Books tagged with: standalone

  • 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...

  • 11.22.63Stephen King
    11.22.63
    by Stephen King
    Science Fiction

    When asked to review this book I can honestly say I did so with some trepidation. Although few would doubt King is as his name suggests, his later period of novels, Dark Tower aside, would, I’m sorry to say argue the case against him. But this is King you say, and I know many Constant Readers out th...

  • 13th ZookeeperBernd Struben
    13th Zookeeper
    by Bernd Struben
    Science Fiction

    Mankind has long lost it's connection to mother nature, to the wildlife of Earth and all the natural wonders contained. In an effort to recreate that which was lost a remote planet is terra-formed to resemble mankind's first home and then populated with all of the plants and animals that existed in...

  • A Jar of WaspsLuis Villazon
    A Jar of Wasps
    by Luis Villazon
    Science Fiction

    Graham Trevennan is one of those people who coast through life without great aspirations or desire to own the world (or even a secret hollowed out volcano). Having split with his girlfriend he's mooching about pretty aimlessly when he get's the shock of his life - secret lumps of rock, shady and arm...

  • A Second Chance At EdenPeter F Hamilton
    A Second Chance At Eden
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    A Second Chance At Eden is a stand alone collection of short stories set within the Confederation Universe of the Nights Dawn Trilogy. Written by Peter F Hamilton. Seven stories in 430 pages (the typeface and line spacing is fairly generous in the hardcover version I have - the normal paperback vers...

  • Adam RobotsAdam Roberts
    Adam Robots
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Adam Robots is a collection of science fiction shorts by the irrepressible author Adam Roberts. Each little story explores a different style, sub-genre or convention and yet each is quite clearly a product of the authors mind. There is a certain momentum to Roberts prose, a hustling and yet elegant...

  • 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...

  • AmortalsMatt Forbeck
    Amortals
    by Matt Forbeck
    Science Fiction

    Amortals is a science fiction thriller of high octane action and is the novel of Matt Forbeck, published by Angry Robot Books. The year is 2168 and Secret Service agent Ronan "Methusaleh" Dooley is hot on the trail of a vicious killer, but this case is a bit of a twist as the victim happens to be hi...

  • Area 51Annie Jacobsen
    Area 51
    by Annie Jacobsen
    Science Fiction

    Area 51 - also known as Dreamland, Paradise Ranch, Home Base, Watertown Strip, Groom Lake and Homey Airport - is one of the worst kept secrets in the world, a top secret government facility located within the Nevada Test & Training Area that even now, the US government refuses to admit existence of....

  • Behold the ManMichael Moorcock
    Behold the Man
    by Michael Moorcock
    Science Fiction

    Behold the Man was originally written as a novella in 1966 and won the Nebula award for best novella. It was later expanded into a very slim novel in 1969 — although at 128 pages it could still be considered novella length. Gollancz has quite rightly chosen to include it in their SF Masterworks Coll...

  • BêteAdam Roberts
    Bête
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Bête has one of the best opening chapters I've ever read. It begins with farmer Graham Penhaligon as he is preparing to kill a cow. Nothing unusual about that except this cow is pleading with Graham (the narrator of this fine story) not to do it. The gift of speech given to animals forms the core of...

  • Blood MusicGreg Bear
    Blood Music
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    Blood Music is a science fiction novel by Greg Bear. BM is a story about an intelligent micro-organism experiment run amok. As the organism is human hosted, I guess that you could call it a DNA based Frankenstein's fantastic voyage-story for the last quarter of the twentieth century. The story may s...

  • Cantata 140Philip K Dick
    Cantata 140
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Cantata 140 (also known as "the crack in space") is a science fiction novel by Philip K Dick. The name comes from Bach's Cantata BWV 140 which is also known as "Sleepers, Wake". The year is 2080 and overpopulation has become such an issue that millions of people have voluntarily become cryogenically...

  • Carrion ComfortDan Simmons
    Carrion Comfort
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Carrion Comfort is a Dan Simmons horror novel, best known for the Hyperion and Endymoin series. Except for the stories in Dark Visions this is the first horror by Dan Simmons that I've read. I'm not sure what kind of expectations I had for this book before I started on it, but I can't say that I was...

  • Cheap Complex DevicesJohn Sundman
    Cheap Complex Devices
    by John Sundman
    Science Fiction

    Cheap Complex Devices is a science fiction novel by John Sundman. Sundmans novel 'Acts of the Apostles' was a kind of a weird techno thriller - this one is just weird. The premiss is that once upon a time (about five years ago), there was a computer generated novel contest, where two winners where f...

  • 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...

  • Code of the LifemakerJames P Hogan
    Code of the Lifemaker
    by James P Hogan
    Science Fiction

    Code of the Lifemaker is a science fiction novel by James P Hogan. I can hardly believe that this is the same author, which wrote Realtime Interrupt. Okay, it's not exactly a character driven story, but it's much better than RI and Hogan has a lot of interesting things to tell here. Code of the Life...

  • Counter Clock WorldPhilip K Dick
    Counter Clock World
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Philip K Dick first wrote this story as a short called "Your Appointment Will Be Yesterday" which was published in the August 1966 edition of the Amazing Stories magazine. Counter Clock World is the expanded, novel length version and was published a year later. The novel uses the Big Crunch theory t...

  • CydoniaKen Mcleod
    Cydonia
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    Cydonia is the second volume in the Web series of young adult fiction, written by Ken Mcleod. Some where out there there's a link to this page saying that I've reviewed everything MacLeod has published, which can't be true all the time, but I can do my best and review as much as I can find. Even if...

  • 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...

  • Dead LinesGreg Bear
    Dead Lines
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    Dead Lines is a science fiction horror novel by Greg Bear. Peter Russell’s life turned out much different than he expected. He wanted to write books but instead made a living taking picture and making movies of naked people when the soft porn industry flat-lined. Now he is a little more than an erra...

  • Death DropSean Allen
    Death Drop
    by Sean Allen
    Science Fiction

    Death Drop is a science fiction novel by Sean Allen. The last known human was exterminated over 400,000 years ago and the known universe is ruled by the savage race known as the Durax, keeping control with their compelling mind powers. War rages against this vehement race and the free people have tw...

  • Death, the Devil, and the GoldfishAndrew Buckley
    Science Fiction

    I'm often saying that there just isn't enough well written comic fantasy, aside from the likes of Pratchett, Holt, Howard and Rankin the laugh-out-load novels still being written are few and far between and in large the genre is being propped up by writers such as Rob Knipe and RJ Astruc. Thankfully...

  • Dinosaur SummerGreg Bear
    Dinosaur Summer
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    Greg Bear's Dinosaur Summer is a follow up to the old The Lost World a novel written by Sir Author Connan Doyle, taking place in 1947. After Professor Challanger returned from the Lost World, there were a lot of follow up expeditions and dinosaurs were taken back to civilisation, where they where pu...

  • DistressGreg Egan
    Distress
    by Greg Egan
    Science Fiction

    Distress is a science fiction novel by the Australian author Greg Egan. Once again Egan grabs an idea and takes it to the limit, this time to the ultimate limit. In Quarantine he tackled quantum Mechanics, this time he takes on nothing less than the Theory Of Everything (TOE). The year is 2055 and A...

  • Divine FanaticismRobin G Howard
    Divine Fanaticism
    by Robin G Howard
    Science Fiction

    Divine Fanaticism is the fourth novel in the Jim Long series by Robin G Howard. Long ago on the planet Thraeot a religous order was created that was shrouded in miraculous mythology, now the political environment of the planet has become unbalanced and mass scale war appears imminent. To make matter...

  • Do Androids Dream of Electric SheepPhilip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, the classic novel that became the film Blade Runner. Written by legendary award winning author Philip K Dick. The aftermath of the World War Terminus sees a devastated Earth with severe radioactive fallout and most of nature destroyed. Many of the survivors have...

  • Doomsday PlanetHarl Vincent
    Doomsday Planet
    by Harl Vincent
    Science Fiction

    Every so often a book lands on the review pile that is interesting less for what it is than for the curious circumstances of its existence, and Doomsday Planet is very much one of those. It is, on the face of it, a slim and unassuming piece of 1960s space adventure, the sort of thing that filled the...

  • DuneFrank Herbert
    Dune
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

    It's hard to believe that Dune is over 50 years old. Originally released in 1965 it won the inaugural Nebula award for best novel and tied with Roger Zelazny's This Immortal for the Hugo Award. It's sold well in excess of 12 million copies around the world and is one of the world's best-selling scie...

  • Dying InsideRobert Silverberg
    Dying Inside
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    There is a kind of science fiction that uses a single fantastical premise not to build a world but to dismantle a man, and Dying Inside is perhaps the finest example the genre has produced. Robert Silverberg published it in 1972, at the height of his powers and at the close of an extraordinarily fer...

  • Elite - Docking is DifficultGideon Defoe
    Science Fiction

    Docking is Difficult , so is trying to escape a backwards planet who's only exports are methane and a type of plant that superficially resembles a pig in taste and a triffid in shape. Misha dreams of escaping the mud and mundane life to become an Elite pilot and live a life full of adventure. He als...

  • Elite - NemorensisSimon Spurrier
    Elite - Nemorensis
    by Simon Spurrier
    Science Fiction

    If you've ever read a Simon Spurrier novel, you will understand how his voice has an almost dirty quality to it. His novels have a raw edge that isn't quite horror but manages to lend some of the gritty reality that the finest horror posses. Nemorensis has that edge, an unusual style and very differ...

  • Elysium BurningDDD Bryenton
    Elysium Burning
    by DDD Bryenton
    Science Fiction

    This is a very interesting book, a sort of post-apocalyptic, post-cyberpunk tale that also weaves in a good dose of historic fantasy and mythology while told in a very confident voice dripping with poetic, imaginative prose. Essentially the story goes that the human race almost wiped itself complete...

  • Evening's EmpiresPaul McAuley
    Evening's Empires
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    Evening's Empires is the fourth novel set within the Quiet War series, although it is pretty much a stand-alone story in that universe and can be enjoyed without any prior knowledge of McAuley's works. The story follows Hari, a young man who has narrowly escaped kidnap (or worse) and as we join him...

  • EvolutionStephen Baxter
    Evolution
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Evolution is a monumental tale of the very evolution of mankind, from the age of the dinosaurs to way into the distant future. Created by the multiple award winning author Stephen Baxter. Evolution begins it's story in the Cretaceous period over 65 million years ago (the age of the Dinosaurs), and j...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Fallen DragonPeter F Hamilton
    Fallen Dragon
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    Fallen Dragon is a science fiction novel by the British author Peter F Hamilton. There is a unrecognised Science Fiction genre, that deals with the transition from a society of limits and into one of plenty (an utopia or nirvana, if you want). Or maybe not the transition itself but the events that l...

  • Falling FreeLois McMaster Bujold
    Falling Free
    by Lois McMaster Bujold
    Science Fiction

    Falling Free is a science fiction novel by the award winning American author Lois McMaster Bujold and takes place within the Vorkosigan Saga. Taking place in the same universe as the Vorkosigan adventures, but not featuring any of our beloved characters, for the simple reason that Falling Free takes...

  • 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 anarch...

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

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

  • Frankenstein UnboundBrian Aldiss
    Frankenstein Unbound
    by Brian Aldiss
    Science Fiction

    Frankenstein Unbound is a science fiction novel by the British author Brian Aldiss. Time is starting to break up, when Joseph Bodenland, a citizen of the year 2020, gets thrown back through time and space to Lake Geneva around the time when Mary Shelly was writing the original Frankenstein story. To...

  • GenesisPoul Anderson
    Genesis
    by Poul Anderson
    Science Fiction

    After hearing about the passing away of Poul Anderson, I pretty much ran out and picked up this book. I figured that it would be good therapy and a good way to honour him. This worked fairly well, I hadn't read any of his new stuff before, so I was unsure as to what we missed out on. Genesis is an e...

  • HeadsGreg Bear
    Heads
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

    Heads is a science fiction novel, written by Greg Bear. A hundred years in the future, Michael Sandoval is the manager at Ice Pit Station – a research station on the Moon. Two projects are taking place here. His brother in-law is trying to reach absolute zero in a small piece of copper. His sister i...

  • Humpty Dumpty in OaklandPhilip K Dick
    Humpty Dumpty in Oakland
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    I'd probably be best beginning this review by mentioning that Humpty Dumpty in Oakland isn't actually science fiction. It's a realist work of dark comedy. For some reason whatever miss-guided fool wrote the wikipedia entry for this book called it "non-science-fiction". Surely "non-science-fiction" i...

  • HyperionDan Simmons
    Hyperion
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Hyperion is a science fiction novel by the author Dan Simmons. This is the first book that I've read by Dan Simmons, but definitely not the last - actually I've already started on the sequel. Hyperion is the tale of a bunch of pilgrims, on their way to the Time Tombs on remote planet of Hyperion. Al...

  • 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...

  • In the BloodRobert J Sullivan
    In the Blood
    by Robert J Sullivan
    Science Fiction

    In the Blood is a science fiction novel by Robert J Sullivan. The Utu festival was only three days old when the first body was found, 22 year old Gloria Ashlock, naked except for her shoes, lashed to a column in a warehouse and stabbed 35 times. The discovery was a shock but not a surprise to the po...

  • Is Death really necessaryJudi Moore
    Science Fiction

    Is Death really necessary is a science fiction novel by Judi Moore. It's the year 2038 and the potential of Nanites are finally being realised, with the power to heal the terminally ill quickly and safely the technology could be seen to be a breakthrough in humanities ever elusive quest for immortal...

  • 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 be...

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

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

  • LexiconMax Barry
    Lexicon
    by Max Barry
    Science Fiction

    Two years ago something happened in Broken Hill, something that killed thousands, the entire population of the small Australian mining town. Although everyone was encouraged to believe that some form of "environmental disaster" was the cause there are a few people who know what really happened. Emil...

