell
    Who Goes There
    by John W Campbell
    Science Fiction

    "Who Goes There?" is the novella by John W Campbell on which John Carpenter based the classic film "The Thing", its presented here with another 6 short stories by the same author, mostly published within Astounded magazine in the 1930's. John W Campbell is widely regarded as being highly influential...

  • 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,...

  • Without WarningJohn Birmingham
    Without Warning
    by John Birmingham
    Science Fiction

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

  • WoolHugh Howey
    Wool
    by Hugh Howey
    Science Fiction

    I missed out commenting about this novel when it was first released. There was such a rush by everyone to say how great it was I felt that I would be adding but a small ripple to a raging Tsunami. Everyone from the big papers to the big authors have commented how magnificent the book is, and they ar...

  • AutumnDavid Moody
    Autumn
    by David Moody
    Fantasy

    Autumn was originally self published and given away by the author ten years ago, since then it has been read by hundreds of thousands of people and even turned into a film starring David Carradine and Dexter Fletcher. It's now published by those fantastic people over at Gollancz and I must say that...

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

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

  • Autumn - The CityDavid Moody
    Autumn - The City
    by David Moody
    Fantasy

    Autumn - The City is the follow up to the sensational zombie novel Autumn, promising the same power and subtle horror of the first. It takes a lot of guts to start a story again right from the beginning but told from a different perspective - a brave move that could have gone horribly wrong. Instead...

  • 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 physi...

  • HellifaxKeith Blackmore
    Hellifax
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

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

  • Moon ChaseCathy Farr
    Moon Chase
    by Cathy Farr
    Fantasy

    When Will Calloway is wrongly accused of a serious crime he is sentenced to join the Moon Chase to prove his innocence. While at first glance this seems pretty straight forward and fairly safe with the fell walkers and huge Fellhounds of Thesk going along to help, he soon realises that proving his i...

  • Mountain manKeith Blackmore
    Mountain man
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    Mountain Man introduces us to a world that is now mostly inhabited by the walking undead and Augustus Berry lives a day-to-day existence that is largely composed of getting drunk, foraging for supplies and preparing for the day when the Zombie horde will come up the side of the mountain and penetrat...

  • NationTerry Pratchett
    Nation
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    Nation is the first novel in some time (since the 1996 novel Johnny and the Bomb) Terry Pratchett has written that is not a part of the Discworld series. Sir Terry had apparently been ready to write it for four years and could wait no longer. Primarily aimed at children, Nation is everything that co...

  • Red MoonBenjamin Percy
    Red Moon
    by Benjamin Percy
    Fantasy

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

  • SafariKeith Blackmore
    Safari
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    We are once again re-united with one of the few survivors in a world infested with the undead. Gus is a little more dishevelled than the last time we saw him, more bruised and a bit more reckless too as his daily existence of waking up, getting drunk and preparing for the inevitable zombie horde beg...

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

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

  • The Complete Double DeadChuck Wendig
    The Complete Double Dead
    by Chuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    The world is a terrible place to live after the zombie apocalypse, but probably for none more so than a vampire.  Without humans, the blood supply is all dried up, unless you find a random animal.  The buildings are decayed and in ruin, with gaping holes the sunlight streams through and providing ea...

  • The Dying of the Light: EndJason Kristopher
    The Dying of the Light: End
    by Jason Kristopher
    Fantasy

    I must admit that I am developing a bit of a soft spot for Zombie novels, I love the way that each I have read recently has something different to offer, from the pseudo first person account of World War Z to the subtle and gradual style of David Moody's Autumn, even though they are all descended fr...

  • The Dying of the Light: IntervalJason Kristopher
    The Dying of the Light: Interval
    by Jason Kristopher
    Fantasy

    The world has ended and the few who remain are faced with a struggle to survive, not only with a lack of food and heat (not to mention any real form of civilisation) but also against the hordes of shambling undead who look to rip, tear, kill and eat not to mention the possibility of an even more dan...

