Sam Tyler

Sam has had a love of reading ever since he realised the local library was only down the road. He is a fan of novels that fall into the big genres; science fiction, fantasy, crime historic etc. but is open to other delectation on occasion. His love of reading naturally led him to a job as a Librarian, if only he had foreseen this meant as much to do with computers as books nowadays. He still spends many of his free hours reading and hopes to do so for many years to come.

Books reviewed by Sam Tyler (588)

  • The Disco at the End of the WorldNathan Tavares
    Science Fiction

    Last night a DJ saved my life. It can feel like that for some people as they crave the weekend, those hot sweaty nights dancing with the people they feel closest to. The community not of family or work colleagues, but the friends and family that you pick up on the way. In the case of The Disco at th...

  • Brigands and BreadknivesTravis Baldree
    Brigands and Breadknives
    by Travis Baldree
    Fantasy

    If you read and review genre fiction long enough you start to be able to tell what the trends are in current fiction. Some of these trends will come and go, whilst others will stick around as their own subgenre. Is Romantasy a keeper? I am not convinced myself, but I do like its cousin the Cosy Fant...

  • Hunt the Ever WildS E Kiser
    Hunt the Ever Wild
    by S E Kiser
    Fantasy

    I think we can all agree that throughout history, and the present, we have had some leaders who are not always the best. Leaders that make their horse a senator, leaders who kill huge swathes of their population to keep control. Despite the madness of our own despots, we have not had a leader that h...

  • Bad Things Happen HereMark Morris
    Bad Things Happen Here
    by Mark Morris
    Horror

    I read quite a lot of horror, to the point that it does not really affect me anymore, flesh eating clowns, aliens that tear off limbs, none of this is going to happen to me. A child being bullied at school, another joining a rough crowd, work becoming too stressful, a parent with dementia. These thi...

  • Moon Over BrendleJeff Noon
    Moon Over Brendle
    by Jeff Noon
    Fantasy

    There is something magical about childhood, you do not need a genre novel to tell you this. Everything is new, experiences that will map the person that you are going to be and stay with you for a lifetime. If you are lucky, these will be good experiences and not bad ones. In the case of Jeff Noon’s...

  • Fresh StartJohnny Worthen
    Fresh Start
    by Johnny Worthen
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction and Westerns have a long history, many stories are your classic stranger coming to a new town, but instead of carrying a six-shooter, they carry a Ray Gun. Fresh Start by Johnny Worthen is the latest and this is one strange stranger. Is Qays Mendoza a monk or a marine? Is his mission...

  • Wonders Never CeaseLexy Hudson
    Wonders Never Cease
    by Lexy Hudson
    Fantasy

    I do not think of myself as a person of culture, but when I stop to think about it, I have likely been to more theatre productions, museums and Stately Homes than most people. I can thank my mother for this as being forced to go as a youth has made me appreciate them and want to go as an adult. One...

  • Low Red MoonMike Chen
    Low Red Moon
    by Mike Chen
    Science Fiction

    As more novels are written within the Star Wars Universe, I start to realise that I am drawn increasingly towards the wider Universe and not the core Skywalker saga. On TV, The Mandalorian, and in the book world the stories I have enjoyed most were adapted from a Star Wars comic, and one even based...

  • Our Lady of BladesSebastien De Castell
    Our Lady of Blades
    by Sebastien De Castell
    Fantasy

    I am not sure if readers have noticed, but we have quietly entered a new Golden Era of Fantasy writing. There is a handful or more of established fantasy authors who have the experience and skill to be writing at the top of their game. Fantasy novels that are not just simple retellings of old tropes...

  • The Drowned SirenCallisto Lodwick
    The Drowned Siren
    by Callisto Lodwick
    General Fiction

    To work in a novel, you need to be the right amount of crazy. Too little and you just come across as a little odd and moany, too much and your book has just become a horror novel. In Callisto Lodwick’s The Drowned Siren , Eleanor is a student in Scotland who is introverted and clingy, but not really...

  • Side HustleWendy Gee
    Side Hustle
    by Wendy Gee
    General Fiction

    Journalist have somewhat of a chequered reputation, for every Watergate, there is ten celebrities caught in the act. In recent times, the profession has cleaned up its act a little, but it still relies heavily on eyes on the page or viewing figures. This leads to a competitive market and some journa...