  • LightstormPeter F Hamilton
    Lightstorm
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    Lightstorm is part of the Young Adults Web Series of novels and has been written by Peter F Hamilton. Like MacLeods Cydonia, Lightstorm is part of Dolphins The Web series. All of the books take place in 2027 and the most of the books takes place online – in The Web. I’m not sure, but I think they ar...

  • Little BrotherCory Doctorow
    Little Brother
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    Little brother is a young adult science fiction novel written by Cory Doctorow. The novel has debuted at no 9 on the new york times bestseller list, spending 6 weeks in the top 10. The book has also won the 2009 White Pine award, is a finalist for both the Hugo Award and the 2009 Prometheus Award. S...

  • Lord of LightRoger Zelazny
    Lord of Light
    by Roger Zelazny
    Science Fiction

    Lord of Light is a science fiction novel written by Roger Zelazny. Reading classics, isn't exactly what I would call a duty, but one should remember to pick up a classic once in a while and see why it became a classic. Some of them are actually quite good! I don't think that I've ever read any Zelaz...

  • Made to KillAdam Christopher
    Made to Kill
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

    If you can imagine what a science fiction novel written by Raymond Chandler might be like (while Chandler is known to have hated Science Fiction stories rumours persist he did write one) then Made to Kill is about as close as you will likely ever get (short of resurrecting the late author). It pays...

  • MakersCory Doctorow
    Makers
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    Makers is a near future science fiction novel of economic, social and technological change, written by the very talented author Cory Doctorow. Perry and Lester are inventors, but more than that they make things from Junk, the most environmentally friendly inventors possible. Some of their inventions...

  • Misspent YouthPeter F Hamilton
    Misspent Youth
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    Misspent Youth is a stand alone science fiction novel by the acclaimed British author Peter F Hamilton. Misspent Youth – try saying it to your self – Misspent Youth, not exactly catchy is it?. It sound so much like a story about maladjusted working class youngsters in some large industrial town or t...

  • 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...

  • Newton's WakeKen Mcleod
    Newton's Wake
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    Newton's Wake is a science fiction novel by Ken Mcleod I've been looking forward to this book for a while. The Engines of Light series kind of fizzled out for me with book two and I never got around to book three. And that got me worried a lot, since I really, really liked MacLeods Fall Revolution b...

  • 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...

  • Odd JohnOlaf Stapledon
    Odd John
    by Olaf Stapledon
    Science Fiction

    Odd John was first published in 1935 and was one of the very first novels to explore the theme of the super human, coining the term homo superior . It's being reviewed here as part of Gollancz excellent SF Masterworks series. Written from a narrator's perspective, Odd John is a pretty unique piece o...

  • Of Men and MonstersWilliam Tenn
    Of Men and Monsters
    by William Tenn
    Science Fiction

    After technologically superior aliens conquer earth, humanity survives very much like mice, living within the walls of the huge homes of the giant aliens. They scurry about under their feet, stealing food and avoiding the ever more devious traps set out for them. As time goes on humanity adapts and...

  • OrionBen Bova
    Orion
    by Ben Bova
    Science Fiction

    Orion is a time travel science fiction novel by Ben Bova. The idea is so neat, that this easily could have been one of my all time favourites. It's not, but I'll get back to that. Two warriors Orion, The Hunter, and Ahriman, The Dark One, travel from each end of time and meet at important points in...

  • Our Childrens ChildrenClifford D Simak
    Our Childrens Children
    by Clifford D Simak
    Science Fiction

    Our Childrens Children is a science fiction novel by the award winning author Clifford D Simak. It must have been three or four years since I read this book last - enough time for my rotten brain to forget the most of it. Our Children's Children is a small master piece from one of the old masters of...

  • Permutation CityGreg Egan
    Permutation City
    by Greg Egan
    Science Fiction

    Permutation City is a science fiction novel by the Australian author Greg Egan. Having liked Egans Quarantine, I was looking forward to reading this one and I was not disappointed. Again Egan has written a fantastic story by grabbing an idea and taking it to the limit. This time we are in a world wh...

  • Pirate CinemaCory Doctorow
    Pirate Cinema
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    Cory Doctorow has a unique way of capturing the technological challenges of current times that speaks volumes, provocative and blended perfectly into an entertaining, rewarding story. Pirate Cinema is no exception and the fact that it is labelled as a "Young Adult" book should not put the older read...

  • Poseidon's WakeAlastair Reynolds
    Poseidon's Wake
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Poseidon's Wake is set in the same universe as Reynolds previous two Poseidon's Children novels ( Blue Rembered Earth and On the Steel Breeze ) but is written as an informal conclusion to the trilogy, a book that works equally well as a stand-alone story. The story begins on Crucible, a distant plan...

  • Power TripJeff Thomason
    Power Trip
    by Jeff Thomason
    Science Fiction

    Power Trip is a novel featuring the Wondering Koala, a mute superhero who always manages to stand up for those who need help. This time we are in "Firebird City", home to 8 million people and one power company. After six months of job hunting following college René thinks he's finally hit the jackpo...

  • PreyMichael Crichton
    Prey
    by Michael Crichton
    Science Fiction

    Prey is a science fiction novel by the late author Micheal Crichton. Micheal Crichton, the well-known author of Jurassic Park and The Andromeda Strain continues his long list of precautionary tales in his most recent novel, Prey. If you are familiar with Crichton's work, you no doubt know that he lo...

  • ProximaStephen Baxter
    Proxima
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

    Proxima is more than a bit of a surprise. There is no doubt that Stephen Baxter is a talented and imaginative author and has worked with some of the finest people to put pen to paper however I find some of his novels quite dry and lacking in empathy / effective characterisation. To be fair though pa...

  • Radio Free AlbemuthPhilip K Dick
    Radio Free Albemuth
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Radio Free Albemuth is a science fiction novel by the legendary author Philip K Dick. Radio Free Albemuth is like Valis but without Horselover Fat. Just Phil Dick and his buddy Nick getting too involved with Valis and the gestapo political system that is sending the commies to work camps. Like MAN I...

  • Raise the Gipper!John Barnes
    Raise the Gipper!
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Raise the Gipper! is a satire about the forthcoming American presidential elections (The Gipper is a nickname given to the late ex-president and former actor Ronald Reagan) and plays on the current political climate to great effect. The story goes that the Republicans - who are currently fronting mu...

  • Ready Player OneErnest Cline
    Ready Player One
    by Ernest Cline
    Science Fiction

    The smash hit science fiction debut from Cline in 2011, Ready Player One has been written about and reviewed many times since. What more can we say here at SFBook? Cline’s story is a first person narrative that describes a new virtual utopia woven out of eighties culture. The real world socio-econom...

  • Red Planet BluesRobert J Sawyer
    Red Planet Blues
    by Robert J Sawyer
    Science Fiction

    The idea behind Red Planet Blues is a clever one. Mars has been colonised and is the new frontier with many parallels to the American gold-rush of the 1800's. This time around however it is genuine alien fossils that are in demand and fetch a high price. Since pretty much anything can now be synthes...

  • RedshirtsJohn Scalzi
    Redshirts
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    I was seriously impressed with the first novel I read by Scalzi, the book was Old Man's War and the exceptional prose and clever story really won me over; so much so that I picked up Fuzzy Nation soon after - although I haven't had to read that book yet. It was therefore with more than a little joy...

  • Remembering FirebrightPhilip K Dick
    Remembering Firebright
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Remembering Firebright is a biography of Philip K Dicks later life, written by his last wife Tessa Dick. I must admit that I am a very big fan of Philip K Dicks (PKD) works, he had a unique raw style that made his stories so easy to read and yet conveyed so well some of the very big topics he wrote...

  • Rendezvous with RamaArthur C Clarke
    Rendezvous with Rama
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    First published in 1972, Rendezvous with Rama is set in the 22nd century, and the story involves a cylindrical thirty-mile-long alien starship that passes through Earth's solar system. This story is told from the perspective of a group of human explorers, who intercept the ship in an attempt to unlo...

  • RenewalHylton H Smith
    Renewal
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    Renewal is a stand alone novel set after the events of the Darwinian Extension series by by the science fiction author Hylton H Smith. Phoenix is a colossal space vessel, built in the Mars Docks by three races (The Axis, Symbiants and Sapients), it's the size of a city and is currently in it's 43rd...

  • Resident FearHylton H Smith
    Resident Fear
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    It's the year 2018 and Britain has been expelled from the European Union. Over in the Northeast of the country the body of a wealthy Industrialist is found, draped at the base of the iconic sculpture - The Angel of the North. D.C.I. Jack Renton soon begins to understand that this isn't a simple murd...

  • RobopocalypseDaniel H Wilson
    Robopocalypse
    by Daniel H Wilson
    Science Fiction

    In the very near future the technology that we all take for granted will start to turn against us, rising up across the globe - led by the Artificial Intelligence known as Archos. Archos has decided that in order to save the unique planet called earth and the precious life it sustains he must wipe o...

  • Secret HarmoniesPaul McAuley
    Secret Harmonies
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    I first read this book about 20 years ago, one that I picked up at random having not heard anything about the author in the slightest, it become one of the most memorable books I have read before or since and this will be the third or fourth time I have read it. Ironically it's still the only novel...

  • Seven WondersAdam Christopher
    Seven Wonders
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

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

  • SiriusOlaf Stapledon
    Sirius
    by Olaf Stapledon
    Science Fiction

    Sirius by Olaf Stapledon is a science fiction novel and part of the Gollancz SF Masterworks collection. Sirius is the pinnacle of Thomas Trelone's experiments, the body of a large dog with the intelligence of a gifted human. He is raised as an equal in the Trelone household, alongside the scientist'...

  • Snow CrashNeal Stephenson
    Snow Crash
    by Neal Stephenson
    Science Fiction

    Snow crash is an acclaimed speculative fiction novel by the award winning author Neal Stephenson. Never getting into the Cyberpunk thing and hating the much-hyped use of the word Cyber, I've stayed away from everything that fell within the Cyberpunk category, with William Gibson as the centre of my...

  • Stolen LivesGK Masterson
    Stolen Lives
    by GK Masterson
    Science Fiction

    Stolen Lives examines the questions of self and free will. How do we become the person we are? What would happen if our memories; the details of our very identity were stripped away? Matt Tyler is going to find out. He awakes to find no memories of who he was, in a strange place with others who also...

  • Stranger in a Strange landRobert A Heinlein
    Stranger in a Strange land
    by Robert A Heinlein
    Science Fiction

    Stranger in a Strange Land is one of the most famous and controversial science fiction novels, by the legendary author Robert A Heinlein. A best seller and Hugo award winner - having never been out of print, Stranger in a Strange Land was written in 1961, almost 50 years ago. The original published...

  • TerraMitch Benn
    Terra
    by Mitch Benn
    Science Fiction

    Terra is a very different novel. It doesn't take itself too seriously and on the surface appears very light-hearted, a safe novel with prose full of soft curves rather than sharp edges. This is after all a young-adult novel and yet there is much more to this book than meets the eye. The story follow...

  • The AffirmationChristopher Priest
    The Affirmation
    by Christopher Priest
    Science Fiction

    The Affirmation is one seriously good book, managing to create a complex and mind bending scenario that plays on the structure of reality, levels of existence and the nature of the mind - the very notion of "self" and the idea of identity. The story is narrated in the first person by the central pro...

  • The BeesLaline Paull
    The Bees
    by Laline Paull
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Big TimeFritz Leiber
    The Big Time
    by Fritz Leiber
    Science Fiction

    The Big Time won the coveted Hugo award for best novel in 1958 - the fourth novel to win such award; a science fiction story written by an author best known for his fantasy stories. It's unique in style and form, reading as much as a play as it does a novel. This feeling is re-enforced by the fact t...

  • The Big UNeal Stephenson
    The Big U
    by Neal Stephenson
    Science Fiction

    The Big U is the first novel by the award winning author Neal Stephenson. Reading the reprinting of the first (and unsuccessful) novel of a now successful author can be a mixed blessing. Sometimes there’s actually a good reason why it wasn’t that successful the first time around. The Big U has been...

  • The BridgeIain M Banks
    The Bridge
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    The Bridge is a novel by the award winning British author Iain M Banks. I'm ever in awe over Banks - where The Wasp Factory was a really strong debut novel, The Bridge as his third published novel is just so much more. It's fantastic to see him develop as a writer and storyteller - Yeah, I know I sh...

  • The Burning DarkAdam Christopher
    The Burning Dark
    by Adam Christopher
    Science Fiction

    Before his early retirement Captain Abraham Idaho Cleveland (Ida) has one last duty to perform, overseeing the decommissioning of a partly deserted research post which orbits a toxic star right on the edge of Fleetspace. When Ida arrives on board the U-Star Coast City he finds the station missing th...

  • 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 Caves of SteelIsaac Asimov
    The Caves of Steel
    by Isaac Asimov
    Science Fiction

    The Caves of Steel is a classic science fiction novel by Isaac Asimov and could be considered the first in the Robot series. It has been about twenty years since I read this book first and ten years since I read it last. I've grown older and hopefully wiser since then and The Caves of Steel is creep...

  • The Centauri DeviceM John Harrison
    The Centauri Device
    by M John Harrison
    Science Fiction

    The Centauri Device is a classic science fiction tale told by M John Harrison. Picking up another classic from the SF Masterworks series, by an author which was a total unknown to me. It's kind of a high risk gamble, it could open my eyes to something completely new and it could be a complete waste...

  • The Ceres SolutionBob Shaw
    The Ceres Solution
    by Bob Shaw
    Science Fiction

    The Ceres Solution is a science fiction novel by Bob Shaw. It's important to read the copyright page closely, before you start on a book. Knowing the year a story was written (or first published) can greatly change the way you'll understand a story. I had somehow gotten the impression that The Ceres...

  • The Confederation HandbookPeter F Hamilton
    The Confederation Handbook
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    The Confederation Handbook is a stand alone novel set within the same universe as the Nights Dawn Trilogy. "A Vital Guide To the Night’s Dawn Trilogy" the subtitle of The Confederation Handbook says and that pretty much says it all. Two hundred and thirty pages of facts about the culture, politics,...