  • The EnemyCharlie Higson
    The Enemy
    by Charlie Higson
    Fantasy

    Charlie Higson is probably best known as part of a series that for many in the UK was one of the funniest things to watch on TV in the 90's - the Fast Show (known as Brilliant in the US). The irreverent and often off-beat humour was guaranteed to make me laugh and still does. Until this year I didn'...

  • The Great Zoo of ChinaMatthew Reilly
    The Great Zoo of China
    by Matthew Reilly
    Fantasy

    Over Forty years in the making, China is almost ready to share with the world the greatest Zoo ever conceived. The Great Zoo of China isn't just bigger and better though, it's unique - inhabited by creatures considered the stuff of legends - Dragons. A select group of VIPs and Journalists are invite...

  • The SilenceTim Lebbon
    The Silence
    by Tim Lebbon
    Fantasy

    What a great idea for a novel. A new little twist on the already satiated apocalypse genre. An underground cavern is unearthed opening the way for thousands of fast breeding “vesps” which hunt by sound and kill everything living they hear on their journey across Europe to our very own British border...

  • The Silent LandGraham Joyce
    The Silent Land
    by Graham Joyce
    Fantasy

    The Silent Land concerns the story of Jake and Zoe who find themselves cut off from civilisation after being trapped in an Avalanche while on a skiing holiday. Managing to claw and wriggle her way out of her snowbound tomb Zoe finds Jake has miraculously survived. On return to their hotel they find...

  • The Troll HunterKeith Blackmore
    The Troll Hunter
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    The Troll Hunter is a heroic fantasy novel by Keith Blackmore. Fresh from the battle infirmaries, a band of rogues, cuts throats and killers return to duty and are ordered north through the war torn country. They know nothing of their mission except that they must protect a mysterious Koch (armoured...

  • The Zombie Survival Guide: Recorded AttacksMax Brooks

    The Zombie survival guide tells you everything you need to know in order to protect yourself from the restless dead. Written by Max Brooks, the guide follows a no nonsense and logical path that draws you in and makes you believe that a future zombie threat might just be possible. With a timeline tha...

  • Well FedKeith Blackmore
    Well Fed
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    After all the years spent fighting off the Zombie hordes in isolation at his home in Annapolis, Gus has finally found a new life of peace. A daily routine of tending and policing the fields of the little community, rarely interupted by shambling corpes. It seems the epidemic is finally beginning to...

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

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

  • AfraidJack Kilborn
    Afraid
    by Jack Kilborn
    Horror

    This is the first book I’ve read by this author. I kind of stumbled across it by accident and I’m so glad I did. Jack Kilborn is a pen name for the author J.A Konrath, and this was his first novel writing under that name. It is a simple tale, wrote simply and in no way completely original and yet th...

  • Allhallows EveRichard Laymon
    Allhallows Eve
    by Richard Laymon
    Horror

    It’s been awhile since I picked up one of Mr Laymon’s books and I was quite looking forward to reading this book. With this in mind I picked it up and started ahead. Now for those of you who aren’t aware Laymon was a very prolific writer right up to his death. His books ranged from short sharp shock...

  • FiendPeter Stenson
    Fiend
    by Peter Stenson
    Horror

    It’s a book about drugs. No it’s a book about zombies. Wrong again, it’s a book about love, hope and the desire we have to be better people. It is all of these and so much more. Peter’s creations of zombies being referred to as Chucks due to the fact that they are always chuckling and giggling bring...

  • Geralds GameStephen King
    Geralds Game
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Geralds Game is a novel by the master of Horror, Stephen King. This is the first Stephen King book (please notice that I wrote book and not story) I have read that really doesn't have anything supernatural in it. Not that I missed it, GG is still a terrific story. The story starts off with Jessie an...

  • LairJames Herbert
    Lair
    by James Herbert
    Horror

    The first of the sequels to The Rats is a vast improvement to the original in terms of suspense and action. What the book lacks in originality now, due to it being a sequel, it definitely makes up for in horror and gore. The author’s writing has really come a long way in the intervening years and by...

