Books tagged with: corruption

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

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

  • A Thousand SonsGraham McNeill
    A Thousand Sons
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    The Space Wolves, those fiercely loyal and dependable Space Marines are sent to Propsero to enforce the Emperors justice after the Primarch of the Thousand Sons chapter makes a serious mistake that puts the safety of the very birthplace of humanity at risk. The events of this story run parallel with...

  • Alien: Sea of SorrowsJames A Moore
    Alien: Sea of Sorrows
    by James A Moore
    Science Fiction

    The second installment in the new Alien series by Titan books is quiet different from the first and doesn’t quiet fit in the way I expected. Yet, it delivers what any fan of the Alien franchise craves: insane amounts of Xenomorph action. Alien: Sea of Sorrows takes place on LV178, which is what conn...

  • 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...

  • Asks the DreamJames C Stewart
    Asks the Dream
    by James C Stewart
    Science Fiction

    A parallel world action drama with everyone urgently following mission briefings and investigating crimes, Asks the Dream pitches the reader into the centre of a grey shaded struggle where the characters feel cleaner than the corporations they are taking orders from. When it suits her, Charity is a...

  • Black Market MemoriesDavid A Schramm
    Black Market Memories
    by David A Schramm
    Science Fiction

    Black Market Memories is a science fiction novel by David A Schramm. From the third millenium the human race have spread to the stars and intergalactic space explorers have settled on worlds in distant solar systems. 250 light years from earth, the newly settled colony of Jamestown is still adjustin...

  • Children of the ThunderJohn Brunner
    Children of the Thunder
    by John Brunner
    Science Fiction

    Children of the Thunder is a science fiction novel by John Brunner. John Brunner has written a really wonderful book 'THE SHEEP LOOK UP' that I should probably re-read. This book came close but not quite to the despondancy that Earth is supposed to face in the present/near future. There is developin...

  • Crashing HeavenAl Robertson
    Crashing Heaven
    by Al Robertson
    Science Fiction

    Today we are all too familiar with the assault of digital information and various forms of media which work hard to blur the definition of reality. Robertson has created a world where that idea is pushed to its disturbing conclusion. On the Station, where the remnants of humanity orbit a toxic world...

  • Creation MachineAndrew Bannister
    Creation Machine
    by Andrew Bannister
    Science Fiction

    I’m always guilty of making snap judgements of books and their covers. Sci-fi covers don’t tend to help. Andrew Bannister’s The Creation Machine is not going to draw you in with its generic spaceship framed by a generic planet, and the woefully reductive, sensationalist logline of ‘It helped create...

  • Daylight on Iron MountainDavid Wingrove
    Daylight on Iron Mountain
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    Daylight on Iron Mountain is the second book in David Wingrove's epic re-imagining of his Chung Kuo series and follows on from the events in the incredible novel Son of Heaven , I seriously recommend you read that novel first. Although we still have the characters of Jack, Mary and their family - wh...

  • DebrisJo Anderton
    Debris
    by Jo Anderton
    Science Fiction

    Tanyana has the innate talent to manipulate the very particles that hold matter together, as one of the most skilled pionners in a far-future society she can craft almost anything with just her concentration. An accident however brings her whole life crashing down and she is virtually cast out of th...

  • Earth SinkIlyan Lavanway
    Earth Sink
    by Ilyan Lavanway
    Science Fiction

    Earth Sink is a science fiction apocalyptic vision by Ilyan Lavanway. War has broken out on the planet of Antecedeon, a seemingly perfect alien world where peace and harmony have reigned for countless generations. A group calling themselves the New Order have grown bored and fed up with perfection a...

  • Echoes of the well of SoulsJack L Chalker
    Echoes of the well of Souls
    by Jack L Chalker
    Science Fiction

    Nathan Brazil had been the guardian of the Well of Souls, where the Well World's master control lay. But now the universe faced a threat more grave than mere destruction: an unnamed and utterly alien entity had somehow been released from its ancient prison and was bent on the corruption of the Well...

  • EdgeThomas Blackthorne
    Edge
    by Thomas Blackthorne
    Science Fiction

    Edge is the first volume in an original science fiction story by John Meaney, writing under the name Thomas Blackthorne. Based in a near future britain, carrying knives has been legalised and a system of dueling to settle arguments now exists which is sensationalized with the TV show Knife Edge wher...