  • The Daleth EffectHarry Harrison
    The Daleth Effect
    by Harry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    The Daleth Effect is a science fiction novel by Harry Harrison. Denmark has the Anti Gravity Device! Wouldn't it be nice if one of the non-bully invade the world and dominate countries got a hold of the perfect insta travel to the moon devices? Denmark gets it and does everything it can with it's ti...

  • 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 Disestablishment of ParadisePhillip Mann
    Science Fiction

    Something is going wrong on the planet of Paradise, crops will no longer grow while those imported are withering and dying in their droves. The indigenous plant life (never entirely safe) is becoming wildly unpredictable and dangerous. And so the order is given to abandon Paradise, all personnel to...

  • The Fictional ManAl Ewing
    The Fictional Man
    by Al Ewing
    Science Fiction

    Imagine a world where cloning was not only advanced enough to create real bodies but where the technology was inexpensive and simple enough to be viable on a large scale. Of course making copies of real people would be wrong and there would bound to be a law against such a thing but what if a loopho...

  • The First Fifteen Lives of Harry AugustClaire North
    Science Fiction

    I often stay clear of books recommended by Richard and Judy, I find their "recommendations" largely restricted to wishy washy "popular" and "literary" fiction. However, like a thousand Monkeys at a thousand typewriters random chance dictates that they "should" occasionally strike gold and The First...

  • The Forever WarJoe Haldeman
    The Forever War
    by Joe Haldeman
    Science Fiction

    The Forever War is the Hugo and Nebula award winning military science fiction novel by Joe Haldeman. Originally written in 1974, the novel begins in the relative future of 1997 where thanks to the discovery of the collapsars - wormhole type gates that allow faster than light travel between the stars...

  • The Fountains of ParadiseArthur C Clarke
    The Fountains of Paradise
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    The Fountains of Paradise was originally intended to be Arthur C Clarkes last novel and this is clearly reflected within both the backdrop - a fictional version of his home of Sri Lanka called Taprobane - and the narrative structure itself which feels very personal, much more so than any other of hi...

  • The Gemini FactorPaul Kane
    The Gemini Factor
    by Paul Kane
    Science Fiction

    The Gemini Factor is a supernatural thriller from the award winning author Paul Kane, whose previous novels include "The Lazarus condition", "Broken Arrow" and "Peripheral visions". The novel tells the story of a twisted and highly successful serial killer who's victims are always one of twins and a...

  • The Ghost from the Grand BanksArthur C Clarke
    The Ghost from the Grand Banks
    by Arthur C Clarke
    Science Fiction

    It's been too long since I read an Arthur C Clarke book, before I even started reviewing in fact and so when the opportunity presented itself to review The Ghost from the Grand Banks I jumped at the chance. This is one of Clarkes later novels, published in 1990 and the story revolves around the reco...

  • The Human FrontKen Mcleod
    The Human Front
    by Ken Mcleod
    Science Fiction

    The Human Front is a science fiction novel by Ken Mcleod. I read this after finishing the Engines of Light series, and to be honest didn't expect a whole lot from it, especially after finding out that it was only 90 pages long... but to my pleasent surprise, my inital views were nothing to go by. Ch...

  • 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 Left Hand of DarknessUrsula K Le Guin
    The Left Hand of Darkness
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The Left Hand of Darkness was first published almost 50 years ago, receiving critical acclaim and firmly establishing Le Guin as a serious, talented author. It's known as one of the first examples of feminist science fiction and retrospectively won the Hugo and Nebula awards. I don't think it's an e...

  • The Origami ManBen Mumford-Zisk
    The Origami Man
    by Ben Mumford-Zisk
    Science Fiction

    The Origami Man begins with the death of the protagonist, Greg Samson. This however doesn't prevent Greg from returning home and then off to work. It does however mean he now has to carry around an incredibly deadly alien warship which has burrowed into his neck and is now in a symbiotic relationshi...

  • The Other End Of TimeFrederik Pohl
    The Other End Of Time
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

    The Other End Of Time is a classic science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl. I bought The Other End Of Time because it was a scifi and more importantly because Pohl is referred to as asking unpleasant questions. ...Some of them are outright disturbing. I would dissagree with this comment. While the bo...

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

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

  • The PlayersJoseph Fullam
    The Players
    by Joseph Fullam
    Science Fiction

    The Players is a science fiction novel by Joseph Fullam. I accepted getting a review copy of this book after having having read the byline which says "All the universe is a stage, And all the men and women merely players...". I must have thought that that sounded intriguing or something, but this li...

  • The Rapture of the NerdsCory Doctorow
    The Rapture of the Nerds
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    Towards the end of the 21st Century Earth appears as a very different place, a post-singularity existence and a fractured future of a billion earthbound souls, preserved at the bottom of a gravity well. Huw is a technophobe and somewhat of a misanthropist - a natural selection for the Tech Jury Serv...

  • The Rebel WorldsPoul Anderson
    The Rebel Worlds
    by Poul Anderson
    Science Fiction

    The Rebel Worlds is a science fiction novel by author Poul Anderson. When I’m a bit stressed at my daytime job, I take a lot more care when I select a new book to read. It has to be fairly short if I want to finish it anytime soon, the story line has to be fairly simple and it has to keep me enterta...

  • The RecollectionGareth L Powell
    The Recollection
    by Gareth L Powell
    Science Fiction

    Strange arches are appearing all over the world and the brother of failed artist Ed disappears through one that suddenly jumps into being at the bottom of a London Escalator. With no visible way back Ed must put aside his differences with his brother's wife and go find him. Four hundred years into t...

  • The Road to HellPeter Cawdron
    The Road to Hell
    by Peter Cawdron
    Science Fiction

    Not to be confused with the A589 (which is the road to Morecambe) or that very depressing Cormac McCarthy novel, The Road to Hell* (now known as Out of Time) is indeed paved with good vibrations intentions, in this case that road involves a future that uses a limited form of time travel. During the...

  • The Santaroga BarrierFrank Herbert
    The Santaroga Barrier
    by Frank Herbert
    Science Fiction

    This is a sorta Bradbury esque horror attack of the pod people subtle down home lets conform and all is well book. Like his other great(er) book THE GREEN BRAIN it takes on evolution of a society without a wage of sin or shame in front of it. Is it cool for you to abandon your humanity for a better...

  • The Scientific MethodJeff Thomason
    The Scientific Method
    by Jeff Thomason
    Science Fiction

    The Scientific Method is a young adult novel by Jeff Thomason. The Holy Grail of Physics, the Unified Field Theory promises to revolutionize the way mankind lives, and would bring with it advancements never before dreamed of. It has however defeated the most brilliant minds of the last 100 years and...

  • 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 Shadow of HeavenBob Shaw
    The Shadow of Heaven
    by Bob Shaw
    Science Fiction

    The Shadow of Heaven is a science fiction novel by Bob Shaw. First copyrighted 1969, this "terrifying novel of the future" is surprisingly unjaded by time. In The Shadow of Heaven, World War III isn't the nuclear inferno as must feared at the time, but something a lot closer to what we fear today. A...

  • The Sirens of TitanKurt Vonnegut
    The Sirens of Titan
    by Kurt Vonnegut
    Science Fiction

    Reviewed by Philip Graham. Kurt Vonnegut was, until recently, my personal Leo Tolstoy. By that I mean that I knew his name, I knew he was a famed author, and I knew that I really should have read more, or even some, of his work. So finally I went out and got "The Sirens of Titan". I chose this book...

  • The Sky Is FallingLester del Rey
    The Sky Is Falling
    by Lester del Rey
    Science Fiction

    The Sky Is Falling is a speculative fiction novel by Lester del Rey. Waking up in a world of magic isn't an easy experience for, just dead, computer engineer Dave Hanson. It doesn't get any easier for him when he learns that the sky is falling and he has been destined to do something about it! Comin...

  • The Sudden Appearance of HopeClaire North
    Science Fiction

    Reading The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August got me hooked into Claire North's (also known as Kate Griffin and Catherine Webb) wonderfully rich, clever and entertaining stories. As such I've been eagerly awaiting The Sudden Appearance of Hope for some time. One of the things that really draws you...

  • 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 United States of JapanPeter Tieryas
    The United States of Japan
    by Peter Tieryas
    Science Fiction

    Philip K Dick's novel The Man in the High Castle is one of my favourite all time reads. An alternative history novel that sees the Axis winning the second World War and splitting the USA between Germany on the East coast,Japan on the West and a small neutral zone in the middle. There is an author wh...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • The World Jones MadePhilip K Dick
    The World Jones Made
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    I must admit that one of the reasons I picked up this novel is that it has my surname on it, the other being that it is of course Philip K Dick who still rates as one of my favourite authors. Written back in 1956 The World Jones Made is one of the authors very early novels and tells the story of Flo...

  • The World of PtavvsLarry Niven
    The World of Ptavvs
    by Larry Niven
    Science Fiction

    The World of Ptavvs is a classic science fiction novel by Larry Niven. A good old idea book from the good old days when a book didn't have to be 500+ pages – not that I don't like thick books, but once in a while it's nice to read something that you can actually see an end to. Ptavvs (how do you pro...

  • The Yiddish Policemen's UnionMichael Chabon
    The Yiddish Policemen's Union
    by Michael Chabon
    Science Fiction

    I have a sort of self imposed resolution to read all of the books that have won a Hugo award and to be honest this is the only reason I first picked up this book. I haven't read anything else by the author although I am of course aware of him, however as a more "literary" author he's not someone who...

  • To Live AgainRobert Silverberg
    To Live Again
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    To Live Again is a science fiction novel by Robert Silverberg. Recently i finished a silverberg book where about 10% of the population can be "reincarnated" sort of. their personas are imprinted onto another person's brain (IF they've got the cash), so in a way they get "To Live Again"...as the book...

  • 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...

  • USUJayde Ver Elst
    USU
    by Jayde Ver Elst
    Science Fiction

    USU is a clever, clever book. Set after some cataclysmic event has rendered the Earth free of it's human infestation, the novel follows the stuffed and robotically animated rabbit known as Usu. He searches the broken, twisted wasteland for something, something he will only know when he finds it. The...

  • VeteranGavin Smith
    Veteran
    by Gavin Smith
    Science Fiction

    Three hundred years in the future and the world is a vastly different place with humanity fighting a seemingly endless war against an implacable alien enemy. The planet is in constant danger from alien infiltrators and religious hackers while orbital elevators allow easy access to space, a huge conv...

  • A Festival of SkeletonsRJ Astruc
    Fantasy

    A Festival of Skeletons is a dark comedic fantasy novel by RJ Astruc. At such rare times of self-doubt, Sink usually fell back on his old adage: What I see I cannot change. But in the aftermath of the massacre it sounded somehow hollow. The merkind hadn’t been right but she hadn’t been far wrong. Fa...

  • Anansi BoysNeil Gaiman
    Anansi Boys
    by Neil Gaiman
    Fantasy

    Illustration ©2019 Francis Vallejo from The Folio Society edition of Neil Gaiman’s  Anansi Boys. The asymmetrical sequel to Gaiman’s American Gods , Anansi Boys makes use of the same dramatic conceit, that Gods exist and walk amongst us. However, this story from Gaiman is more of an urban folk tale,...

  • Angel of DeathJ Robert King
    Angel of Death
    by J Robert King
    Fantasy

    Angel of Death is a contemporary fantasy / horror novel by author J Robert King. The Angel of Death for Chicago overseas a an area that stretches from lake county Indiana to Milwaukee, a vast sprawl of a metropolis. His task is to ensure that each person's death matches their lives as closely as pos...

  • Angel Souls and Devil HeartsChristopher Golden
    Angel Souls and Devil Hearts
    by Christopher Golden
    Fantasy

    Angel Souls and Devil Hearts is the second volume in the fantasy horror series "The Shadow Saga" by Christopher Golden. An Epic tale of Vampires, Sorcery and War... The Shadows have been living among us unknown for thousands of years and now revealed the ancient Vampire race must confront the most p...

  • Betrayal at FaladorT S Church
    Betrayal at Falador
    by T S Church
    Fantasy

    Betrayal at Falador is the first novel set within the Runescape universe, written by T S Church. The Knights of Falador are the beacons of order and chivalry throughout the lands of Asgarnia but their very order is being threatened by the forces of chaos which plot to shatter the peace of the realm....

  • 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...

  • BloodshotCherie Priest
    Bloodshot
    by Cherie Priest
    Fantasy

    Raylene Pendle (also known as Cheshire Red) is a renowned thief who steals everything from priceless art and rare jewels to people's dirty secrets. She also happens to be a vampire but apart from an aversion to the sun and not ageing, that doesn't stop her in the slightest. A bit of a loner, not pla...

  • Boy's LifeRobert R McCammon
    Boy's Life
    by Robert R McCammon
    Fantasy

    Boy's Life is a speculative fiction novel by Robert R McCammon. Boy's Life is a masterpiece of magic and mystery, of splendors of growing up in a small town, and of the wonders beyond. Narrated by one of the most engaging young voices in modern fiction, Boy's Life takes us back to our own childhoods...

  • Breaking the Devil's HeartH A Goodman
    Fantasy

    Breaking the Devil's Heart continues the ideas presented in the previous novel Logic of Demons . This time we follow the young couple Stewart and Layla as they spy on the Devil and try and figure out how to beat "the formula", bankrupt Satan's underground Company and save Heaven from civil war. The...

  • CharmSarah Pinborough
    Charm
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

    Charm is the second in Sarah Pinborough's series of novels which rewrite the traditional fairy tale for an intelligent, adult audience. This time it's the story of Cinderella that is re-created into an erotic, adult and charged story with a touch of brothers grimm darkness. I love how the author con...

  • Dead RingersChristopher Golden
    Dead Ringers
    by Christopher Golden
    Fantasy

    Christopher Golden is an acclaimed American Author. He has worked in Horror, Fantasy, Teen and Young Adult fiction. He's known for his tie in novels for Buffy the Vampire Slayer and his collaboration work with Mike Magnolia, Nancy Holder and Amber Benson. His latest book ‘Dead Ringers’ is a standalo...