  • No One Gets Out AliveAdam Nevill
    No One Gets Out Alive
    by Adam Nevill
    Horror

    Ok it’s fair to say I struggled with this book a lot more than I expected to. Promise of an English Stephen King, was lapped up by yours truly, a self-confessed King fan, add on to that the fact I’m English myself and I had a book on my hands I just had to read. The promise was far more than the act...

  • SlugsShaun Hutson
    Slugs
    by Shaun Hutson
    Horror

    Ok so we all know who Shaun Hutson is, and asked to name some of his works then Slugs is more than likely to be in the answer bank, most people probably know that it was even his first novel. What they may not know however, unless they have read up on the guy is that he is a die-hard Iron Maiden fan...

  • The FungusHarry Adam Knight
    The Fungus
    by Harry Adam Knight
    Horror

    When I was given this book I must admit I had my doubts. The front cover didn’t appeal, the title seemed rather dated and the type of book I was expecting seemed very much planted in the 80’s. Reading through the first few pages and I wasn’t disappointed. It was exactly as I feared. Cheesy. Cliché r...

  • The Girl Who Loved Tom GordonStephen King
    Horror

    The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon is a novel by Stephen King. Probably one of the shortest novels by Stephen King that I've ever read. Two hundred and twenty five pages in the hardcover edition is a lot less that we are used to, but King manages to do, what he set out to do, in those pages and he does i...

  • 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 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...

  • TicktockDean Koontz
    Ticktock
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    By the time Dean Koontz wrote this novel he was already a household name. He had infiltrated the mystery / thriller / horror genres like no other. With a novel a year hitting the bookshelves he was as prolific a writer as Stephen King. However on closer inspection one can find that a lot of the book...

  • TurnerKarl Drinkwater
    Turner
    by Karl Drinkwater
    Horror

    Ok, where shall I start? It was an ok book. A little above average. Hints of promise, but then his next piece of work would have to be something special or he will find himself reduced to the bargain bookshops and supermarket shelves. It started off with great promise too to be fair. The tension and...

  • Dark SkyMike Brooks
    Dark Sky
    by Mike Brooks
    Science Fiction

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

  • At the Mountains of MadnessHP Lovecraft
    At the Mountains of Madness
    by HP Lovecraft
    Fantasy

    At the Mountains of Madness is a novella set within the Cthulhu Mythos and written by HP Lovecraft. The Barren, windswept interior of the Antarctic plateau is considered completely devoid of life until an expedition from the University of Miskatonic find strange fossils of unknown creatures along wi...

  • DefenderGX Todd
    Defender
    by GX Todd
    Science Fiction

    In the dark future of Defender , the majority of the worlds population have died. Killed by themselves and others who were listening to voices steering their horrific actions. Those who survived live in a hostile environment, unable to trust strangers and fighting over limited resources. On a long d...

  • The DiscipleStephen Lloyd Jones
    The Disciple
    by Stephen Lloyd Jones
    Horror

    Given that today is Halloween, I thought it only right that we review a horror novel. It's also a damn good one - The Disciple by Stephen Lloyd Jones. It all starts on a stormy night as Edward Schwinn navigates the country roads at the edge of Devil's Kitchen, Snowdonia. On a dark road in the middle...

  • The HatchingEzekiel Boone
    The Hatching
    by Ezekiel Boone
    Science Fiction

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

  • SkitterEzekiel Boone
    Skitter
    by Ezekiel Boone
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • CladeJames Bradley
    Clade
    by James Bradley
    Science Fiction

    Apocalyptic fiction has been growing in popularity for years, with most stories following some big cataclysmic event such as a zombie uprising, sweeping plague, nuclear war or the rise of artificial intelligence. Recently though novels have started to appear that seem much closer to reality, some of...

  • Strange WeatherJoe Hill
    Strange Weather
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

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

  • The Wolves of WinterTyrell Johnson
    The Wolves of Winter
    by Tyrell Johnson
    Fantasy

    On the surface, this post-apocalyptic tale of infection, nuclear fallout and scattered, savage humanity is no different from the many others that have gone before it. But what saves it from being just another drop in the great maelstrom of dystopian novels is the author’s taught and affecting story-...