  • If We Cannot Go at the Speed of LightKim Choyeop
    Science Fiction

    Starting a new book can always be daunting, but I have a special trepidation for short story collections. They can be vast, full of stories that are loosely linked. Trying to find themes and remember all the stories can feel impossible when considering a review. However, you sometimes get a more cur...

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

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

  • Aphrodite in PiecesLauren J A Bear
    Aphrodite in Pieces
    by Lauren J A Bear
    General Fiction

    I am a student of History, but even to this day there are massive blind spots in my learning, moments in the past that I know little about, so anything on the subject matter feels fresh to me. I have a passing knowledge of the Antient Greek Gods, but having read Aphrodite in Pieces by Lauren J. A. B...

  • Death Wasnt InvitedCarlene O'connor
    Death Wasnt Invited
    by Carlene O'connor
    General Fiction

    I love to play hidden object games; I find them a nice way to relax after a busy day. I also love to read for the same reason, even a crime story can be comforting in its own way. Death Wasn’t Invited by Carlene O’Connor combines the two as it is a ‘cosy’ crime caper based on the June’s Journey game...

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

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

  • The Fractal EpisodesAllen Stroud
    The Fractal Episodes
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    What differentiates a short story series from episodes? Allen Stroud’s The Fractal Series comes in a collection or can be read separately. There are twelve individual stories, that sounds like a short story collection, but there is a difference as they all take place within the Fearless universe tha...

  • Bodies of WorkClay Mcleod Chapman
    Bodies of Work
    by Clay Mcleod Chapman
    Horror

    What is art? It is a question I have to ask on occasion as I live with an artist. It is in the eye of the beholder, some of the stuff I see I would not look twice at, even top name artists are not to everyone’s tastes. Some are labelled outsider artists, those that have no formal training and use th...

  • WoodstakeDarin S Cape
    Woodstake
    by Darin S Cape
    Horror

    Woodstock is an event that has passed into folklore. Like Spike Island, I imagine that every eligible person the right age claims to have been there. Who is to say that they were not? These events are massive, you can lose yourself in the crowd, but other things can hide to. Would anyone notice a fe...

  • First Mage on the MoonCameron Johnston
    First Mage on the Moon
    by Cameron Johnston
    Fantasy

    I like when a genre becomes so embedded that as a whole, we can play with it. This has happened for years in comic books, even the films are so prevalent now that you get plenty of leftfield superhero movies. One genre that has been around longer and has even deeper roots is Fantasy, but has it expl...

  • The Wonder EngineT Kingfisher
    The Wonder Engine
    by T Kingfisher
    Fantasy

    A large part of fantasy novels is not really the destination, but the journey. The camaraderie that builds among a troop of characters as they travel to their destination, but what happens once they have arrived? In T Kingfisher’s Clockwork Boys four mismatched social pariahs set out to survive the...

  • Cabaret in FlamesHache Pueyo
    Cabaret in Flames
    by Hache Pueyo
    Horror

    When is a vampire not a vampire? When it is a Gul. These strange creatures are part of everyday life in this version of Brazil, the secret for the humans who want to survive is to stay at home after curfew, lest they be eaten by Guls or taken for enemies of the state by the Fascists who run the coun...

  • JitterbugGareth L Powell
    Jitterbug
    by Gareth L Powell
    Science Fiction

    Many of us do not really know what is going on in Space, and not everyone really cares. It is all so far away and beyond our control. However, even the layman would think twice if the planets in our Solar System started to disintegrate one after the other and strange new discs appear in Space that b...

  • 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...

  • Way of the WalkerSalinee Goldenberg
    Way of the Walker
    by Salinee Goldenberg
    Fantasy

    Naming your book The Last Phi Hunter comes with some idea that this will be the last of their kind, but Salinee Goldenberg proves this is not the case with a sequel, Way of the Walker . But is this Walker an actual Phi Hunter? If your job is to find and kill the undead (Phi), befriending them and he...