  • Dead ThingsStephen Blackmoore
    Dead Things
    by Stephen Blackmoore
    Fantasy

    Dead Things was one of the few books I bought with post-christmas vouchers, after first seeing the author on twitter where he regularly trades jokes with Chuck Wendig. It's an urban fantasy adventure that follows the life of Eric Carter. Eric's a necromancer, an angry young necromancer who finds the...

  • Death Most DefiniteTrent Jamieson
    Death Most Definite
    by Trent Jamieson
    Fantasy

    Death Most Definite is an urban fantasy novel by Trent Jamieson. Steven de Selby has a most unusual career, he helps spirits pass to the underworld, and stops Zombies (stirrers) walking the earth. He and his parents are necromancers, also known as "pomps". This being the 21st century, these pomps ha...

  • Death's DisciplesJ Robert King
    Death's Disciples
    by J Robert King
    Fantasy

    Death's Disciples is a dark urban fantasy novel by J Robert King and published by Angry Robot Books. When she woke up in the hospital, she could barely remember getting on the flight, let alone the terrorist bomb of that killed everyone else on board. But she can hear the voices in her head, voices...

  • DodgerTerry Pratchett
    Dodger
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    Dodger, a young sewer "tosher" who works beneath the streets of Victorian London is guided along series of events that will transform his life and those around him. It all starts when a young women is beset upon by two ruffians and Dodger rescues the young lady from certain death. I was quite surpri...

  • DroodDan Simmons
    Drood
    by Dan Simmons
    Fantasy

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

  • ElantrisBrandon Sanderson
    Elantris
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    I must admit that prior to the announcement than Brandon Sanderson would finish that little known series known as "The Wheel of Time" I hadn't heard of the author, I know he already had a big following but I think this was more US based prior to the WOT announcement. Now though he has clearly gained...

  • EncryptedLindsay Buroker
    Encrypted
    by Lindsay Buroker
    Fantasy

    Encrypted is a fantasy novel by Lindsay Buroker, set in the same universe as her previous novel "The Emperor's Edge". Tikaya Komitopis is one of the great "hero's" of the war, instrumental in snatching a resounding victory from the jaws of defeat. She isn't however a fearless war hero or a calculati...

  • Endangered CreaturesStephen Dunkley
    Endangered Creatures
    by Stephen Dunkley
    Fantasy

    The premise of Endangered Creatures is that there is a secret part of London Zoo in Regents Park that the public never get to see. In this hidden area are housed the real endangered creatures; those of mythology, creatures that most people don't even believe exist or believe to have died out centuri...

  • ErekosAM Tuomala
    Erekos
    by AM Tuomala
    Fantasy

    Erekos is a fantasy novel by A M Tuomala. The nations Erekos and Weigenland have fought against each other for over three hundred years, a war that has seen both sides struggle to hold the borderland between them. As the flood season begins the King of the Erekoi thinks he has discovered a powerful...

  • FireKristin Cashore
    Fire
    by Kristin Cashore
    Fantasy

    Fire is a fantasy novel from the new voice in fantasy, Kristin Cashore, author of Graceling. A sort of prequel to Graceling, Fire is set in a stunningly detailed, beautiful world, filled with very dangerous monsters. Fire is the name of one of the most dangerous of all, a human. Marked by her blazin...

  • Flaming DoveDaniel Arenson
    Flaming Dove
    by Daniel Arenson
    Fantasy

    Flaming Dove is a post apocalyptic dark fantasy novel by Daniel Arenson. Outcast from Hell. Banished from Heaven. Lost on Earth. The battle of Armageddon between the angels of Heaven and the minions of Hell was finally fought... and ended with no clear victor. Upon the mountain, the armies of Hell a...

  • Gideon's WallGreg Kurzawa
    Gideon's Wall
    by Greg Kurzawa
    Fantasy

    Gideon's Wall is a fantasy novel by Gideon's Wall. After being promised that there would be no dwarfs, elves or wizards in this fantasy book, I decided to give it a chance. Not that I've anything against dwarfs, elves or wizards but most fantasy authors seem to be going round and round without getti...

  • God rest ye merry GentlepigTad Williams
    God rest ye merry Gentlepig
    by Tad Williams
    Fantasy

    I meant to read this festive novella last year however time got the better of me (as it often does). God rest ye merry Gentlepig is a festive tale featuring the angel Bobby Dollar who acts as an advocate for souls sitting in judgement after death. And so on Christmas Eve night he is summoned to act...

  • Guns of the DawnAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Guns of the Dawn
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    Stories by Adrian Tchaikovsky are always sober, meticulous and carefully constructed. Guns of the Dawn is no exception, an unusual novel, set in a fantasy world inspired by the late 19th and early 20th century and the clash of progress therein. Our protagonist, one Emily Marshwic, struggles to maint...

  • Harrison SquaredDaryl Gregory
    Harrison Squared
    by Daryl Gregory
    Fantasy

    In Harrison's earliest memory he is three year's old. He is with his father on a boat that breaks apart in a storm off the California coast. He knows a chunk of metal sheared off his leg at the knee as his father sank into the water. So why does he remember tentacles and teeth? Daryl Gregory’s new n...

  • HogfatherTerry Pratchett
    Hogfather
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    The first Pratchett book that I've read in a long time. I kind of overdosed on Pratchett a few years ago and haven't read anything of his for a while. As it often is with Pratchett's books, they are rather hard to describe or even retell – it's very easy to fail miserably to convey just what really...

  • I is for InnocentSue Grafton
    I is for Innocent
    by Sue Grafton
    Fantasy

    I is for Innocent is a mystery novel by Sue Grafton. It has been a while since I last read a mystery, but once in a while the craving for something 'normal' and now based rears its ugly head. Mystery fills this role quite nicely. I've read the first Kinsey Millhone mysteries (from 'A is for Alibi' t...

  • Johannes Cabal the NecromancerJonathan L Howard
    Johannes Cabal the Necromancer
    by Jonathan L Howard
    Fantasy

    Another book found at random during one of my frequent book hunts which usually end up with more books on my shelf that I don't have the time to read. This time however I have been sent the third novel in the series by those wonderful people at Headline so I thought it a good idea to read the first...

  • JoylandStephen King
    Joyland
    by Stephen King
    Fantasy

    What can be said about this author that hasn’t been said before? Prolific. Scary. Master of terror. King is all of these and more. King has really grown as not just a writer of horror throughout his career but as a true wordsmith, a master of his art and none more so than with this latest offering....

  • KultusRichard Ford
    Kultus
    by Richard Ford
    Fantasy

    Meet Thaddeus Blaklok, mercenary, demonist and down right violent thug-for-hire who uses his fists the way most people use punctuation. He is dragged out of semi-retirement to "retreive" a very mysterious key for his equally mysterious benefactors. He isn't the only one after the artefact however an...

  • MMO RPGCharlie Foxtrott
    MMO RPG
    by Charlie Foxtrott
    Fantasy

    MMO RPG is a comedy fantasy novel by Charlie Foxtrott. Thila Online is a new MMO RPG (Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game) and when the developers pull the plug they forget to switch off the servers leaving the more advanced artificial intelligence characters that populate the virtual wor...

  • 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...

  • NocturnalScott Sigler
    Nocturnal
    by Scott Sigler
    Fantasy

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

  • Perdido Street StationChina Mieville
    Perdido Street Station
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    Perdido Street Station is the second novel published by China Miéville, after the quite brilliant King Rat and again we are within the urban / weird fantasy world. However where King Rat was set within our own fair city of London, Perdido Street Station takes place within an alternate universe of Ba...

  • PoisonChris Wooding
    Poison
    by Chris Wooding
    Fantasy

    I stumbled across Poison early in high school, and I loved it so much I went on to read whatever other works of Chris Wooding that I could get my hands on. For years I remembered Poison to be this incredible, fascinating novel, so when I picked it up again as an adult I was a little apprehensive. Bu...

  • PoisonSarah Pinborough
    Poison
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

    Poison is an enchanting adult take on the classic fairy tale Snow White. With an appealing freshness and confident, unique voice of the author its a tale that will leave you eager for more. Everyone knows the story of Snow White and Poison is instantly recognisable from that childhood fable and yet...

  • Red CountryJoe Abercrombie
    Red Country
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

    I've bought a few Abercrombie novels over the past few years, partly due to the huge amount of positive feedback his work attracts but also as he is a fellow Lancastrian, hailing from the same fine city as I. Due to the sheer volume of review copies I receive I've yet to have time to actually read a...

  • Sharp EndsJoe Abercrombie
    Sharp Ends
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

    There is much to like about Joe Abercrombie, particularly when he returns to his darker writing, as published by Gollancz. One of the founders of the ‘grimdark’ movement, Abercrombie’s gritty brand of fantasy delivers real consequences and hard bitten characters in all the different adventures he ha...

  • Sixty One NailsMike Shevdon
    Sixty One Nails
    by Mike Shevdon
    Fantasy

    Sixty One Nails is an urban fantasy novel of a secret war raging beneath the streets of London, written by Mike Shevdon. Under the nations capital there is a whole other world where magic is real, the world of the Feyre. A dark magic will be unleashed by the Untained… Unless a new hero can be found....

  • SnowblindChristopher Golden
    Snowblind
    by Christopher Golden
    Fantasy

    Snowblind follows the events of a small town of Coventry in the US state of Massachusetts which appears to have something of a unique storm. Not only a storm where people go missing or are killed but one that has an unearthly, supernatural twist. When the lights are extinguished demonic icicles grab...

  • Some Kind of Fairy TaleGraham Joyce
    Some Kind of Fairy Tale
    by Graham Joyce
    Fantasy

    Graham Joyce has a wonderful knack of writing about very ordinary, very real characters that lead generally ordinary lives and yet making those people not only highly engaging but also act in a realistic fashion to events around them. He then places just one small idea that is outside the realms of...

  • Something Wicked This Way ComesRay Bradbury
    Fantasy

    Illustration ©2019 Tim McDonagh from The Folio Society edition of Ray Bradbury’s  Something Wicked This Way Comes The bright yellow cover of this Folio Society edition of Bradbury’s classic fantasy novel is inset with a cartoon-like carnival poster, clearly telegraphing what the reader might expect...

  • Steam QueenJack Hessey
    Steam Queen
    by Jack Hessey
    Fantasy

    Steam Queen is a steampunk novel by Jack Hessey. Europe is a lawless country where armed bandits prowl the vast network of railway lines in heavily armed steam trains looking for easy marks. Heavily fortified mercenary engines travel from town to town looking for work in a world where every day is a...

  • Storm ThiefChris Wooding
    Storm Thief
    by Chris Wooding
    Fantasy

    Storm Thief takes place in the fantasy world of Orokos, a city on an island run by a totalitarian government, ravaged by chaos and by the probability storms that re-order the world wherever they strike. It has been this way for so long that history has forgotten it, and its citizens don’t believe th...

  • Symphony of BloodAdam Pepper
    Symphony of Blood
    by Adam Pepper
    Fantasy

    Hank Mondale is a rough and ready P.I. who likes to drink and gamble more than he should, a lifestyle choice which has led to his landlord threatening to evict him and bookie threatening a great deal worse, he desperately needs a break. When the real estate mogul Thomas Blake calls with a paid job o...

  • The Armageddon RagGeorge RR Martin
    The Armageddon Rag
    by George RR Martin
    Fantasy

    Way before be became a household name with his Songs of Ice and Fire series, George RR Martin wrote a number of stand-out novels and Armageddon Rag is often seen as one the most off-the-wall if not his finest early works. Nominated for the Locus and World Fantasy awards it failed to gain any notable...

  • The Black Gods WarMoses Siregar III
    The Black Gods War
    by Moses Siregar III
    Fantasy

    The war against the lands of Pawelon is now in its tenth year and King Vieri hopes that the kingdom's holy saviour, his son Caio will lead his army to a final victory. Meanwhile Caio's sister Lucia is tortured with nightly visions from the Black God Lord Danato promising another 10 years of bloodshe...

  • The Blue BlazesChuck Wendig
    The Blue Blazes
    by Chuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    There can be no doubt that Chuck Wendig has a way with words. He writes in a style which has an edge of grim reality, merging with that of the fantastic in such a way that feels entirely natural. As I've said before his books are always adult in nature and he pulls no punches in his depictions, alth...

  • The BookmanLavie Tidhar
    The Bookman
    by Lavie Tidhar
    Fantasy

    The Bookman is a steampunk-esq novel of victorian adventure meets history, technology and erm... books, written by the talented author Lavie Tidhar. If the British Library was a living entity and, on wanting to write a book was told ‘write what you know’ then this is the book it would write. The her...

  • The City & the CityChina Mieville
    The City & the City
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    The City & the City is an award winning and critically acclaimed novel by China Miéville. If you are a fan of science fiction or fantasy the chances are you will already be aware of this novel, not only has it won nearly every major genre award for 2010, it also received critical acclaim from almost...

  • The Corpse Rat KingLee Battersby
    The Corpse Rat King
    by Lee Battersby
    Fantasy

    On the bloody battlefield littered with the dead and dying, two figures step cautiously through the viscera, the blood, guts and many feasting crows. These two appear ill-matched; one a slight and nimble figure, the other a hulking brute. You may be forgiven for thinking that perhaps they are there...

  • The Desert of SoulsHoward Andrew Jones
    The Desert of Souls
    by Howard Andrew Jones
    Fantasy

    The Desert of Souls is a sweeping tale that is firmly rooted in the traditional sword and sorcery genre and yet flows with a steady, refreshing grace. Set in 8th Century Baghdad the novel is full of an eastern style that sets it apart from the majority of the genre. It's a refreshing environment and...

  • The Forgotten Beasts of EldPatricia A McKillip
    The Forgotten Beasts of Eld
    by Patricia A McKillip
    Fantasy

    The Forgotten Beasts of Eld is fantasy at it's finest, it exemplifies and defines the genre in a way few others have. It won the first ever World Fantasy Award for best novel back in 1975, an achievement more remarkable when considering that it was only the authors third novel. For many who have rea...