  • Final GirlsRiley Sager
    Final Girls
    by Riley Sager
    Horror

    Final Girls asks the question what happens after the horror film has ended. How does the fastest and smartest girl cope after the horror ends? Quincy Carpenter went on vacation with her student friends 10 years ago. She was the only one to return, surviving a horror film level massacre. On doing so...

  • The SilencedStephen Lloyd Jones
    The Silenced
    by Stephen Lloyd Jones
    Science Fiction

    Mallory Grace had been successfully hiding out in London for some time until she met Obadiah in a seemingly random encounter. Now she's just had to kill someone and if she wants to survive the next few hours she'll probably have to kill again. To survive the night she'll need a miracle. Obadiah Maci...

  • One WayS J Morden
    One Way
    by S J Morden
    Science Fiction

    People have been imagining life on Mars for hundreds of years but it seems to becoming an increasingly popular destination at the moment. We've got a growing number of films, games, VR "experiences" and of course books. NASA has it's own "Journey to Mars" program of sending humans there in the 2030'...

  • Zero DayEzekiel Boone
    Zero Day
    by Ezekiel Boone
    Science Fiction

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

  • One of us will be dead by morningDavid Moody
    Horror

    One of us will be dead by morning . Fifteen people trapped on Skek, a small, barren island in the middle of the North Sea between the coasts of Denmark and the UK. Skek is the home of the extreme sports company Hazelton Adventure Experiences, who specialise in corporate team building in an environme...

  • PandemicA G Riddle
    Pandemic
    by A G Riddle
    Science Fiction

    As the name suggests, Pandemic explores what happens when a deadly infection takes the leap from epidemic to pandemic. A sobering passage on the cover aknowledges, it's not a question of if but when . There are many things that endanger the human race but with the exception of the zombie apocalypse...

  • Daughters of the Forgotten LightSean Grigsby
    Science Fiction

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

  • ShelterDave Hutchinson
    Shelter
    by Dave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

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

  • RaftStephen Baxter
    Raft
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Raft was originally a short story published in Interzone back in 1989. Baxter admitted struggling to contain the story to such a short space however and eventually Raft  became the authors first published novel. It's also the first book in the authors Xeelee sequence (although no Xeelee make an appe...

  • 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. Every y...

  • Across the VoidS. K. Vaughn
    Across the Void
    by S. K. Vaughn
    Science Fiction

    On our first trip to Mars I hope that they send the best equipped, those with the skills and temperament to handle any situation that may occur. If disaster struck I would hope that these men and women would tackle the challenge dispassionately in an attempt to survive the oncoming end with as littl...

  • JunctionDaniel M Bensen
    Junction
    by Daniel M Bensen
    Science Fiction

    Junction asks the question: what would we do if we had access to a brand new, virgin world? Would we destroy it like we are doing with our own world? Or would we learn from our mistakes and treat this as a second chance to do things right? Daisuke Matsumori is a Japanese nature show host who happens...

  • 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 readin...

  • No WayS J Morden
    No Way
    by S J Morden
    Science Fiction

    No Way is the follow up to the gripping thriller One Way.   A perilous journey to the Red Planet by a group of convicts. Deciding that it was much more economically viable to train people that would have otherwise rotted in a jail rather than a group of experienced and highly trained Astronauts form...

  • Cage of SoulsAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Cage of Souls
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    A change of pace and approach from Adrian Tchaikovsky, Cage of Souls is a first-person past narrative, presented as a journal. This is a collection of writings from Stefan Advani, the chronicler of the last days of the last city of humankind – Shadrapar. Our story begins with Stefan being brought to...

  • The PassengersJohn Marrs
    The Passengers
    by John Marrs
    Science Fiction

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

  • All Roads End HereDavid Moody
    All Roads End Here
    by David Moody
    Horror

    David Moody has been writing his Hater series (which has been optioned for a film by Universal Studios) since 2006, originally with the books Hater , Dog Blood and Them or Us . Then in 2017 he started from the beginning of the story again but from a totally different perspective with  One of Us Will...