  • Elite - ReclamationDrew Wagar
    Elite - Reclamation
    by Drew Wagar
    Science Fiction

    Elite - Reclamation is the third book in our ongoing review of the Elite: Dangerous novels. 10% of the proceeds of this book are being donated to the Ashford Dyslexia Centre. Elite - Reclamation is quite different to the previous stories, it feels much more of a slow burn - a political thriller set...

  • EmbeddedDan Abnett
    Embedded
    by Dan Abnett
    Science Fiction

    To the veteran journalist Lex Falk the planet Eighty Six looks as dull as it's unimaginative name would suggest, then trouble starts brewing with the local population and the media start getting the runaround from the military high command, his interest is suddenly roused. I have been looking forwar...

  • Escape from Bagdad!Saad Hossain
    Escape from Bagdad!
    by Saad Hossain
    Science Fiction

    Escape from Bagdad! is a novel riding the wave of modern, alternative fiction that provides a fresh and marked difference to the over-subscribed European / American setting. As the title implies the story is set in Bagdad during the US invasion. With the American military, Religious fanatics, Mercen...

  • Europe in AutumnDave Hutchinson
    Europe in Autumn
    by Dave Hutchinson
    Science Fiction

    Europe in Autumn is an alternative history near future story that could be considered Kafkaesque in more than one sense of the word. Its part of new style of novel that mixes European settings with a gritty noir feeling such as seen in those quite brilliant novels Osama and Wolfhound Century. In Hut...

  • 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...

  • Fardwor, RussiaOlec Kashin
    Fardwor, Russia
    by Olec Kashin
    Science Fiction

    Oleg Kashin’s debut novel ‘Fardwor, Russia’ takes its reader on a surreal journey through the political landscape of Russia’s seedy underbelly. Drawing on his experience as an award-winning journalist and polemicist, Kashin skilfully blends fact and fiction, shining a light on some of the most sinis...

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

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

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

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

  • HardcaseDan Simmons
    Hardcase
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    Hardcase is a detective fiction novel by Dan Simmons. Dan Simmons certainly gets around. He has written straight horror, epic SF, thrilling espionage and with this book he has opened a door the the hard-boiled Private Investigator genre. Hardcase is the first book in a series of books, about the for...

  • Harmonica and GigRJ Astruc
    Harmonica and Gig
    by RJ Astruc
    Science Fiction

    When a territory engineer dies in suspicious circumstances, three qverse experts are brought in to investigate. Initially the three hacks choose to work separately on the case, but as they continue their investigations they discover clues leading to some of the most powerful figures in the qverse. S...

  • Ice and FireDavid Wingrove
    Ice and Fire
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    The great world-spanning City of Chung Kuo see's the "War that wasn't a war" being fought between it's levels as the ruling seven T'ang struggle to maintain calm and prevent change. But this War isn't being fought on a battlefield, instead these combatants are employing a degree of subterfuge and gu...

  • Iron WarriorsGraham McNeill
    Iron Warriors
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    On the dark and bloody battlefields of the Warhammer 40k universe few enemies incite more dread than the merciless Chaos Space Marines. Spreading terror and destruction in their wake, they have fought against their hated Space marine brethren for a millennia. The Iron Warriors are brutal even amongs...

  • Jennifer GovernmentMax Barry
    Jennifer Government
    by Max Barry
    Science Fiction

    Simply put this is a witty outlook on modern life and the consumerists of today. It does bare great similarities with the classic Orwell novel but where that can be quite dark and bleak this novel, although fatalistic somewhat is rather funny. The characters in the novel all having surnames from the...

  • NoirK W Jeter
    Noir
    by K W Jeter
    Science Fiction

    Noir is a science fiction novel by K W Jeter. NOIR.....Hohoho! What a way to go! Corpses in this book aren't allowed to die, they go into debt and are kept from the grave to hang out on the dead side of what was L.A. (now the Gloss) to wait for some job so they can be buried. X shaped pupils. One gu...

  • PainkillersSimon Ings
    Painkillers
    by Simon Ings
    Science Fiction

    Painkillers is a thought provoking read. I completed it in less than three days, which is something I haven’t done with a book for nearly fifteen years. During that time, I tried to work out what was keeping me absorbed as it is a very atypical Science Fiction novel, but perhaps that’s it. There is...