  • Pretenders to the Throne of GodAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Pretenders to the Throne of God
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    A lot can happen during a siege, enough so that you do not have to have a book full of battles, you could have just one about the siege itself. This is the setting of Adrian Tchaikovsky’s latest in the The Tyrant Philosophers series, Pretenders to the Throne of God . We will meet new friends and old...

  • Maria the WantedV Castro
    Maria the Wanted
    by V Castro
    Horror

    One of the benefits of being a vampire is not the insatiable lust for human blood, but the eternal life. It can make meeting other vampires a tad strange as that 25-year-old looking person may actually be 100 years old, or a 1000. They try to act all modern, but they always have that whiff of the Re...

  • Books and BewitchmentIsla Jewell
    Books and Bewitchment
    by Isla Jewell
    Fantasy

    As a born cynic, I am always on the lookout for the angle in life and in fiction, but sometimes something is what it seems on the surface; wholesome. Not all books need to challenge the reader and leave them exhausted. Novels can be an escape, an entertainment, full of love and magic. Books and Bewi...

  • A Forest, DarklyA G Slatter
    A Forest, Darkly
    by A G Slatter
    Fantasy

    Dealing with major changes in your life is not easy. You can find help in your community, but when you are a Witch who is hunted down, this is not so simple. Any other Witch that you come across is also being hunted or is too young to know what to do and needs a mentor. All Merhrab wants is to be le...

  • Apparently, Sir Cameron Needs to DieGreer Stothers
    Fantasy

    Fantasy has a rich history of heroes who fight against the odds to ensure that good triumphs over evil, but what about the cowards? What about the people who would rather live in peace and quiet faraway from the front and have no truck with prophecies, even if they are the centre of them? In Greer S...

  • A Hole in the SkyPeter F Hamilton
    A Hole in the Sky
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    We all come of age at some point in our lives. If we are lucky enough this will be as part of a loving household and we come out of it not too messed up, but not everyone is lucky. In the real world it can be tough enough, but take this dysfunction and place it is space, things can get real bad. Haz...

  • Nine GoblinsT Kingfisher
    Nine Goblins
    by T Kingfisher
    Fantasy

    Back in the nineties, Fantasy had a comedic moment. Led by Sir Terry Pratchett, other authors were signed up to produce lighter fantasy with a sense of humour. Whilst none became as popular as Discworld, I still miss those days. T Kingfisher agreed and Nine Goblins is the author’s homage to that era...

  • 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...

  • 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 the...

  • 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...

  • ExilesMason Coile
    Exiles
    by Mason Coile
    Science Fiction

    One of the best things about Science Fiction is that it also works as Science Fact. Much of the science and fantasy in the books are based on real research; taken to the nth level, but with a basis in truth. Exiles by Mason Coile layers this with some fundamentals in philosophy. Occam’s Razor sugges...

  • Queen of the DeadSarah Broadway
    Queen of the Dead
    by Sarah Broadway
    Fantasy

    My partner and I have differing opinions on ghosts. I like to read about them but am incredibly cynical that they exist. My partner is more of a believer. I just refuse to believe that ghoulies can exist without more evidence, we live in a surveillance society at this point. However, even I would st...

  • Blood RivalJake Arnott
    Blood Rival
    by Jake Arnott
    General Fiction

    In fiction you can blur the real world with the fictional to give your story a sense of authenticity. This is something that Jake Arnott has done in the past taking a splash of truth, a soupcon of reality, and then blending in some fictional high-octane action. In the case of Blood Rival , there was...

  • Spawn of the Serpent GodTim Waggoner
    Spawn of the Serpent God
    by Tim Waggoner
    Fantasy

    Conan has fought against Gods his whole life. The little ones that try to interfere with the ways of man, and the Old Ones that nestle in other dimensions waiting for their chance to absorb the Earth. The only God that Conan has had little trouble with is Crom, his own God, and that is because Crom...

  • Master of EvilAdam Christopher
    Master of Evil
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

    One of the aspects of Star Wars that I love is that it is an IP that keeps evolving, as do I. As a child I saw The New Hope as a simple action adventure between good and evil. The Emperor was omnipotent. As the series progressed, we see that the Empire was far too vast for one man to control, no mat...