  • The Return of the Incredible Exploding ManDave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

    Failed science writer Alex Dolan is just floating along, struggling to find work when multi-billionaire Stanislaw Clayton provides a surprising, well-paid offer out of the blue. He wants Alex to write a book about the world's first privately funded high-energy physics facility - the Sioux Crossing S...

  • Shatter WarDana Fredsti
    Shatter War
    by Dana Fredsti
    Science Fiction

    What would you do should a sudden cataclysmic event effect the Earth? The answer is that you will probably be dead, but if you are lucky enough to be the protagonist of a book you are likely to have survived. It would be a very short book otherwise. The events in Dana Fredsti and David Fitzgerald’s...

  • Cold StorageDavid Koepp
    Cold Storage
    by David Koepp
    Horror

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

  • The God GameDanny Tobey
    The God Game
    by Danny Tobey
    Science Fiction

    What if God was one of us? Just an Artificial Intelligence like one of us. Just a stranger on the internet, trying to wreak our lives. Anyone with a passing knowledge of the Bible will know that God can be a little tricksy. If that God can flood the world or demand you sacrifice your child, what wou...

  • Night TrainDavid Quantick
    Night Train
    by David Quantick
    Science Fiction

    I am not a big fan of train travel. The route I take is usually into London on a packed train. I have been made to suffer by standing all the way and having no access to the t oilets. I have considered putting this into prose form in a science fiction  thriller but  needing the loo and having sore f...

  • Galactic KeeganScott Innes
    Galactic Keegan
    by Scott Innes
    Science Fiction

    As a football fan it is sometimes hard to understand that some people just don’t care about it. They see it as a  frivolous  game of kicking a pig’s stomach around a patch of grass.  In the context of life and death, it is just something to keep you busy on a Saturday afternoon. That is unless you a...

  • Survivor SongPaul Tremblay
    Survivor Song
    by Paul Tremblay
    Horror

    Releasing  a book about a pandemic during the middle of a real pandemic is a bold move but one that Paul Tremblay has taken. Although there are  some  parallels between what is happening in the world today and  those within the  pages of  Survivor Song , they are not  enough to make the book off put...

  • FearlessAllen Stroud
    Fearless
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    It's 2118 and humanity has not only got over the coronavirus, but have reached out into space - colonising the Moon, Mars, Ceres and Europa. It's still early days of mankind's expansion though and the ship Khidr is part of a small fleet who travel between the different colonies, assisting the huge c...

  • The Final Girl Support GroupGrady Hendrix
    The Final Girl Support Group
    by Grady Hendrix
    Horror

    Your love of a movie genre can often depend on your age. The current crop of kids is growing up in a Golden Age of Superhero films, but when I was an impressionable teenager, it was all about the horror films.  Halloween ,  Friday the 13 th , A Nightmare on Elm Street  and so many others. I bought t...

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

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

  • Mickey7Edward Ashton
    Mickey7
    by Edward Ashton
    Science Fiction

    If I lived in a Star Trek universe I would always travel by shuttlecraft and refuse to use the transporter. I am just uneasy with the idea of being split into atoms and reformed elsewhere. I am, for all intents and purposes, the same person, with the same memories, but am I? Is it not true that one...

  • 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...

  • Kill Me GoodbyeA K Reynolds
    Kill Me Goodbye
    by A K Reynolds
    General Fiction

    There is an internet meme of Will Ferrel playing a dishevelled looking Anchorman and stating, “well that escalated quickly.” I have read many crime thrillers in my time, and they often pick up pace and rattle along, but none have taken this meme to heart as much as A K Reynolds’  Kill Me Goodbye , i...

  • MomenticonAndrew Caldecott
    Momenticon
    by Andrew Caldecott
    Science Fiction

    I adore science fiction, but it also frustrates me. I consider myself reasonably well read and clever enough to cope with most books, but occasionally a science fiction book comes along that I just cannot get my head around. Momenticon by Andrew Caldecott is a Bizzaro take on a dystopian future that...