  • Path of the RenegadeAndy Chambers
    Path of the Renegade
    by Andy Chambers
    Science Fiction

    Asdrubael Vect has ruled the dark city of Commorragh for millennia, ruthlessly disposing of any who would dare cross him. His reach is long and his position unassailable... or so he thinks. The ambitious Archon (highest ranking member of a Dark Eldar Kabal) Yllithian thinks otherwise and joins force...

  • PerfectionNick Kyme
    Perfection
    by Nick Kyme
    Science Fiction

    Perfection, an audio drama from those wonderful people at Black Library; this time we are welcomed with the words of Nick Kyme who writes about those colourful, chaotic characters of the Slaaneshi Space Marines. The warped warriors of chaos have beseiged the world of Vardask and things look pretty b...

  • PhalanxBen Counter
    Phalanx
    by Ben Counter
    Science Fiction

    The gargantuan star fort of the Imperial Fists, the Phalanx is to be the host for half a dozen Space Marine Chapters. Along with Inquisitors, Sisters of Battle and agents of the Adeptus Mechanicus they will witness a darkly historic event - the end of a Space Marine chapter. After the events of Hell...

  • 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...

  • 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...

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

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

  • Radiant StatePeter Higgins
    Radiant State
    by Peter Higgins
    Science Fiction

    I have been eagerly waiting for this novel, more than most. I thought Wolfhound Century was that good that I chose it as Book of the year for 2013. Truth and Fear — the second volume in the series, narrowly missed out from being book of the year 2014 (That accolade going to Dave Hutchinson's Europe...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Running BlackP Todoroff
    Running Black
    by P Todoroff
    Science Fiction

    Running Black is a science fiction novel, the debut of Patrick Todoroff. For the last eight years, the North Korean mercenary Tam Song has headed up Eshu International, a private security team that takes any job for the right price, no questions asked. Based in the Belfast Metro Zone, they're repute...

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

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

  • 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...

  • Shades of EmpireCarmen Webster Buxton
    Shades of Empire
    by Carmen Webster Buxton
    Science Fiction

    Set within the same universe as the authors previous novel Tribes , Shades of Empire follows the ex-soldier Alexander Napier, merchant starship captain Madeline Pallestrino and a host of other colourful characters. Alexander still reluctantly wears the marks of his servitude to the Emperor but it's...

  • Shadows of TreacheryChristian Dunn
    Shadows of Treachery
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

    38 000 years in the future and the greatest, most terrible war humanity has ever faced rages across the galaxy as the forces of chaos look to spread terror to every corner and man fights fellow man. On the home world of the human race preparations have begun to defend the Imperial Palace and get rea...

  • 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...

  • The Abyss Beyond DreamsPeter F Hamilton
    The Abyss Beyond Dreams
    by Peter F Hamilton
    Science Fiction

    Peter Hamilton doesn't just write Space Opera, he defines it . The Abyss Beyond Dreams is the start of a new series that takes place in his wonderfully rich Commonwealth universe. It's no secret that we love the works of Peter Hamilton at SFBook and The Abyss beyond Dreams is no exception. To co-ins...

  • 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 Emperor's GiftAaron Dembski-Bowden
    The Emperor's Gift
    by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
    Science Fiction

    The legendary Grey Knights are all that stand between mankind and the horrors of chaos. Secret Guardians who journey into the very realms of the warp and beyond in pursuit of the enemy; to most they and their foes are nothing more than myth and legend, those are the lucky ones. The fortress of Titan...

  • The Middle KingdomDavid Wingrove
    The Middle Kingdom
    by David Wingrove
    Science Fiction

    The Middle Kingdom, the third volume in David Wingrove's re-imagined epic Chung Kuo series see's the Earth covered in continent spanning, mile high city of Ice; ruled by the seven T’ang, the Kings of China. A century of peace is shattered when the Minister of the Edict is assassinated and the seven...

  • The Miracle InspectorHelen Smith
    The Miracle Inspector
    by Helen Smith
    Science Fiction

    The Miracle Inspector is a science fiction novel by Helen Smith. England is now a partitioned country with the capital an oppressive place where poetry has been banned, schools are shut and women no longer allowed to work outside of the home. Lucas and Angela decide to try and escape the confining r...