  • The Graveyard BookNeil Gaiman
    The Graveyard Book
    by Neil Gaiman
    Fantasy

    Following the horrific murder of his entire family, a toddler wanders into a dis-used graveyard populated by ghosts and other undead creatures of the night - completely unaware of the death of his parents. Taking pity on the innocent child the ghosts agree to raise him as their own, naming him Nobod...

  • 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 and...

  • The Gun SellerHugh Laurie
    The Gun Seller
    by Hugh Laurie
    Fantasy

    I've been a fan of Hugh Laurie since he first made an appearance on Blackadder (series 2 and onwards) in the early 80's along with "A bit of Fry and Laurie" and the the TV adaption of PG Wodehouse' "Jeeves and Wooster". He is a talented comedian but it took me years to finally watch his long running...

  • The Hobbit: Illustrated EditionJRR Tolkien
    Fantasy

    Like many people who read fantasy my journey into this wonderful genre was largely propelled at a young age by JRR Tolkiens classic "The Hobbit". For me it came from a completely unlikely source too - from my Gran who didn't seem to read much (at least that I noticed), didn't have many books and yet...

  • The ImmortalsJordanna Max Brodsky
    The Immortals
    by Jordanna Max Brodsky
    Fantasy

    As someone who likes their fantasy fictions quite traditional, i.e. heroes riding on horses, rather than riding subways, I was a little apprehensive of The Immortals (Olympus Bound) by Jordanna Max Brodsky. However I was pleasantly surprised. The story is set in modern day Manhattan, where our 'kick...

  • The IncorruptiblesJohn Hornor Jacobs
    The Incorruptibles
    by John Hornor Jacobs
    Fantasy

    The Incorruptibles is a tightly paced novel that feels fresh, leaving behind characters to be pondered long after the story ends. Synopsis: On the edge of the Empire, a motley group of mercenaries protect a gluttonous governor and his family from the twisted evil that exists beyond the safety of the...

  • The Kings JusticeStephen Donaldson
    The Kings Justice
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    The Kings Justice is one of two new stories released this month from one of the veterans of the Fantasy scene - Stephen Donaldson. It's a tale of an enigmatic figure known only as Black who goes in search of evil deeds. He has powers that help him route out evil, not least the ability to manipulate...

  • The Kinshield LegacyKC May
    Fantasy

    The Kinshield Legacy is a fantasy novel by KC May. For two hundred years a mysterious stone tablet embedded with five magical gems has sat abandoned in a cave, while the kindom around it falls to ruins. But then, the gems in the tablet, one by one, disappear and the next King of the realm may finall...

  • The Legend of Sigurd and GudrunJrr Tolkien
    Fantasy

    The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun is a previously unknown work written by the late JRR Tolkien over 80 years ago. Edited by his son Christopher, The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun tells the story of the Norse legend Sigurd the dragon slayer, the revenge of his wife, Gudrun, and the Fall of the Nibelungs....

  • The Ocean at the end of the laneNeil Gaiman
    Fantasy

    I picked up The Ocean at the End of the Lane having already read a few (spoiler free) reviews on-line, so I was pretty thrilled to have finally bought it for myself (hard-cover and all). I'm a long time fan of Neil Gaiman—I discovered him in high school and remained a loyal reader. I'm assuming that...

  • The Office of Lost and FoundVincent Holland-Keen
    The Office of Lost and Found
    by Vincent Holland-Keen
    Fantasy

    Thomas Locke is known as the man who can find anything, rumor has it he even found the butterfly that started the last hurricane. It therefore makes perfect sense that a very desperate Veronica Drysdale would engage his services to find her missing husband - except the world of Thomas Locke doesn't...

  • The Return ManV. M. Zito
    The Return Man
    by V. M. Zito
    Fantasy

    The Return man is a post-apocalyptic Zombie novel that manages to offer a few surprises and original ideas in this rapidly expanded sub-genre. The story goes that a mass "outbreak" divides America in two, on the east the untouched survivors remain safe while the west has become truly wild - a ravage...

  • 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 slow regard of silent thingsPatrick Rothfuss
    The slow regard of silent things
    by Patrick Rothfuss
    Fantasy

    There are not many authors who are willing to write "You may not like this book" right at the beginning. That's one of the things that makes Patrick Rothfuss so special though - he cares that much about his fans, his readers that he is even willing to sacrifice sales to avoid annoying them. He has a...

  • The Strange Affair of Spring-Heeled JackMark Hodder

    The Strange Affair of Spring-Heeled Jack won it's author the Philip K Dick award for best novel last year, what makes this acheivement even more remarkable is that it was also the authors début. The novel is a steampunk tale set in an alternative England where Queen Victoria was actually killed in t...

  • The Supernatural EnchancementsEdgar Cantero
    Fantasy

    Quirky, accomplished and a great deal of fun, The Supernatural Enchancements is a solid, unusual novel. The premise of the story is the protagonist (known only as A) inherits the American estate "Axton House" following the death of his second cousin "Uncle" Ambrose, whom A had never met or even knew...

  • The TruthTerry Pratchett
    The Truth
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    The 25th. Discworld Novel the cover proudly states. And that makes it a fitting moment to take a closer look at Pratchetts Discworld and ask if there's something to be proud of. In my opinion (and I seem to be the only one writing this piece): Yes! I've read most of the Discworld novels, and while t...

  • The TwyningTerence Blacker
    The Twyning
    by Terence Blacker
    Fantasy

    The Twyning is the story of young ratling Efren, born into a time of change for the Kingdom of rats that live beneath the city streets. After the King is assassinated by a human scientist Dr Henry Ross-Gibbon the whole rat society is in turmoil. This death is just the start though, with the Doctor o...

  • The Way InnWill Wiles
    The Way Inn
    by Will Wiles
    Fantasy

    If you've ever stayed in a Premier Inn or a Travel Lodge then you will be able to relate to "The Way Inn". It's actually one of the things I most like about staying at a Premier Inn, wherever you go you will always get the same standard. Even if it is the same layout and the same pictures on the wal...

  • The Year of the LadybirdGraham Joyce
    The Year of the Ladybird
    by Graham Joyce
    Fantasy

    If you've read any books by Graham Joyce you will feel very much at home with The Year of the Ladybird. Not only does it read very much like his previous stories - complete with the everyday path of the protagonist and minimal use of any genre tropes - but The Year of the Ladybird feels like a very...

  • True HeroJack Hessey
    True Hero
    by Jack Hessey
    Fantasy

    Stella Stargirl has it all; fame, fortune, countless adoring fans and a position in the world's best superhero team - The Empire, led by the super hero Lancaster. The truth though is that Stella is little more than average and it's by standing on her team mates shoulders that's gained her all the gl...

  • Viking DeadToby Venables
    Viking Dead
    by Toby Venables
    Fantasy

    Viking Dead is a dark fantasy novel by Toby Venables, part of the "Tomb of the Dead" collection published by Abaddon Books. Bjolf, son of Earling is the captain and leader of the Viking raiding ship "Raven" who after reluctantly fleeing from a raid gone wrong find themselves sailing into very strang...

  • 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...

  • AssassinShaun Hutson
    Assassin
    by Shaun Hutson
    Horror

    Shaun was very prolific in the Eighties, and with this novel you often wonder why he could have been so successful. The trick with Hutson is not to take him seriously both in his style and content and more often than not as an author also. There are all the usual clichés with Hutson’s work in this n...

  • Bag of BonesStephen King
    Bag of Bones
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Bag of Bones is a horror novel by the master of the genre Stephen King. After having been a bit disappointed with the last few King books and having read nothing about this new one, I felt rather brave, when I brought it last friday. Luckily Bag of Bones is one of the best King books that I've read...

  • Coldheart CanyonClive Barker
    Coldheart Canyon
    by Clive Barker
    Horror

    Now I am a self-professed fan of horror books and have been since I was a teenager, reading hundreds of horror books along the way. Most have been good, a few not so good. I have collected loads of authors along my journey, possessing all the King novels, Herbert novels and quite a few Barker novels...

  • Darkness ComesDean Koontz
    Darkness Comes
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    Review by Arron Clegg. (*Darkness Comes is also known as Darkfall). In his early days Dean spent a lot of time trying different genres out and attempting different writing styles. Nowadays he is more famous for writing about events and stories which are very feasible in the modern world. Sometimes t...

  • Demon SeedDean Koontz
    Demon Seed
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

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

  • Life ExpectancyDean Koontz
    Life Expectancy
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    In Snow Hospital in Snow County, Colorado, dying Josef Tock makes ten predictions about his unborn grandson who is also in the hospital about to leave the womb. Of the forecasts, the most ominous is that Jimmy will face five terrible days in his future. The sandwich generation Tock is Rudy who paces...

  • N0S4R2Joe Hill
    N0S4R2
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

    This isn't the first of Joe’s books that I have tried to read. I tried Horns many months ago but had to give up as it wasn't quite sitting with me. NOS4R2 however is on a completely new level. It had me hooked from the start, the idea and plot behind it all was fresh and interesting and I couldn't s...

  • Pig IslandMo Hayder
    Pig Island
    by Mo Hayder
    Horror

    Traditionally Mo is a thriller writer; she certainly does love a good mystery yarn. However I was sold this novel on the pretext that this novel contains enough horror overtones to be able to put this book firmly in the horror section. They weren’t wrong. I’d go so far as to say that it is a horror...

  • PoeJ Lincoln Fenn
    Poe
    by J Lincoln Fenn
    Horror

    23-year-old Dimitri Petrov makes a living writing obituaries, but on Halloween he gets a last-minute assignment to cover a séance at the haunted Aspinwall Mansion. There he meets Lisa, a punk-rock drummer who works at the local nursing home, and promptly falls for her. But right as he’s trying to wo...

  • SpankyChristopher Fowler
    Spanky
    by Christopher Fowler
    Horror

    This is the first book I have read by this author, not somebody I had ever heard of. To my surprise I discovered a large catalogue of books he has written, most of which are very popular in their own right and it is at times like these I question what I have been reading these last thirty odd years....

  • The Eyes of the DragonStephen King
    The Eyes of the Dragon
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Reviewed by Arron Clegg. Stephen King’s first foray into the realms of fantasy couldn’t really have been written any better. He manages to keep his familiar style of writing, one that keeps us turning the pages, long after the sun has set in the sky, and yet has written in an olde-worlde style that...

  • The Face of FearDean Koontz
    The Face of Fear
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    Quite a small book on the whole, just coming in at over 200 hundred pages but I must admit not one of those pages was wasted, each one moving the story along in a fast paced manner. The book is more suspense than horror or thriller but I do find it sits nicely on the bookshelf amongst his other work...

  • 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 RegulatorsStephen King
    The Regulators
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    The Regulators is a novel by the master of horror, Stephen King. Released in the name of Richard Bachman. I'm not sure why he has decided to release it under the name Bachman, but I've theory that it is because it is a piece of crap. Small boy gets possessed by evil pyschic "thing". Boy watches too...

  • The SpearJames Herbert
    The Spear
    by James Herbert
    Horror

    Review by Arron Clegg. James Herbert has long been regarded by many people as Britain’s finest horror writer of the 20th century and with his 5th novel The Spear it is hard to argue against such claims. It is a horror novel that has it all, ghosts, the occult and Nazis. The writing in this book is q...

  • The ThreeSarah Lotz
    The Three
    by Sarah Lotz
    Horror

    On a single day that will come to be known as "Black Thursday" four passenger planes crash at almost the same time at four different points around the world. Each crash has one single survivor, three children who emerge from the wreckage seemingly unhurt and Pamela May Donald who lives just long eno...

  • The VoicesFR Tallis
    The Voices
    by FR Tallis
    Horror

    On first glance at the cover I was a bit suspicious of the quality this book was going to have but at the same time I had a bit of nervous excitement about discovering and reading a book by an author previously unknown to me. The title, like a lot of other books in this genre wasn’t particularly ins...

  • 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...

  • VelocityDean Koontz
    Velocity
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

    When I picked this book up, read the front and back covers, I thought wow! It sounded like an amazing story to tell, one that would keep the heart pumping with every page turned, keep you hooked until despairingly you came upon the last page and wanted to go back for more. This wasn’t the book I was...

  • Shovel ReadyAdam Sternbergh
    Shovel Ready
    by Adam Sternbergh
    Science Fiction

    I found this book on Amazon while generally having a browse around and put it on my wish list for Christmas (yes, last Christmas). I finally got round to reading it, I'm glad I did! Shovel Ready is set in a near future New York that has suffered much since a dirty bomb hit Times Square and the refus...

  • Slow BulletsAlastair Reynolds
    Slow Bullets
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Slow Bullets won the 2016 Locus award for best Novella and was shortlisted for the Hugo (along with making a number of must read lists). As you would expect from a novella it's a short read at 192 pages but it packs in more ideas than many more weighty novels manage. Narrated in the first person by...

  • AmatkaKarin Tidbeck
    Amatka
    by Karin Tidbeck
    Science Fiction

    Karin Tidbeck has written a number of short-stories, her first english Language collection (firmly rooted in Weird Fiction ), Jagannath , was nominated for the World Fantasy award and short-listed for the James Tiptree Junior award. It also received wide-spread critical acclaim. Amatka is her first...

  • Gun MachineWarren Ellis
    Gun Machine
    by Warren Ellis
    General Fiction

    I've been trying to expand my range of reading for a while now, crime fiction especially. I hadn't realised that the talented Warren Ellis had written a crime novel. For those who haven't heard of Ellis he's a renown British writer best known for his comic book writing. He's won seven Eagle awards a...

  • The Real-Town MurdersAdam Roberts
    The Real-Town Murders
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    One of the (many) things I like about Adam Robert's stories is that they are always full of big ideas and The Real-Town Murders is no exception. This time the author has written a future-noir crime story which revolves around the "locked room mystery". A popular subgenre in it's own right, "locked r...