  • 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 Drowning EarthJack D Mclean
    The Drowning Earth
    by Jack D Mclean
    Science Fiction

    I think the pessimistic among us see a future of raised water levels and the UK losing plenty of its coastal land and anything close to our rivers. However, even the most resigned will not have imagined the world that Martin Mulligan and Jack D. McLean have created in The Drowning Earth . Not only a...

  • HideKiersten White
    Hide
    by Kiersten White
    Horror

    As an adult it is easy to forget how exhilarating hide and seek was when you were a child. That crackling of electricity in your chest as you huddle in a hiding place waiting to get caught. The heightened senses as you hear the footsteps of the seeker drawing closer. The sense of relief as they walk...

  • Silver QueendomDan Koboldt
    Silver Queendom
    by Dan Koboldt
    Fantasy

    Fantasy does not have to be massive epics set over several books that see dynasties rise and fall. Some of the best modern fantasy books concentrate on the characters that may have hidden in the background of Game of Thrones or Lord of the Rings. The humble conman for instance and their crew. I cann...

  • AuroraDavid Koepp
    Aurora
    by David Koepp
    Science Fiction

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

  • Titan HoppersRob J Hayes
    Titan Hoppers
    by Rob J Hayes
    Science Fiction

    Humanity is a parasite sucking the recourses from the Earth until there are no more. Like a remora attached to the undercarriage of a shark, humans will one day need find a new host. The alternative is to change our ways, but that does not seem likely. Titan Hoppers by Rob J Hayes follows a flotilla...

  • The HollowsDaniel Church
    The Hollows
    by Daniel Church
    Horror

    Humans fear the dark and we fear the cold. There is good reason for this. In our modern world we can wrap up warm in a synthetic coat and take along a torch that can be seen from space, but that was not always true. The dark used to mean the unknown. Animals or something else preying on you. The col...

  • IsolationDan Coxon
    Isolation
    by Dan Coxon
    Horror

    Placing a restriction on yourself should not be a freeing experience, but the opposite can be true, especially in the arts. Making films under strict rules can lead to innovation as film makers struggle to achieve their vision under restraints. Creating an anthology about one subject matter limits m...

  • Falling DarkTom Lloyd
    Falling Dark
    by Tom Lloyd
    Science Fiction

    It should not matter what format you ingest a novel – on paper, on the screen or even via audio, but it does. I do not always get on with audio as I am such a fast reader, even on speed up the narrator cannot keep up with my awful lack of attention. However, the right book works as an audio experien...

  • BellatrixSimon Turney
    Bellatrix
    by Simon Turney
    General Fiction

    Given a time machine where would you travel? Reading a lot of Historic Fiction as taught me that the Roman Empire would not be my choice. Life was hard and short for many people and that included many of the emperors. It could be a challenging time to survive in. Becoming a legionary promised a bett...

  • Dark DwellerGareth Worthington
    Dark Dweller
    by Gareth Worthington
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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,...

  • Hellwegs KeepJustin Holley
    Hellwegs Keep
    by Justin Holley
    Horror

    I have always felt that the idea of travelling space is horrific enough without the thought of added monsters or manipulations of the mind. The only thing between you and the vast vacuum of space is a few inches of steel. When you arrive on a new planet, things are not much safer. The air may be bre...

  • Once Upon a Time LordDan Slott
    Once Upon a Time Lord
    by Dan Slott
    Science Fiction

    Any Doctor Who fan knows that this year is a big anniversary for the series and there is so much content coming that even the wider community may be aware that the Doc is turning 60. How do you stand out from the new books, audio series and episodes all incoming around the festive period? Perhaps a...

  • The Butcher of the ForestPremee Mohamed
    The Butcher of the Forest
    by Premee Mohamed
    Fantasy

    There is a perfectly sensible reason why the concept of Fairy Woods exist. Back in the day, the land was covered in thick forests, any person that travelled too far from the village or well-trodden tracks could easily get lost and become victim to one of several predators from wolves to wild boars....

  • The Hunters GambitCiel Pierlot
    The Hunters Gambit
    by Ciel Pierlot
    Fantasy

    When it comes to vampires, I understand that there is a rich tapestry of versions you can now read about, but I like mine to have that old fashioned appeal. The type of vampire that does not want to talk about their feelings or act like the average tween, but instead wants to wear lace frills and su...

