Comedy

As you might expect, comedy is a sub-genre that as you would expect contains a good deal of humour as a major plot device. Some of the stories parady the genre's conventions for comic effect and satarize conventions.

Books Reviewed

  • Space BroomsA G Rodriguez
    Space Brooms
    by A G Rodriguez
    Science Fiction

    There is more than one tradition in science fiction. You can have your epic space battles, but here in Blighty we have the tradition of an every person getting wrapped up in something far above their pay grade. Arthur Dent had his towel, and Johnny Gomez has his mop and bucket. It can’t just be spac...

  • The Last Adventure of Constance VerityA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    That one time you saved the world with stick with you for a lifetime. You may bask in the glory one day and wake up with cold sweats the next, either way, the event will be forged in your memories forever. What about two times? Three or four? Do you think that James Bond can remember one supervillai...

  • Constance Verity Saves the WorldA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    Constance Verity is anything but normal, blessed as a child to live an adventurous life, this may sound exciting, but the reality is much different. Now in her 30s, she is fed up with having to save the world all the time and just wants some normal downtime. By Constance Verity Saves the World , som...

  • Constance Verity Destroys the UniverseA Lee Martinez
    Science Fiction

    By this, her third outing, Constance Verity has saved the world countless times and the Universe itself just as many. Fighting off otherworldly threats is an everyday occurrence. It is the more mundane things in life that worry Constance like assuring her best friend’s wedding is not ruined by mole...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Low ActionAndrew Cartmel
    Low Action
    by Andrew Cartmel
    General Fiction

    Punk was a  short-lived  musical genre and if you have listened to some of it you can probably tell why. It was raw, edgy and loud, but most of the songs were not that great and it was more about attitude than  being able to  sing. The songs that you may lik e from that genre may be post- P unk or N...

  • Space TeamBarry Hutchison
    Space Team
    by Barry Hutchison
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • Cheddar Luck Next TimeBeth Cato
    Cheddar Luck Next Time
    by Beth Cato
    General Fiction

    I find most comfy crime novels an oxymoron as they usually deal with a hideous murder. The cosiness comes in the telling and the setting. I blame Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple books with that inquisitive pensioner solving crimes that were hideous, gruesome, committed for money, revenge, or passion....

  • 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...

  • Maeve FlyC J Leede
    Maeve Fly
    by C J Leede
    Horror

    It makes me comfortable to think that we all have small voices in our heads on occasion telling us to do something. The important thing is to only listen to them when they are giving good advice. Ask that person out – sounds scary, but a good plan. Put that spoon in between your teeth and twist – ba...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • The Dead Take the A TrainCassandra Khaw
    The Dead Take the A Train
    by Cassandra Khaw
    Science Fiction

    Certain jobs can change you, the things that you see, the things that you must do. You may become closed off, hard, brittle, or just a little bit over the edge. Julie Crews has become all these things and more as a local Psychic Operative. Living off a diet of cocaine, regret and apprentices who onl...

  • StringersChris Panatier
    Stringers
    by Chris Panatier
    Science Fiction

    Comedy combined with Science Fiction is rare because it is so hard to do. When it clicks though it is worthwhile as you get some absolute classics such as Red Dwarf or Hitchhiker's . Those are mighty large shoes to try and fill, but Chris Panatier is giving it a go in Stringers , a book that feels l...

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

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

  • Lucky DayChuck Tingle
    Lucky Day
    by Chuck Tingle
    Horror

    Do you believe in luck? Gambling sites and Casinos hope you do as you believe there is a chance that you will win big. You may just do that, but there is a reason some of the richest people in the UK own gambling websites, the house always wins. You may win big, but elsewhere someone is losing big,...

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

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

  • 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 UndetectablesCourtney Smyth
    The Undetectables
    by Courtney Smyth
    Fantasy

    Advances in forensic science can feel like magic from the discovery that we all had unique fingerprints to the use of DNA to catch criminals, but what would you do in a world were magic exists? Can science be used to solve crimes committed by magic? The Undetectables believe so, they use their scien...