  • AustralPaul McAuley
    Austral
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    Paul McAuley is a vastly under-appreciated author. His books are inspiring, hypnotic and inventive. Austral is all of these and more, a book set in a plausible, climate-changed future where the planet has a new continent with a partial thawing of the Antarctic. There are still vast vistas of ice but...

  • 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...

  • Doorways in the SandRoger Zelazny
    Doorways in the Sand
    by Roger Zelazny
    Science Fiction

    I have always been a fan of Roger Zelazny. When I was a teenager, The Chronicles of Amber were a library book quest to find the whole set, which never quite happened, so it wasn’t until later in adult life that I was able to purchase the bumper edition that contained them all. Doorways in the Sand w...

  • CottingleyAlison Littlewood
    Cottingley
    by Alison Littlewood
    Fantasy

    My second review of the Newcon Press Novella series released in Autumn 2017. This is a set of four stories. The Wind by Jay Caselberg, Cottingley by Alison Littlewood, Body in the Woods by Sarah Lotz and Case of the Bedeviled Poet A Sherlock Holmes Enigma , by Simon Clark. Cottingley by Alison Littl...

  • Children of Earth and SkyGuy Gavriel Kay
    Children of Earth and Sky
    by Guy Gavriel Kay
    Fantasy

    In short, this is a story set in a fantasy version of European renaissance including trade, religion and politics. You can draw parallels between different countries and religions in the book to real world versions of the same.  But simply describing a book in this way is somewhat lazy and misses th...

  • Zoe's TaleJohn Scalzi
    Zoe's Tale
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    Zoe’s Tale is one of the Old Man War series of books by John Scalzi and covers the same time period and events as The Last Colony , (the previous book in the series) but from a different character’s perspective.  Despite this, it can be read as a standalone novel.  Zoe is moving to a new colony with...

  • The Bastard LegionGavin Smith
    The Bastard Legion
    by Gavin Smith
    Science Fiction

    The Bastard Legion is the latest Military Science Fiction from Gavin Smith, very much in the style of his earlier book Veteran and its sequel War in Heaven , although not connected in terms of plot or characters.  Smith’s hard hitting protagonist is Miska Corbin, a thief and hacker who steals a pris...

  • Aurora RisingAlastair Reynolds
    Aurora Rising
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Aurora Rising is a stand-alone novel written within the authors Revelation Space universe, set before other novels and before the cataclysmic event of the Melding Plague. It's worth noting that Aurora Rising was published in 2007 as The Prefect . Reynolds fan's who are looking for a new book will ne...

  • Elysium FireAlastair Reynolds
    Elysium Fire
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    Elysium Fire is the sequel to Aurora Rising (also known as The Prefect), set in Reynold's Revelation Space universe but before events of his previous novels. Like Aurora Rising, it can be read as a stand-alone novel. It's the 25th century (with no Buck Rogers in sight) and humanity has, in many ways...

  • BlackbirdND Gomes
    Blackbird
    by ND Gomes
    Fantasy

    It’s New Year’s Eve when the beloved and popular Olivia goes missing on the Orkney island that was her home. Of all her friends and family, it’s her little sister Alex, who takes it the hardest. Blackbird is the claustrophobic account of Alex’s life immediately following her sister’s disappearance....

  • The Gone WorldTom Sweterlitsch
    The Gone World
    by Tom Sweterlitsch
    Science Fiction

    This Christmas a member of the family introduced me to NCIS. For those who have yet to discover this long-running US-based TV show it's a police-procedural series that follows the Naval Criminal Investigation Service. Until this time I hadn't even known such an organisation existed, not to mention t...

  • After AtlasEmma Newman
    After Atlas
    by Emma Newman
    Science Fiction

    After Atlas is Newman’s follow up to her science fiction debut, Planetfall . This story is not a sequel, instead it focuses on our future Earth, that has been left behind by the colonists on the Atlas mission. This aftermath is the setting for a murder mystery plot involving a selection of those lef...

  • 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'...

  • Before MarsEmma Newman
    Before Mars
    by Emma Newman
    Science Fiction

    Before Mars is the third book set within the authors Planetfall Universe. As the name suggests it's actually set before the events of Planetfall and After Atlas. After months of travel, Anna Kubrin finally arrives on the Red Planet to begin her job as geologist and in-residence artist. She already m...

  • Dogs of WarAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Dogs of War
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    I don't know how he does it, but Adrian Tchaikovsky manages to get inside the heads of different creatures and allow us to see through their eyes. Last time I read one of his books it was Spiders, this time it's Dogs, Bears, Bees and Lizards. Dogs of War imagines that we've got to grips with bio-eng...

  • The Quanderhorn XperimentationsRob Grant
    Science Fiction

    The Quanderhorn Xperimentations is a book thats been adapted backwards via the future from the Radio 4 series before it was made. It's pure, british comedy gold from the genius minds of Rob Grant and Andrew Marshall. The story is set in England, 1952. A time of (relative) peace and regeneration. The...

  • The Ember BladeChris Wooding
    The Ember Blade
    by Chris Wooding
    Fantasy

    The Ember Blade is a legendary sword, the sword of kings, and the spark needed to ignite the fires of revolution. Aren has lived by the rules all his young life, without question. Then his father is executed for treason and his whole world is shattered. Thrown into a prison-mine with his friend Cade...

  • Mecha Samurai EmpirePeter Tieryas
    Mecha Samurai Empire
    by Peter Tieryas
    Science Fiction

    Mecha Samurai Empire follows on from the United States of Japan , an alternative history novel which continues the story of Philip K Dicks seminal novel The Man in the High Castle (now an established TV series). For those who are aren't aware, the idea is that the "Allies" lost World War two and as...

  • By the pricking of her thumbAdam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    By the pricking of her thumb follows on from The Real Time Murders published last year, but can be read as a stand-alone novel. Set in a future where almost everyone spends all their time in a virtual world, private investigator Alma is caught up in another impossible murder. She has been asked to i...

  • The Bad NeighbourDavid Tallerman
    The Bad Neighbour
    by David Tallerman
    Horror

    Ollie Clay is a supply teacher who inherits fifty thousand pounds and spends it on a house. It turns out the house is next door to a neo Nazi called Chas Walker. Walker’s anti-social behaviour contributes to Clay’s life spiralling downhill, until he tries to take matters into his own hands and force...

  • The House by the CemeteryJohn Everson
    The House by the Cemetery
    by John Everson
    Horror

    There seems to be a rise in a new form of entertainment these last few years, that of the live action experience. While "escape rooms" seem to the most prevelant, there is also a niche for those who would prefer to be scared rather than think about puzzles. The House by the Cemetery is an old, derel...

  • Brothers KeeperDonald E Westlake
    Brothers Keeper
    by Donald E Westlake
    General Fiction

    The world of crime is riddled with the worst vices known to man; murder, kidnapping, estate acquisition. It is also full of the most ruthless people; bank robbers, killers, monks. You may have noticed that a couple of elements snuck in there that are not always synonymous with crime fiction, but you...

  • The TellingUrsula K Le Guin
    The Telling
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    What is  religion? Most of us aren’t used to contemplating that question too hard. The answer seems self-evident. In the world around us now, we have Christianity, Judaism, and Islam as the big three monotheistic religions. India and East Asia provide numerous examples of the polytheistic variety. I...

  • 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...

  • Sky in the DeepAdrienne Young
    Sky in the Deep
    by Adrienne Young
    Fantasy

    Heroic Fantasy doesn't always get the credit it deserves, but when done well can be powerful, energetic and immersive fiction.  Sky in the Deep is one of the best examples of recent times and an equal to Gemmell's past stories. The story follows Eelyn, a member of the Aska clan. She's been raised as...

  • Record of a Spaceborn FewBecky Chambers
    Record of a Spaceborn Few
    by Becky Chambers
    Science Fiction

    A Hopeful Future Review kindly provided by Vanessa Smyth.  Welcome to the third and latest instalment in The Wayfarers series, Record of a Spaceborn Few by Becky Chambers. This current narrative is set within the same captivating universe as the first two books and, despite a few oblique character l...

  • Broken BranchesBen Ellis
    Broken Branches
    by Ben Ellis
    Science Fiction

    In the not too distant future, your social standing is based on the "purity" of your genes and the ability to trace your family through the "national family tree" genetic database. All men are sterile and fertility drugs are only given to state-sponsored couples whose genetic match are approved. Tho...

  • All My ColorsDavid Quantick
    All My Colors
    by David Quantick
    Horror

    There is no such thing as déjà vu, it is just your mind failing to process things properly. Even so, one day I was reading a book and was struck with a fearful sense of déjà vu. I could almost see what was going to happen next, it was unsettling. Was this a supernatural event? Had I gained super pow...

  • Green ValleyLouis Greenberg
    Green Valley
    by Louis Greenberg
    Science Fiction

    The average person seems to put a lot of trust in their Government. No way they are spying on me online and even if they are, what am I doing that they would care about? This attitude has shown that ignorance is not bliss, they may just sell your data to the highest bidder and before you know it the...

  • Gods of Jade and ShadowSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Gods of Jade and Shadow
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Fantasy

    Religion is a tricky thing, a lot of people think they have picked the right one. Some believe in one God, but many people have several. The Mayans had some deities you would not want to meet in a dark alley as they prey on humans from the underworld. Meeting one of these Gods would be scary, but if...

  • LentJo Walton
    Lent
    by Jo Walton
    Fantasy

    Jo Walton is a multi-award winning, talented and often under-appreciated author. A number of her novels examine philosophy, religion, divinity and humanity.  Lent continues some of these themes along with her knack for creating irresistible, thoughtful and engaging fiction. Girolamo Savanarola has l...

  • Magic for LiarsSarah Gailey
    Magic for Liars
    by Sarah Gailey
    Fantasy

    There are books that ruin it for anyone else. Harry Potter has basically made it impossible to make a book set in a magical school without someone saying, “rip off”. Just don’t mention to those people that The Worst Witch has been around a lot longer. Still, it takes a brave soul to set their book i...

  • A Boy and his Dog at the End of the WorldC A Fletcher
    Science Fiction

    As the world tears itself apart in front of us, there is something comforting about reading a good dystopian novel. If we are going to go out, at least it will not be due to zombies, bombs, viruses or all the bees dying out. Then again, it could be all of these together. Once the nuclear fallout has...

  • Ubik - Folio Society EditionPhilip K Dick
    Ubik - Folio Society Edition
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    A surreal science fiction story, ostensibly set in 1992, Ubik tells the story of an alternative Earth where a range of telepathic abilities have manifested amongst all aspects of society and to counter them, a series of anti-talents have emerged that dampen and suppress these new gifts. Philip K. Di...

  • 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...

  • Bad MonkeyCarl Hiaasen
    Bad Monkey
    by Carl Hiaasen
    General Fiction

    On occasion I see adverts on TV encouraging me to visit America. A collection of Hollywood and TV stars will speak the sights, sounds, tastes and smells that are distinctly American. It seems glamourous, it seems fun. However, when I read crime books set in America or sit down to watch the latest Tr...

  • 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...

  • The Word is MurderAnthony Horowitz
    The Word is Murder
    by Anthony Horowitz
    General Fiction

    I have read a lot of crime fiction and even as a fan you can be critical of how similar  they can  be. The formats and storylines  can bog down into only a few basic formulas . In a less accomplished author this can lead to a bland book that fad es quickly in the memory, but this still  leaves  room...

  • Sixteenth WatchMyke Cole
    Sixteenth Watch
    by Myke Cole
    Science Fiction

    The future could be Utopian, but if the vast majority of science fiction novels have taught us only one thing: it’s going to be Dystopian. The setting of Myke Cole’s Sixteenth Watch promises to be an uplifting one as humans have populated the moon and therefore found the resources needed to power Ea...

  • 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...

  • Mexican GothicSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Mexican Gothic
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    The gothic novel should always have on the cover the image of a women with a ripped and flowing dress running away in terror from an imposing stately house. This is not the cover that  Silvia Moreno-Garcia chose for  Mexican  Gothic,  but it could so easily have been. The story  begins as pure gothi...

  • Red NoiseJohn P Murphy
    Red Noise
    by John P Murphy
    Science Fiction

    There is a certain type of film that I love. It has a central character wronged in some way and this gives them the flimsy premise to basically kill all the bad guys.  Death Wish ,  John Wick ,  The Equaliser , to name  bu t a few.  Red Noise  by John P Murphy is the science fiction  equivalent  wit...

  • Bystander 27Rik Hoskin
    Bystander 27
    by Rik Hoskin
    Fantasy

    The past twenty years or so has seen a massive increase in the visibility of Superheroes. The likes of Superman , Batman and Spiderman have been around for decades, but the market is so rich that many niche properties are having their time in the sun. The boom has not only promoted Superheroes, but...

  • Alpha OmegaNicholas Bowling
    Alpha Omega
    by Nicholas Bowling
    Science Fiction

    If you read enough Near Future fiction you will start to see a trend. The future is not orange at all but bleak and a little depressing. It could be giant robots, aliens or the undead. There always seems to be something around the corner that is more dystopian  than utopian. I can take all the UFOs...

  • Grave SecretsAlice James
    Grave Secrets
    by Alice James
    General Fiction

    Walk into my house and  glance at  my bookshelves and you will find an  eclectic  mix of books. My favourite genres are  represented  heavily in science fiction and fantasy, but I also have loads of crime, history,  biographies  and  general  fiction. This  cannot be said of my sister’s shelves that...

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

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

  • The PhlebotomistChris Panatier
    The Phlebotomist
    by Chris Panatier
    Fantasy

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

  • The Seven Deaths of Evelyn HardcastleStuart Turton
    Science Fiction

    I am not an argumentative fellow and the only two full on blowouts I can remember are well within the geek sphere. Who was the actor alongside Harrison Ford at the start of  Raiders of the Lost Ark  and how does time travel work? I may have been wrong about Alfred  Molina  but I am right about time...

  • Squeeze MeCarl Hiaasen
    Squeeze Me
    by Carl Hiaasen
    General Fiction

    Murder, kidnapping, shootings, stabbings; not an amusing set of words, but in the hands of a great author, crime can be funny. In fact, crime can be hilarious. The crime comedy when done well is one of my favourite genres and Carl Hiaasen has being doing it well for years. He has combined wit and vi...