  • HoneycombS B Caves
    Honeycomb
    by S B Caves
    Science Fiction

    Before a drug is allowed onto the marketplace, it must undergo rigorous tests. Firstly on animals and then eventually on humans. These tests will determine what side effects there are, and in many cases, there will be side effects. Do the positives outweigh the negatives? If a wonder drug saves the...

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

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

  • SymbioteMichael Nayak
    Symbiote
    by Michael Nayak
    Science Fiction

    The thought of travelling to space and living on the International Space Station has no interest to me. Stuck in a metal box, isolated, miles away from civilisation with only the same people as company sound like a one-way ticket to madness. You do not need to go into space to create such a feeling....

  • The Way Up Is DeathDan Hanks
    The Way Up Is Death
    by Dan Hanks
    Science Fiction

    When I imagine the aliens coming, I always imagine that they would pick somewhere amazing to land their ship. Probably America as all the movies have trained my brain to think that way. The place I do not jump straight to is Manchester, or at least the hills around the city. I know those hills well...

  • The Get OffChrista Faust
    The Get Off
    by Christa Faust
    General Fiction

    A good life is a life well lived full of new adventures, meeting new people, and experiencing new things. On this criteria Angel Dare has had one of the best lives, she is always meeting new people and finding herself in new places, but not for the reasons she would want. From adult film star to vic...

  • When the Wolf Comes HomeNat Cassidy
    When the Wolf Comes Home
    by Nat Cassidy
    Horror

    I have had my fill of Vampires. They are the Primadonna of the undead world hogging all the limelight with their films and TV shows. They are also all over books. One of my family member’s entire book collection is just vampires. What about the other supernatural beings? A vampire's erstwhile enemy...

  • Killing ItMike Bockoven
    Killing It
    by Mike Bockoven
    Horror

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

  • Anji Kills a KingEvan Leikam
    Anji Kills a King
    by Evan Leikam
    Fantasy

    In the fantasy that I usually read Regicide is usually the goal for the end of the book. In fact, I have read entire trilogies in which the protagonist is trying to kill a royal. You get the sense that Evan Leikam is going to tackle things a little differently in Anji Kills a King when the first sce...

  • AwakenedLaura Elliott
    Awakened
    by Laura Elliott
    Science Fiction

    Science has taken humans to amazing places, prolonged our lives, made living better, but it has also created great harm. Have some diseases been developed in a lab then released, on purpose or by accident? Perhaps legitimate research led to tragic mistakes. In the world of Laura Elliott’s Awakened ,...

  • Killer on the RoadStephen Graham Jones
    Killer on the Road
    by Stephen Graham Jones
    Horror

    Like any genre, the horror genre has shifts in style and tone. I was always a fan of the nasty horror stories of the late 70s and early 80s. Books that saw lots of terrible things happen to good people. In Killer on the Road author Stephen Graham Jones attempts to capture that Grindhouse feel and gi...

  • The DescentChristian Francis
    The Descent
    by Christian Francis
    Horror

    I read so much genre fiction and have seen so many horror movies that I don’t scare easy. My brain automatically remembers all the behind-the-scenes make-up specials and director commentaries; I know it is not real. However, back in 2005 the last film that scared me was about a group of female caver...

  • Carried AwayT J Derry
    Carried Away
    by T J Derry
    General Fiction

    There are different people in life. There are those that love the idea of travelling to a remote Indonesian island with three friends and surfing huge waves, and those that think this is a barmy idea and would rather go on a nice city break or read a book by the pool. What you do not always get is a...

  • The Night ShipAlex Woodroe
    The Night Ship
    by Alex Woodroe
    Horror

    One of the wonderful things about genre fiction is that an author does not have to explain what is going on if they do not want to. Science Fiction often goes into great detail trying to explain the science, but sometimes it just happens to be set on a remote alien planet – deal with it. In Alex Woo...

  • SentientMichael Nayak
    Sentient
    by Michael Nayak
    Science Fiction

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