  • The Loose EndDave Dwonch
    The Loose End
    by Dave Dwonch
    General Fiction

    Noir comes in many flavours, not just 1940s black and white detective. There have been classic noir novels that have reflected the decades they were written. The 90s noir I enjoyed had a bright Hollywood gleam to it; that was only shone to hide the grime set shallow below the surface. The Loose End...

  • 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...

  • This Book is Full of SpidersDavid Wong
    Horror

    Spiders seem to tap into a primeval fear inside humans. Perhaps in the days of cavemen there were 20 foot spiders that ate those that travelled at night? What I do know is that the average domestic spider in the UK is unlikely to spring off the wall and eat through your skull. This set of events is...

  • 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...

  • Double FeatureDonald E Westlake
    Double Feature
    by Donald E Westlake
    General Fiction

    The movie industry is seen as all glitz and glamour, but just beneath the surface Donald E. Westlake suggests that it is made up of lies and even murder. What type of person is drawn to an industry where you pretend to be fake – fake people. In Double Feature, two of Westlake’s novellas have been br...

  • Mostly HarmlessDouglas Adams
    Mostly Harmless
    by Douglas Adams
    Science Fiction

    Mostly Harmless is a novel by Douglas Adams, published in 1992, and the fifth book of what Adams himself liked to call a four-part trilogy: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy . The title derives from a joke early in the series. When Arthur Dent discovers that the entry for Earth in The Hitchhiker'...

  • The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy OmnibusDouglas Adams
    Science Fiction

    This Omnibus Edition Includes the First 4 books in the "Hitchhikers guide Trilogy" 5 book set. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is also the title of the first of five books in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy comedy science fiction series by Douglas Adams. The novel is an adaptation of the f...

  • The Salmon of DoubtDouglas Adams
    The Salmon of Doubt
    by Douglas Adams
    Science Fiction

    I should start with my hand on the table. Douglas Adams is one of my favourite authors. The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is one of my favourite series. I first read it as a teenager, returned to it through various forms including the radio scripts, the television series, the books (of which I ha...

  • Mickey7Edward Ashton
    Mickey7
    by Edward Ashton
    Science Fiction

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

  • And Another ThingEoin Colfer
    And Another Thing
    by Eoin Colfer
    Science Fiction

    And another thing is the sixth novel in the Hitchhikers guide to the galaxy series (created by the late great Douglas Adams) and has been written by the very successful author Eoin Colfer. The Hitchhikers Guide series stands as one of the greatest science fiction series of novels ever to grace the m...

  • HighfireEoin Colfer
    Highfire
    by Eoin Colfer
    Fantasy

    Dragons get a bad press. They may have been known to ransack a few villages and eat people, but if they were left alone, they would not bother you. They are, of course, extinct now. If one or two of them remained where would they hide? Somewhere remote enough to be away from crowds carrying pitchfor...

  • The Sign of NineG. S. Denning
    The Sign of Nine
    by G. S. Denning
    Fantasy

    Warlock Holmes is back. No, not Sherlock, Warlock. If you think about it, what makes more sense; a man who can somehow divine everything from a few clues, or a Warlock who just uses magic to do the same? The Sign of Nine continues the premise that Sir Conan Doyle’s original stories were actually edi...

  • Future's EdgeGareth L Powell
    Future's Edge
    by Gareth L Powell
    Science Fiction

    The Earth has exploded killing all the inhabitants, the only survivors are those humans that happened to be off planet at the time. Does not sound like the start of a fun Science Fiction novel, does it? Douglas Adams would beg to differ and so would Gareth L. Powell. Future’s Edge is the author’s la...

  • How to Sell a Haunted HouseGrady Hendrix
    How to Sell a Haunted House
    by Grady Hendrix
    Horror

    Any house of a decent age is haunted. There are no spectres, but there are ghosts of memories, the people that lived and died there over the years. I grew up in a house that was once a Victorian police station and then a Greengrocers. As I moved out, my parents stayed. When they left, instead of mov...

  • Apparently, Sir Cameron Needs to DieGreer Stothers
    Fantasy

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

  • A Stainless Steel Rat Is BornHarry Harrison
    A Stainless Steel Rat Is Born
    by Harry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    A novel chronicling the beginning of the Stainless Steel Rat's career. Young Jim diGritz has only one abition in life, to become a master criminal. He intentionally gets caught trying to rob a bank so that he will go to jail where he can learn from the masters of crime, only to realize (too late) th...