  • The Northern Star: The BeginningMike Gullickson
    Science Fiction

    From the back cover: The oil is gone. That way of life, ended. An invention frees the mind. A cyber-world becomes salvation. A boy, a weapon. A soldier, a titan. While nations thrash into antiquity, And a CEO becomes Queen, A man, brilliant and cunning, Plots to rule it all. Imagine a future where o...

  • The PrimarchsChristian Dunn
    The Primarchs
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

    It is a time of legends, the entire galaxy is one mighty battleground which see the indomitable space marines locked in a bitter civil war, divided by the heresy of Horus. Some chapters remain loyal to humanities greatest leader; the Emperor, while others have chosen the chaos tainted promises of th...

  • The Sacred ProtocolHylton H Smith
    The Sacred Protocol
    by Hylton H Smith
    Science Fiction

    The Sacred Protocol is a near future novel of an alternative history, written by Hylton H Smith. After the Spanish Armada defeat the English fleet in 1588 the great British Empire is overthrown and Spain control most of Europe. Moving forward to 2016 and the Internet collapses causing mass chaos as...

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

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

  • The Zxap JacketKen Mazur
    The Zxap Jacket
    by Ken Mazur
    Science Fiction

    2047 in New York and the future imagined in Zxap Jacket is a grim one; acid snow falls with abandon on the dirty streets and those without a Zxap Jacket suffer stinging eyes and burned skin. As is commonly prevailent within the early 21st Century, it isn't long before private enterprise looks at the...

  • Theme PlanetAndy Remic
    Theme Planet
    by Andy Remic
    Science Fiction

    Andy Remic has managed to carve out his own particular niche within the science fiction genre, deliberately pushing the boundaries and not holding back in the slightest. Finding a new Remic book is very much like finding a new Tarrantino film - you just know it's going to be an irresistible action p...

  • TitanbornRhett Bruno
    Titanborn
    by Rhett Bruno
    Science Fiction

    Titanborn follows the life of "collector" (part bounty hunter part detective) Malcom Graves. Graves is a seasoned veteran who has seen the worst of humanity and is often tasked with cleaning up such flotsam. He lives in a future where mankind has spread to other planets and have adapted, with the hu...

  • Tobacco Stained Mountain GoatAndrez Bergen
    Science Fiction

    Melbourne, Australia - a metropolis that at one time was the biggest and wealthiest city in the world, ranked as one of the top three world's most liveable cities and a mecca for the arts, commerce, education, entertainment, sport and tourism. It also happens to be the only city in the world left st...

  • 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...

  • Void StalkerAaron Dembski-Bowden
    Void Stalker
    by Aaron Dembski-Bowden
    Science Fiction

    The Night Lords are being relentlessly hunted by the Eldar of the Craftworld Ulthwé, fleeing to the dark fringes of the Imperium in an attempt to escape their pursuers. The fickle hand of fate delivers them to the carrion world of Tsagualsa, a world where their Primarch died and the legion broken. H...

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

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

  • Wolfhound CenturyPeter Higgins
    Wolfhound Century
    by Peter Higgins
    Science Fiction

    Every so often there comes along a book that manages to make you go wow , one that stands out as a book that is destined to become a classic. Last year Osama was such a book; this year Wolfhound Century takes that honour. Set in an alternate Russia the novel tells the tale of Investigator Vissarion...

  • WoolHugh Howey
    Wool
    by Hugh Howey
    Science Fiction

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

  • Anno DraculaKim Newman
    Anno Dracula
    by Kim Newman
    Fantasy

    I remember reading the short story "Red Reign" about 20 years ago, written by Newman and published in the Mammoth Book of Vampires. This short story formed the basis for the novel and it's been on my list of books to read for some time. The imminent re-release of the sequel "The Bloody Red Baron" ha...

  • As Wonderland Goes ByLaszlo Mohacsi
    As Wonderland Goes By
    by Laszlo Mohacsi
    Fantasy

    As Wonders Go By a wildly different book to most I've read. For a start it's narrated in the second person, there aren't many I've read that take this approach. The protagonist is a woman of "loose morals", at large in Europe and looking for "adventure". She finds more adventure even she can handle...

  • BloodstoneDavid Gemmell
    Bloodstone
    by David Gemmell
    Fantasy

    Bloodstone is the third and final volume of David Gemmell's Jon Shannow trilogy, and it brings the saga of the Jerusalem Man to a close with all of Gemmell's customary style and grace. I have said of both earlier books that I consider them among Gemmell's finest work, and I will say it again here; m...