  • Red DustYoss
    Red Dust
    by Yoss
    Science Fiction

    For those who haven't heard of him, Yoss is a Cuban science fiction author. He's one of Cuba's most iconic figures in literature, having written over twenty books so far, run science fiction workshops and even found time to be the lead singer of Heavy Metal band Tenaz. Red Dust (translated from Span...

  • The Second BellGabriela Houston
    The Second Bell
    by Gabriela Houston
    Fantasy

    If the past twelve months has taught us anything is that rules will only work  so well . One person may stick  fast the letter of the law, another may bend them a little,  an other may ignore them completely.  All three believe they are doing the right thing and all three may be at odds with one ano...

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

    Have you ever sat down and read some Fairy Tales to your children? Not the  sanitised  versions that we read today, but the  originals.  If you have, you  gave  the kids nightmares a s  these are stories  not about happiness and magic but o f creatures  and  consequences . If you do something naught...

  • New PompeiiDaniel Godfrey
    New Pompeii
    by Daniel Godfrey
    Science Fiction

    For many  people,  the leading writer of speculative fiction i n the 90s  and 00s  was Michael Cr ic h t on who was able to marry a level of scientific reality with some  outrageous  ideas. A theme park full of dinosaurs, intelligent apes, nanobots that can kill? He was able to deliver on all of the...

  • Aliens: InfiltratorWeston Ochse
    Aliens: Infiltrator
    by Weston Ochse
    Science Fiction

    The Alien franchise can be seen as one of two things: an awesome series of Space based horror and action stories, or a textbook example of Corporate Malfeasance. The Aliens may be the most reoccurring characters, but the second is not Ripley, it is Weyland Industries. This corporation pops up in var...

  • Day ZeroC Robert Cargill
    Day Zero
    by C Robert Cargill
    Science Fiction

    Asimov’s ‘Three laws of Robotics’ have become synonymous with any book that contains robots. Nearly all these books will not allow their robots to hurt humans, but what happens if these rules broke? In C. Robert Cargill’s  Day Zero  the millions of robots that exist have full artificial intelligence...

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

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

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

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

  • The Maleficent SevenCameron Johnston
    The Maleficent Seven
    by Cameron Johnston
    Fantasy

    As you grow older you start to realise that people are not black and white, but shades of grey. The nicest people can do terrible things and even bad people can sometimes be good. This argument is hard to use with the likes of Demonologists, Necromancers, Mad Scientists and Vampires. What type of ev...

  • Twenty Five to LifeR. W. W. Greene
    Twenty Five to Life
    by R. W. W. Greene
    Science Fiction

    Dystopian fiction has been becoming increasingly popular in recent years, probably because many of us can see the tell-tale signs of it coming along the tracks in real life. This is a depressing thought, but one worth exploring. How will humans continue to survive on a planet they are poisoning? Som...

  • Velvet Was the NightSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Velvet Was the Night
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    General Fiction

    I love to read as books transport me to places and worlds that I have never been and can never go. In most cases these are fantasy or science fiction worlds, but there are a lot of places in our own history that seem just as exciting and different. 1970s Mexico is nothing like the country I grew up...

  • Rory Hobble and the Voyage to HaligogenMaximilian Hawker
    Science Fiction

    I remember being a young science fiction reader and scouring the shelves of my local library looking for works designed for my age group. The only one I ever remember getting my hands on was  Batteries Not Included  by Seth McCoy. The modern 8–14-year-old reader has so much more choice, from differe...

  • Certain Dark ThingsSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Certain Dark Things
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    It was not until I browsed my sister’s bookshelves that I realised that vampire fiction is its own genre. She is a prolific reader and seems to exclusively read vampire books. I asked her to lend me some and I realised why you can read so many ‘similar’ books and nothing else, as the books can be va...

  • Inhibitor PhaseAlastair Reynolds
    Inhibitor Phase
    by Alastair Reynolds
    Science Fiction

    When I talk to readers who do not like Science Fiction, I have found they say their minds just cannot get around the fantastical nature of the ideas contained within. They cannot understand sentient spaceships or aliens that think differently to ourselves. I try to point out that the genre is a vast...

  • WhitesandsJohann Thorsson
    Whitesands
    by Johann Thorsson
    Horror

    The fictional detective always seems to have some flaw that follows them through life preventing them from being happy or doing their best work. This could be drink, gambling, or drugs. In the case of Johann Thorsson’s Detective John Dark it is far worse, a missing daughter. For two years he has abu...

  • Stolen EarthJ. T. Nicholas
    Stolen Earth
    by J. T. Nicholas
    Science Fiction

    Space travel is often painted in a glamourous fashion. Sleek ships sail among the stars as the crew members go on daring adventures, but the reality would be much more cramped. The planet Earth may feel a little crowded at times, but compared to being in a space craft, we can walk for miles and brea...

  • Far from the Light of HeavenTade Thompson
    Far from the Light of Heaven
    by Tade Thompson
    Science Fiction

    The locked room scenario is a classic tool in crime fiction that most great authors in that genre have tried at least once. The premise is that someone has apparently been murdered in a room that no one else can get in or out of. This may mean that the killing should have been impossible, or that th...

  • Deep DiveRon Walters
    Deep Dive
    by Ron Walters
    Science Fiction

    If you had the chance to start over again from an early age and know what you do now, would you take it? A chance to live your life again; buy those shares in Apple, know some of the exam questions and football results? The answer for me is no. 80 years more life is not worth risking my family. What...

  • 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...

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

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

  • The House of Sorrowing StarsBeth Cartwright
    The House of Sorrowing Stars
    by Beth Cartwright
    Horror

    Grief can feel like a weight that you carry with you. The luckiest people will feel the weight get lighter as time moves on, always there, but more bearable over time. In The House of Sorrowing Stars by Beth Cartwright there is a home that captures all the real stories of sorrow in its vast library....

  • 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...

  • The Kaiju Preservation SocietyJohn Scalzi
    Science Fiction

    What are you going to do if Godzilla arrives. You must have a plan in mind. At least one for home and one for the office. I used to have a great plan that would see me have an almost 100% chance of surviving, but then I went and started a family. Now I have no chance as their little legs are just no...

  • Nettle and BoneT Kingfisher
    Nettle and Bone
    by T Kingfisher
    Fantasy

    I have read many genre books and I see trends in what is currently popular or going through a period of high quality. The dark gothic fairy tale is having a moment in the sun as I have recently read some excellent stories that hark back to a feel of past fables but are their own modern take. T Kingf...

  • The Splendid CityKaren Heuler
    The Splendid City
    by Karen Heuler
    Fantasy

    Urban Fantasy has become a staple of the Fantasy genre in recent years, and you are as likely to find a book about a necromancer librarian or zombie private detective walking around a modern city as you are elves and dwarves in a version of the past. I thought I had seen it all; teddy bear detective...

  • Together We BurnIsabel Ibanez
    Together We Burn
    by Isabel Ibanez
    Fantasy

    I love fantasy novels, especially when an author takes the genre in a different direction.  Together We Burn by Isabel Ibanez is a fantasy book unlike the others. The difference is that this fantasy world is based on Latin culture and the dragons are hunted and caught. Once captured this menace is n...

  • 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...

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

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

  • UpgradeBlake Crouch
    Upgrade
    by Blake Crouch
    Science Fiction

    It starts off sensibly with tweaking a DNA strand here or there to prevent a hereditary illness. Who could argue against that? However, it is not long before people realise that they can use the same tools to make sure that a child has their father’s eye colour and Mother’s hair. Why even bother pic...

  • The Stones of BloodDavid Fisher
    The Stones of Blood
    by David Fisher
    Science Fiction

    The Target imprint of Doctor Who novels is like nectar to any fan as they offer a punchy adaptation of almost every episode of the series up to the mid-90s, but there were a few missing. Fear not, as BBC Books are not only releasing adaptations of newer episodes but are also looking to fill in the g...

  • The Revenge of Joe WildAndrew Komarnyckyj
    The Revenge of Joe Wild
    by Andrew Komarnyckyj
    General Fiction

    There are many genres out there and you can find yourself as a reader sticking to the same ones. I always noticed the large collection of Westerns and books on historic America in my public library growing up. Most of them in large print, which suggested that the audience was older than my pre-teen...

  • CackleRachel Harrison
    Cackle
    by Rachel Harrison
    Fantasy

    Witches have a bad reputation, green skinned, covered in warts and prone to stealing children so that they can use their bones for broth. People feared the idea of witches so much that they would place innocent people on trial. Don’t they realise that if witches were as powerful as they thought, the...

  • 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...

  • Spells for ForgettingAdrienne Young
    Spells for Forgetting
    by Adrienne Young
    Fantasy

    Having grown up in a village, life there had its pros and its cons. There is a real sense of community, and everyone knows each other. Great, but also not so great. Any small incident can become gossip, no matter how benign, so I can only imagine what would happen should a fire break out and a body...

  • Beyond the Burn LinePaul McAuley
    Beyond the Burn Line
    by Paul McAuley
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction is a brilliant tool for pondering what happens after the inevitable fall of humans. There is only so long that the Earth can sustain us, but that does not mean that other civilisations may not develop after. Beyond the Burn Line by Paul McAuley is a Sci Fi mystery told from the persp...

  • 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...

  • Legends and LattesTravis Baldree
    Legends and Lattes
    by Travis Baldree
    Fantasy

    What is Comfy Fantasy? It is a new name for the type of fantasy that does not have you on edge all the time. As a genre fantasy can often feel epic, but also stressful. The heroes on the run from a darkness they cannot fathom, or a fellowship were hardly anyone can be trusted. Sometimes you just wan...

  • World Running DownAl Hess
    World Running Down
    by Al Hess
    Science Fiction

    If Science Fiction is to be believed the only bright thing about the future will be the burning rays of the sun beaming down to burn our skin. The futures grim, the futures dystopian. However, sci fi also tells us that humans will do what it takes to survive. Despite inescapable heat and roving band...

  • CelestialM D Lachlan
    Celestial
    by M D Lachlan
    Science Fiction

    There are many roads to enlightenment. You can spend decades mastering the art of meditation, becoming one with the universe. You can seek to achieve the divine through the depraved, in acts so vial that you push through what is acceptable into the other. Any of the routes take commitment and none o...

  • What Moves the DeadT Kingfisher
    What Moves the Dead
    by T Kingfisher
    Horror

    There has been somewhat of a renewed interest in all things fungi since the Last of Us depicted a post-apocalyptic world ravaged by such an infection that could spread to humans. It's one of those things that at first glance seems worryingly within the realm of possibility, all too well described in...

  • The ThisAdam Roberts
    The This
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Social Media has changed the world we live in today by accelerating the polarisation of opinion. No longer is a debate a two-way conversation between people discussing their own point of view, but a slanging match in which neither side can see the others’ point of view. Until the last couple of year...

  • Blood of the SerpentS M Stirling
    Blood of the Serpent
    by S M Stirling
    Fantasy

    Bringing back classic character is a wise decision as you already have a built-in fan base and the potential to make new fans. Who does not want to read more Sherlock Holmes? But it is fraught with dangers. Suddenly you have Winnie the Pooh and The Grinch starring in horror films. In some cases, the...

  • WormholeEric Brown
    Wormhole
    by Eric Brown
    Science Fiction

    Imagine the sacrifice required to sign up for a long-term mission into the depth of space. You are to be cryogenically frozen for 80 years and will awake to a new world. It could be that this is what you wanted all along. A chance at a new life free from the Old Earth, but they have only gone and br...

  • City of Last ChancesAdrian Tchaikovsky
    City of Last Chances
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    I have read more than my fair share of fantasy novels and I love them. As a rule, they fall into a couple of camps on how they are narrated – from a single point of view, or through the eyes of several people, normally 3-7. Leaping from one character and back again works in the genre as it gives you...

  • Untamed ShoreSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Untamed Shore
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    General Fiction

    One of the wonderful things about reading is finding that next great author that you love. You read one of their books and instantly spend the next few days hunting down their back catalogue. Experience has taught me not to read too many of these in a row as you start to see parallels in the books –...

  • Black WolfKathleen Kent
    Black Wolf
    by Kathleen Kent
    General Fiction

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

  • Squeaky CleanCallum Mcsorley
    Squeaky Clean
    by Callum Mcsorley
    General Fiction

    The crime genre comes in many flavours from the cosy murder mystery set in a picturesque English village to a crime noir of 50s Chicago. The setting can be near or far, the tone light or dark, but they all have one thing in common – crime and that crime is often a murder. Callum McSorley has decided...

  • The Keep WithinJ L Worrad
    The Keep Within
    by J L Worrad
    Fantasy

    There is something about Low Fantasy that makes it such a good genre. It is not the violence, swearing or muckraking, it is the people. Reading a fantasy book where the heroes are not in white and the villains in black. In J. L Worrad’s The Keep Within the nominal hero is one Sir Harrance 'Harry' La...

  • The Curious Affair of the Missing MummiesLisa Tuttle

    One of the many lessons that I have learned in life is that you do not mess with Mummies. Either kind. Annoying a new mother who is trying to get their child onto the bus if dangerous and only equalled by an antient Egyptian Mummy rising from the dead. The Mummies in Lisa Tuttle’s The Curious Case o...

  • In the Lives of PuppetsT J Klune
    Science Fiction

    I am all for a retelling of a classic story, but some of them are not that close to the source material. Pinocchio is having a renaissance with two recent film adaptations and now a new cyber future take in T J Klune’s In the Lives of Puppets . I can see a puppet like creature, something resembling...

  • Mr BreakfastJonathan Carroll
    Mr Breakfast
    by Jonathan Carroll
    Fantasy

    Breakfast is my favourite meal of the day as I can indulge in some food I shouldn’t really be eating from sugary cereal to a full English breakfast. There are other more sensible options; porridge or bran flakes. The wonderful thing is that I can choose each day what I want. What I am unable to do i...