  • Bill, The Galactic HeroHarry Harrison
    Bill, The Galactic Hero
    by Harry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    Harry Harrison was a genius. The way he managed to use absurdity, satire and slapstick humour to talk about some pretty grim subjects is nothing short of remarkable. Way before Pratchett, Holt, Adams and Naylor, Harrison was creating some of the funniest books on the planet. Bill, the Galactic Hero...

  • The Stainless Steel Rat for PresidentHarry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    The Stainless Steel Rat and Angelina enjoy a belated honeymoon on a planet run by a dictator who rigs elections to get into office, so they set the Rat up as a candidate instead. Very much a satire on banana republic politics and a parody of adventures set in Latin America I regretted buying this bo...

  • The Stainless Steel Rat Wants YouHarry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    Slippery Jim diGriz, the future's master criminal tumed super-spy, is recruiting for an all-out interstellar war! Loathsome, mind sucking creatures from an unknown star are closing in on Earth. Once again it's up to the Stainless Steel Rat to save humanity. In a daring caper packed with action and l...

  • The Stainless Steel Rat's RevengeHarry Harrison
    Science Fiction

    The Stainless Steel Rat gets married, but rapidly gets involved in something that so far has proven impossible in the galaxy - the planet Cliaand has successfully been invading other worlds. Jim is sent to investigate, and discovers the mysterious Grey Men behind Cliaand's success, encounters a worl...

  • Luna for the LuniesIra Nayman
    Luna for the Lunies
    by Ira Nayman
    Science Fiction

    Review by Luis Villazon. Ira Nayman bills himself as the proprietor of the “Alternate Reality News Service”, a sort of Reuters for the multiverse. This collection of short stories is structured like a newspaper, with technology stories, crime reports, obituaries and advice columns supplied by ARNS c...

  • Welcome to the MultiverseIra Nayman
    Science Fiction

    Noomi Rapier is a rookie investigator with the Transdimensional Authority, a force who police the travel between dimensions. When Noomi and her partner "Crash" Chumley find a dead body slumped over an altered transdimensional machine in one of the many dimensions they patrol, they must discover not...

  • The Road to NeverwinterJaleigh Johnson
    The Road to Neverwinter
    by Jaleigh Johnson
    Fantasy

    The tie in novel can have a bad press, a book churned out to steal some of the glory from a popular TV show or film, but I have a soft spot for them. When done well they can expand the universe; tie in novels for the likes of Star Trek, Doctor Who, Star Wars (twice) and many others have given fans c...

  • 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...

  • Hard TimeJodi Taylor
    Hard Time
    by Jodi Taylor
    Science Fiction

    The timeline is fragile. Stand on a butterfly in the Jurassic Era and you may end up returning to a world in which we all have seven arms – useful for multi-tasking. If time travel were available not everybody wou ld respect the past and therefore, it needs to be policed. A subtle and intelligent te...

  • Mechanical FailureJoe Zieja
    Mechanical Failure
    by Joe Zieja
    Science Fiction

    I was quite unprepared for Mechanical Failure . While the blurb mentions it as a "sarcastic adventure", such a description doesn't do justice. Set in the far future after Humanity has spread to the stars and now live in a different Galaxy, mankind has managed to endure Two Hundred years (and countin...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Johannes Cabal the DetectiveJonathan L Howard
    Johannes Cabal the Detective
    by Jonathan L Howard
    Fantasy

    So here we have the return of Johannes Cabal, a little older, maybe a little wiser; at the very least more "complete" than he was, this time he's attempting to steal a rare book in his continued quest to understand how to defeat death. Captured in the act and awaiting execution Cabal is forced to re...

  • Johannes Cabal the Fear InstituteJonathan L Howard
    Johannes Cabal the Fear Institute
    by Jonathan L Howard
    Fantasy

    So here we reach the third novel featuring that acerbic anti hero Johannes Cabal who this time get's recruited by the mysterious Fear Institute to lead an expedition into the Dreamlands - an alternative reality created by peoples dreams. There they must hunt and destroy the dread Phobic Animus - the...