  • Dead WinterCL Werner
    Dead Winter
    by CL Werner
    Fantasy

    Dead Winter is the first novel in a new series that's set within the "Time of Legends" collection, itself set within Warhammer Fantasy with the aim to tell the stories of some of the greatest heroes of the Warhammer world. A thousand years have passed since the Age of Sigmar and the Empire he create...

  • Discord of Lupinda: The AwakenedTony Elliott
    Fantasy

    One man's quest for the justice of his wronged mother brings war to a land made soft by a forced but enduring peace. As the conflict spreads a few survivors flee into an alien world of currency, corruption, commerce and cruelty while behind them a long buried darkness returns, something that the wor...

  • Dorothy The Darker Side of OzScott Stanford
    Dorothy The Darker Side of Oz
    by Scott Stanford
    Fantasy

    Dorothy The Darker Side of Oz by Scott Stanford is a modern, dark interpretation of the classic "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" (originally written by L. Frank Baum). Having seen the original film a number of times (not a fan but the family are) and not actually having read the book, my interpretation...

  • 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...

  • Empire of the SavioursAJ Dalton
    Empire of the Saviours
    by AJ Dalton
    Fantasy

    Empire of the Saviours is a very, very clever novel than manages to offer something different over the traditional fantasy fare, using tried and tested fantasy tropes - young boy from humble beginnings find he has incredible power - but then creating something quite different, fresh and unique that...

  • FirefightBrandon Sanderson
    Firefight
    by Brandon Sanderson
    Fantasy

    Brandon Sanderson needs little introduction: wantonly imaginative; rollicking action scenes; well thought-out magic systems. Firefight, the second book in his YA Reckoners series is perhaps less well known, and centres on a group of humans in post-apocalyptic American cities hunting evil X-Men - sor...

  • MysteryPeter Straub
    Mystery
    by Peter Straub
    Fantasy

    Mystery is a horror novel by Peter Straub. This is the first book by Peter Straub that I have read. I have seen his name mentioned in the alt.books.stephen-king newsgroup a few times and when I found this book at the library, I thought "why not?". The About the Author thing on one of the last pages...

  • 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...

  • Proven GuiltyJim Butcher
    Proven Guilty
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    Harry Dresden is once again thrown into magical conflict in Proven Guilty. As always, our wise cracking wizard-for-hire is up to the challenge! Proven Guilty smoothly picks up where Dead Beat leaves off. Harry Dresden, now named a Warden of the White Council, struggles to fulfill his role as magical...

  • Romeo SpikesJoanne Reay
    Romeo Spikes
    by Joanne Reay
    Fantasy

    Living amongst us are a group of creatures who prey on the vulnerable and the weak, guiding them to commit suicide and living off this energy released (known as "span") of a life snuffed out before its time. These Tormentas look just like a regular human, often taking the guise of a ravishing seduct...

  • Second SightGreg Hamerton
    Second Sight
    by Greg Hamerton
    Fantasy

    Second Sight follows on from the events of the Riddler's Gift and is the second novel in the Lifesong series by Greg Hamerton. Tabitha Serannon has not only survived the horrors brought by the shadowcasters led by the Darkmaster, but has become a miracle healer and a fledgling wizard, but already he...

  • Serial Killers IncorporatedAndy Remic
    Fantasy

    Serial Killers Incorporated is a dark urban fantasy novel by Andy Remic and published by Anarchy Books. Callaghan is a drug and drink fuelled, womanising, amoral, hardcore photographer for the tabloid rag Black & White. He's a guy with very few redeeming features (if any) and his journey on the road...

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

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

  • Shadows SonJon Sprunk
    Shadows Son
    by Jon Sprunk
    Fantasy

    In the holy city of Othir treachery and corruption are rife, the ideal breeding ground for any freelance assassins with no scruples. Caim is one of the best, living on the edge of a blade he has carved out an impeccable reputation but when he reluctantly takes on a job at very short notice he finds...

  • Swords of the EmperorChris Wraight
    Swords of the Emperor
    by Chris Wraight
    Fantasy

    Swords of the Emperor combines the two Warhammer fantasy novels Swords of Vengeance and Sword of Justice along with the short stories Feast of Horrors and Duty and Honour. Each of these tales have been brought to life from the pen of Chris Wraight who creates a sense of maturity and depth to the War...