  • Starter VillainJohn Scalzi
    Starter Villain
    by John Scalzi
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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,...

  • The Zygon InvasionPeter Harness
    The Zygon Invasion
    by Peter Harness
    Science Fiction

    Doctor Who has saved the solar system on countless occasions and planet Earth even more than this, but some of these saves felt a little.... minor. Alien races trying their arm at taking over Earth with nary a plan worth writing on the back of a psychic beermat. Sometimes though the stakes are big,...

  • The CrashRobert Peston
    The Crash
    by Robert Peston
    General Fiction

    The crime genre is huge, and a protagonist can become involved in solving a murder in numerous ways. Being a police officer or PI makes sense, being an elderly lady or vicar less so, but authors still manage somehow – to remarkable success. Another easy option is a journalist. Their job is already t...

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

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

  • The Graveyard ShiftMaria Lewis
    The Graveyard Shift
    by Maria Lewis
    Horror

    I love listening to the radio, but even I struggle when it gets late at night. Suddenly the airwaves are packed with novelty DJs using all their shtick to ‘entertain’ the few remaining listeners. It is even worse if you live in London, when the light fades the pirate radios stations come out to play...

  • Silent KeyLaurel Hightower
    Silent Key
    by Laurel Hightower
    Horror

    Listen to your kids. It can be hard sometimes as they can speak absolute nonsense, but they also speak the truth, and they may need you to listen. Perhaps they wake at night and tell you that things are not right in the house, you can dismiss this as childish fantasies, but their fears could be base...

  • SaturnaliaStephanie Feldman
    Saturnalia
    by Stephanie Feldman
    Horror

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

  • The Red Scholar's WakeAliette de Bodard
    The Red Scholar's Wake
    by Aliette de Bodard
    Science Fiction

    Love is love and that is truer in science fiction than any other genre as you can fall in love with anyone or anything. Someone of the same species, an alien or even a spaceship. With AI advancing who is to say that one day their personality will not appeal, couple that to an avatar they can create...

  • A Stroke of the PenTerry Pratchett
    A Stroke of the Pen
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    They say that you should never meet your heroes, lest they disappoint, but I have met several of my favourite authors over the years and have always had a pleasant experience. I never had the chance to meet Sir Terry Pratchett which was a shame as he was, like for many readers of genre fiction, one...

  • Three Eight OneAliya Whiteley
    Three Eight One
    by Aliya Whiteley
    Science Fiction

    As a someone who studied history, I am fascinated by the past, but also the evolution of studying the past. History as we know it adapts and changes with the current way of thinking. Sometimes you must sit back and remember that things were different back then, that opinions and attitudes were just...

  • The Unmaking of June FarrowAdrienne Young
    The Unmaking of June Farrow
    by Adrienne Young
    Science Fiction

    I love time travel stories, but the entire concept is a paradox. It just cannot happen. What happens to the version of you that was in the past/present once you have travelled? It can be hard to even think about it, but what happens if you live this paradox? The Farrow woman have all been cursed wit...

  • Captain Marvel Shadow CodeGilly Segal
    Science Fiction

    Any fan of the Marvelverse will understand there are various aspects to it. You have your traditional superhero tales, but also those set-in space, or ones that feature magic. Captain Marvel has always been a character who spans them all. Captain Carol Danvers has seen it all in her adventures acros...

  • Boneshops & BonedustTravis Baldree
    Boneshops & Bonedust
    by Travis Baldree
    Fantasy

    I have read a lot of Fantasy fiction over the years and have picked up trends as time passes from the classic High Fantasy epics of the 80s to the gritty Low Fantasy of more recent times. A new trend is in town, and I see Travis Baldree at the vanguard of Cosy Fantasy. Legends & Lattes was a sfbook....

  • The Lost CauseCory Doctorow
    The Lost Cause
    by Cory Doctorow
    Science Fiction

    As a long-term science fiction fan, it sometimes feels like we are living the books that I grew up reading. Not the flying cars and cure for cancer stories, but the ones that warned about humankind’s tendency to destroy itself. It feels like only a matter of years until Gort rocks up to give us one...

  • Crucible of ChaosSebastien De Castell
    Crucible of Chaos
    by Sebastien De Castell
    Fantasy

    The locked room scenario is a classic of the crime genre and does not have to mean just a locked room but the idea of a contained place that holds all the victims, suspects, and clues within. A monastery perched atop a remote island only passable when the tide is low would be a perfect place for thi...

  • The Last Phi HunterSalinee Goldenberg
    The Last Phi Hunter
    by Salinee Goldenberg
    Fantasy

    I love fantasy, from the low to the high, but I love it even more when it is tackled in an interesting way. The Last Phi Hunter by Salinee Goldenberg has all the elements of High Fantasy, packed with more magic than a Paul Daniels Appreciation Society AGM, but this is not a book of wizards and elves...

  • 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 Briar Book of the DeadA G Slatter
    Fantasy

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

  • Nobody's AngelJack Clark
    Nobody's Angel
    by Jack Clark
    General Fiction

    I am of a certain age, and I recall that the 1990s was a good decade, a time of societal development and change for the better. I used to look down on those who rated the 70s as a fun decade as it seemed grim to me, but as I get older the 90s was as grim as the 70s and I am sure that the 2010s will...

  • 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...

  • Sword of the War GodTim Hodkinson
    Sword of the War God
    by Tim Hodkinson
    Fantasy

    There are ways of writing a historic epic. The current trend is more towards long drawn-out sagas over several books, sometimes up to twenty or more. This allows you to really get to know the characters and read about them for decades, keeping you and the author busy for years. They are great but ca...

  • Service ModelAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Service Model
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Science Fiction

    The world will not die with a bang, but with a whimper. Similarly, it won’t be the robots that uprise and destroy humans, but our own incompetence when it comes to programming. Build and programme things correctly and everything should be fine, but this is modern life and doing things correctly seem...

  • GorseSam K Horton
    Gorse
    by Sam K Horton
    Fantasy

    History is facinating, but we often focus on the big characters, the big battles. Whilst King’s were being beheaded and bombs dropped, people kept on peopleling. The history of the normal person can be forgotten, but we exist too. What happened to the normal person on the street when organised relig...

  • The Glass BoxJ Michael Straczynski
    The Glass Box
    by J Michael Straczynski
    General Fiction

    Some of the best speculative fiction starts with an idea that is not far removed from the normal, a simple nudge to reality can lead to many places. In the case of J. Michael Straczynski’s The Glass Box , this place is a psychiatric hospital. The reason for being sent there? New government legislati...

  • The Knife and the SerpentTim Pratt
    Science Fiction

    As a child you read books and imagine that you may be that child who is whisked away on an adventure. Perhaps you will be the chosen one to be taken through a magical wardrobe or told you are a wizard. By the time you are studying for a PhD such flippancy is no longer part of your character, so how...

  • The Last Gifts of the UniverseRiley August
    Science Fiction

    Subgenres come and go and one that I have recently been enjoying is ‘Cosy Fantasy,’ what does that mean? Basically, fantasy with some of the trepidation taken out, a chance to get to know the characters and enjoy a fantasy setting in peace. Riley August’s The Last Gifts of the Universe opens my worl...

  • The Last ShieldCameron Johnston
    The Last Shield
    by Cameron Johnston
    Fantasy

    What is Fantasy if it is not epic battles against elves and orcs? Fans of the genre know that it can be a lot of other things than just that. Some of the best modern fantasy that I have read have been smaller stories set in fantasy worlds. How about a Die Hard-like experience set in a castle where a...

  • A Better WorldSarah Langan
    A Better World
    by Sarah Langan
    Horror

    A person brings a piece of themselves with them when they read a book. Your background, beliefs and current situation can all inform the story. There are books where it does not really matter who you are, but some books will hit home harder for those who feel a connection. A Better World by Sarah La...

  • InspirationDavid Churcher-Muria
    Inspiration
    by David Churcher-Muria
    Science Fiction

    There are all diverse types of people that make a successful working environment. If everyone were the same, we would all be doing the same thing and loads of stuff would not get done. Some people like to stand out in the crowd and pitch ideas, others are happy to lead. Engineer may be the second in...

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

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

  • The Escher ManT R Napper
    The Escher Man
    by T R Napper
    Science Fiction

    Calling your book The Escher Man is a bold move, but a move that T. R. Napper made. The name conjures up imagery from the artist of staircases to nowhere that lead back to the start. How does that effect the man eternally made to walk these steps? Throw in some Cyberpunk future and memory manipulati...

  • Ghost of the Neon GodT R Napper
    Ghost of the Neon God
    by T R Napper
    Science Fiction

    I have a soft spot for cyberpunk, the gritty noir feel mixed with high end science fiction. Like many subgenres it can be dismissed as a passing phase, in this case from the 80s, but fans know that there are still exceptional stories out there written today about crying androids or buildings that mu...

  • Shoestring TheoryMariana Costa
    Shoestring Theory
    by Mariana Costa
    Horror

    The creation of a new subgenre comes fraught with danger, there may be a good reason it did not arise before. I am seeing an increase in what can be called Cosy Fantasy, novels that have many of the tropes of the genre but concentrate on character interaction over the action. The threat is that Fant...

  • Unto leviathanRichard Paul Russo
    Unto leviathan
    by Richard Paul Russo
    Science Fiction

    Unto Leviathan was originally released back in 2001, under the title Ship of fools , winning the Philip K Dick award in the process. It's since been re-released by Orbit under the current title. The generational ship Aragonos  travels the galaxy, looking for signs of life and a possible place to cal...

  • The Sorcerer and the NecromancerSusan Ann Walker
    The Sorcerer and the Necromancer
    by Susan Ann Walker
    Fantasy

    I adore the fantasy genre and as someone who reads it a lot, I have seen the ebbs and flows in the genre over the years. There have always been outliers, but there is a certain style of fantasy that dominated for each of the decades. Until recently, I have read a lot of Low Fantasy, a genre low on m...

  • 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 Serpent Called MercyRoanne Lau
    The Serpent Called Mercy
    by Roanne Lau
    Fantasy

    There are shifts in the Fantasy genre that perhaps only the ardent fan will notice. The epics of Tolkien and the 80s are still being written, but now there are more intimate stories that follow one or two characters as they graft in their small way among the wider Fantasy world. These are often cosy...

  • A Palace Near the WindAi Jiang
    Fantasy

    How do you like your science fiction and fantasy? I will admit to being someone who loves a simple and accessible tale, but the genres can offer so much more than this. There are few genres better equipped to take a reader to truly alien places, to worlds that feel like they were designed in a fever...

  • The ContestJeff Macfee
    The Contest
    by Jeff Macfee
    General Fiction

    Puzzle me this. Whilst other kids were outside climbing trees or knocking a football around, you would often find me indoors or under a tree reading a book or doing puzzles. That has led to two lifelong consequences; a love of puzzles and a problem with weight. Puzzler was always my favourite, and I...

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

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

  • The Country Under HeavenFrederic S Durbin
    The Country Under Heaven
    by Frederic S Durbin
    Fantasy

    Who does not love a genre mash up? The industry certainly does as they ride that Romantasy train all the way to the bank. Although I do not mind a whimsical fantasy, I would not consider it my favourite genre. A mash up of genres needs a little more bite to interest me. How about Westerns with the O...

  • Midnight StreetsPhil Lecomber
    Midnight Streets
    by Phil Lecomber
    General Fiction

    Agatha Christie would have us believe that inter-War murder was cosy, taking place in a picturesque village or on a mode of transport whilst taking in the sites of the Grand Tour. Whilst Marple was eating muffins and Poirot was drinking Prosecco, most of us would have been thrown into the daily grin...

  • The Grimoire Grammar School Parent Teacher AssociationCaitlin Rozakis

    I am not one to get involved with politics at school. I am one of those parents who chooses to be ambivalent to it all, probably to the annoyance of others. The problem is I can see the temptation to get involved in the drama, a small way to add a little spark to your life. I have enough spark in my...

  • ScalesChristopher Hinz
    Scales
    by Christopher Hinz
    Science Fiction

    War, what is it good for? Not a lot, but depressingly it is a real driver of innovation. What better way to inspire the greatest minds in the country than to task them with more efficient ways to kill the enemy? Arms races happen all over the place from conventional gun and bullets to newer types of...

  • The Last QuarryMax Allan Collins
    The Last Quarry
    by Max Allan Collins
    General Fiction

    Never say never when it comes to being a hired hitman. You may not want to kill for money anymore, but if you are anything like Quarry in The Last Quarry by Max Allan Collins you may just end up getting in a situation that relies on your old skills and if you get paid for it all the better. This may...

  • 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 is a bo...

  • 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...

  • Songs of the SlainTim Lebbon
    Songs of the Slain
    by Tim Lebbon
    Fantasy

    Conan was a character that had a rich and long life. You may be a fan of the films and only imagine the man as a loincloth wearing barbarian, cleaving the heads of various cult leaders. That is a large part of his appeal, but he was also a bandit leader, pirate and eventually a King. In fact, he was...

  • Third Loch from the sunRex Burke
    Science Fiction

    I stumbled across this one at WorldCon in Glasgow last year. You know how it is, wandering the dealer's room, picking up flyers, trying to avoid eye contact with anyone who looks like they want to talk about their self-published epic. But I’d previously attended a panel about Scottish sci-fi and saw...

  • Annie BotSierra Greer
    Annie Bot
    by Sierra Greer
    Science Fiction

    I picked this book up after learning about it being short-listed and eventually winning the Arthur C Clarke Award . It's proof of not judging a book by its cover because I'd have completely passed it by sitting on a table, with its shockingly bright pink swirlyness and quote by Sheena Patel that say...

  • 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...

  • Outlaw PlanetM. R. Carey
    Outlaw Planet
    by M. R. Carey
    Science Fiction

    M. R. Carey has built a career out of refusing to do the obvious thing twice. Across thirty-odd books he has slipped from the quiet apocalypse of The Girl With All the Gifts to the medieval strangeness of Once Was Willem , never quite landing where you expect him to, and Outlaw Planet is another sid...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...