  • 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...

  • 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 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...

  • SupermaxKen Bruen
    Supermax
    by Ken Bruen
    General Fiction

    The pulp crime genre is one of my favourite because it pushes the envelope of what is acceptable in crime. It can be a little too gory, a little too silly, a little too much, but that is what makes it so fun to read. There is a delicate balance between writing a thrilling action crime story that is...

  • Interstellar MegaChefLavanya Lakshminarayan
    Interstellar MegaChef
    by Lavanya Lakshminarayan
    Science Fiction

    I enjoy it when the publishing community gets together and decides to proclaim there is a new subgenre. These are a collection of books that have already been written but are now herded into a common bracket. Romantasy and Cosy Fantasy are doing great, and I have read a few of these. Low stake conse...

  • 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...

  • Confessions of an AntichristMarta Skadi
    General Fiction

    Joining a band is a rite of passage that everyone should try at least once. I got as far as forming a fake band with my mates at university, but then we had no commitment. To really make it you will need to buckle down and learn an instrument and write some songs – or just be a punk band. If you wan...

  • Complete DarknessMatt Adcock
    Complete Darkness
    by Matt Adcock
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction is a crowded market. There are a variety of ways in which a writer can try to tell a story that gives a sense of a possible future. Some of those ways are close to our reality, some are not. Complete Darkness by Matt Adcock certainly offers a glimpse into something futuristic. A worl...

  • The Everlasting Beyond of Eternal HappinessMichael Amos
    Science Fiction

    The Everlasting Beyond of Eternal Happiness reminds me quite a bit of Harry Harrisons "Bill, The Galactic Hero" series, which itself is in part a parody of Heinlein's Starship Troopers - there is a very similar irony running throughout and the book even shares some of the same vernacular. There are...

  • The Fan Who Knew Too MuchNev Fountain
    The Fan Who Knew Too Much
    by Nev Fountain
    General Fiction

    Cozy crime comes in all sizes, but it still has an odd name. The characters may be eccentric, the setting twee, but when it comes down to it, there is still a dead person lying on the carpet. Marple had her village with its higher crime rate than Gotham, Poirot had various summer vacation spots, Jes...

  • 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...

  • The Pale House DevilRichard Kadrey
    The Pale House Devil
    by Richard Kadrey
    Horror

    I read a lot of spooky and downright horrific books in the run up to Halloween this year, but the horror books that work well stick in the mind all year round. The Pale House Devil by Richard Kadrey is not your typical horror novel, nor is it your typical comedy book, or buddy story. This is a book...

  • 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...

  • A Heist Too FarRob Knipe
    A Heist Too Far
    by Rob Knipe
    Fantasy

    A Heist Too Far is a fantasy novel by Rob Knipe. Mallik is a skilled assassin who is very quick on his feet with an even quicker temper, he travels with Dick Swede (aka The Black Moustache) who is nearly famous as a highwayman and Jules Van Jives - a quickly bored elf with an unhealthy obession for...

  • The Fandom of the OperatorRobert Rankin
    The Fandom of the Operator
    by Robert Rankin
    Fantasy

    Robert Rankin is pretty unique amongst the literary world, in many ways he's like a grown up version of Spike Milligan who perhaps has been influenced by Pratchett in a "funny mood". His books are always very easy to read and yet have hidden depths for those who wish to look for them, I've yet to me...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Finders KeepersRuss Colchamiro
    Finders Keepers
    by Russ Colchamiro
    Science Fiction

    Finders Keepers is a comedy scifi novel and the debut of Russ Colchamiro. On a backpacking trip through Europe, Jason Medley and Theo Barnes stumble through hash bars and hangovers; religious zealots and stalkers; food poisoning and thunderstorms; cute girls; overnight trains; fever pitch hallucinat...

  • Love BitesRy Herman
    Love Bites
    by Ry Herman
    Horror

    The best thing about genre fiction is that it provides such a wide array of ideas. Take the  concept  of a vampire novel. You may immediately think of  gothic buildings and lace, but you could easily read a modern vampire novel that is violent and full of action.  Love Bites  by Ry Herman  goes in a...

  • EdenvilleSam Rebelein
    Edenville
    by Sam Rebelein
    Horror

    It is important to choose the place of Higher Education that suits you. You may want to go to one of the old Universities of learning, taking with you high grades and a love of academia. You may want to go somewhere more relaxed or vocational. Where do you go if you are interested in creative writin...

  • Doctor AphraSarah Kuhn
    Doctor Aphra
    by Sarah Kuhn
    Science Fiction

    When an intellectual property becomes huge it can go one of two  ways,  a homogeneous blob of the same stories on repeat, or a vibrant  universe full of different adventures. Star Wars was already massive, but  recently has branched out even wider. This included a reset of the tie in novels and rath...

  • Galactic KeeganScott Innes
    Galactic Keegan
    by Scott Innes
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • JubileeStephen K. Stanford
    Jubilee
    by Stephen K. Stanford
    Science Fiction

    What made people think that the middle of the desert was the right place to build a town like Los Vegas where people from around the world flock to get their vice on? It was the fact that it was in the middle of nowhere, safe from prying eyes and it was desperate to for people to visit. There should...

  • Stars Like UsStephen K. Stanford
    Stars Like Us
    by Stephen K. Stanford
    Science Fiction

    Invent any innovative technology and it won’t be long until someone finds a way to use it to make money via base entertainment. We are talking wine, woman, and song. The same can be said of future worlds; the Emperor may have thought he had an iron grip on all his subjects, but just below the surfac...

  • Clockwork BoysT Kingfisher
    Clockwork Boys
    by T Kingfisher
    Fantasy

    The fantasy genre has the reputation of producing books big enough that you could use as a casual seat, trilogies that you could line up, throw some cushions on top and make into a settee. It does not have to be this way and T Kingfisher has certainly bucked the trend with Clockwork Boys, which come...

  • Nine GoblinsT Kingfisher
    Nine Goblins
    by T Kingfisher
    Fantasy

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

  • Carpe JugulumTerry Pratchett
    Carpe Jugulum
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    Translating the title take a bit better knowledge of Latin than I have (which is close to non). I can understand the Carpe part, but Jugulum? It turns out to mean something like "Go for the Throat" (that's Nanny Ogg's translation, not mine), which could be quite a hint towards the topic of this book...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • JingoTerry Pratchett
    Jingo
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    One of the newer books in the (never-ending) Discworld saga. I'm finding it extremely hard to say anything interesting about this book – not because it's bad, but it's a Discworld novel and …well that's it. It's no worse and no better than all the other Discworld novels. Pratchett is funny, as alway...

  • SnuffTerry Pratchett
    Snuff
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    Sam Vimes is forced to take a holiday in the country and discovers that things are not what they seem in the peaceful village. Once again Pratchett has written a classic with, humour, suspense and sheer wonder. I was hooked from page one and read the whole thing in two days stopping only to eat and...

  • The Shepherds CrownTerry Pratchett
    The Shepherds Crown
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    I've been reading Pratchett books for such a large part of my life. Knowing there will be no more Discworld, no more cheerful yet insightful adventures from the colourful inhabitents of that world on the back of four giant elephants — propelled through space by the Great A'Tuin, is a sad and soberin...

  • 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...

  • Thief of TimeTerry Pratchett
    Thief of Time
    by Terry Pratchett
    Fantasy

    Summertime is Pratchett and Discworld time. Reading while frying in the sun asks for a special kind of book, something that can hold your attention, even while your brain is reaching dangerous temperatures and even while members of the opposite sex, moves around you in small articles of clothing. It...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • The CabinetUn-Su Kim
    The Cabinet
    by Un-Su Kim
    Science Fiction

    I love genre fiction that deals with people who have developed superpowers;  X-Men ,  The 4400 ,  The Boys . All of them have ordinary people gaining extraordinary powers. Some become superheroes, other supervillains. However, what about those mutations that are a little naff? Do you deserve to be s...

  • 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 Last HumanZack Jordan
    The Last Human
    by Zack Jordan
    Science Fiction

    Humans always think we are special when it comes to science fiction. Somehow, we are better than the multitude of other alien races out there. How many times has Kirk used “this human emotion called love,” to win the day, or how often has an invading alien army been conquered by “the common cold”? I...