  • 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 Boy who wept bloodDen Patrick
    The Boy who wept blood
    by Den Patrick
    Fantasy

    The Boy who wept blood is the sequel to Den Patrick's impressive novel, The Boy with the Porcelain Blade . Set some time after the events of the first book, the Queen Anea now rules Demense. A fairer society is being built on the ashes of the old regime however many of the old players are reluctant...

  • The Boy with the Porcelain BladeDen Patrick
    Fantasy

    Lucien de Fontein is one of the Orfano, a group who have grown-up deformed in some way and hold a strange place in society - not quite outcast but not accepted either, tormented by their deformity. Orfano are known to have powers that others do not and Lucien is as skilled a fighter as his young age...

  • The Buried LifeCarrie Patel
    The Buried Life
    by Carrie Patel
    Fantasy

    From the books description page: The gaslight and shadows of the underground city of Recoletta hide secrets and lies. When Inspector Liesl Malone investigates the murder of a renowned historian, she finds herself stonewalled by the all-powerful Directorate of Preservation – Recoletta’s top-secret hi...

  • The Chosen SeedSarah Pinborough
    The Chosen Seed
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

    Framed for Murder and on the run, Detective Inspector Cass Jones gets unwelcome attention wherever he goes, including being hounded by his former colleagues. As he works desperately to save his kidnapped nephew and gain answers he finds himself going up against The Bank and its sinister employees on...

  • The Emperor's EdgeLindsay Buroker
    The Emperor's Edge
    by Lindsay Buroker
    Fantasy

    The Emperor's Edge is a speculative fiction novel by Lindsay Buroker. Amaranthe Lokdon is one of the first ever female watch officers in the city, she works harder than anyone else and yet is overlooked for promotion while others rise in the ranks around her. When ravaged bodies begin to show up on...

  • 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 Lies of Locke LamoraScott Lynch
    The Lies of Locke Lamora
    by Scott Lynch
    Fantasy

    Review by Ed Prior. Homeless young orphan Locke Lamora is deemed not "circumspect" enough to make it as a thief. Narrowly escaping a swift death he is packed off to be a disciple at the temple of the Crooked Warden, the god of Fate and Fortune - patron of thieves and rogues. Locke soon learns the te...

  • The Path Of DaggersRobert Jordan
    The Path Of Daggers
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    The Path of Daggers is the eighth volume in Robert Jordans fantasy epic, the Wheel of Time series. Following the events in A Crown of Swords, Elayne, Nyneave, Aviendha and a coalition of women who can channel the one power finally manage to use the "Bowl of the Winds" to reverse the un-natural heatw...

  • The Queen of the TearlingErika Johansen
    The Queen of the Tearling
    by Erika Johansen
    Fantasy

    Kelsea Glynn is the only heir to the throne of Tearling but rather than growing up surrounded by servants and sophistication she has been raised in a woods by foster parents, in secret. Mostly this is due to her real mothers failings - Queen Elyssa was murdered for ruining the kingdom and for 18 yea...

  • The Reluctant MageKaren Miller
    The Reluctant Mage
    by Karen Miller
    Fantasy

    The Reluctant Mage is the second volume in the Fisherman's Children series by Karen Miller. Rafel has been gone for months, last seen heading over Barl's Mountains into the unknown in a desperate quest to find help in the legendary magical Library but such time has passed and all hope appears lost....

  • The Riddler's GiftGreg Hamerton
    The Riddler's Gift
    by Greg Hamerton
    Fantasy

    The Riddler's Gift is the first volume in the Lifesong series by Greg Hamerton. There is a song that drifts on the breeze through all the world. Its rhythms are echoed in our breath, the music is caught in our laughter, hidden in our language, woven through our life... Most of the old world has been...

  • The Road to UnderfallMike Jefferies
    The Road to Underfall
    by Mike Jefferies
    Fantasy

    The Road to Underfall is a 1987 high fantasy novel by Mike Jefferies, the first volume of the Loremasters of Elundium trilogy, and one of those books that has earned its standing through readers' affection rather than publishers' fanfare. In 1987 the British fantasy shelves were busy. Donaldson had...

  • The Straight Razor CureDaniel Polansky
    The Straight Razor Cure
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    The greatest city in the Thirteen Lands, Rigus stands as a radiant hub of grandiose manors and sparkling citadels. It's a place where nobility rules and disagreements are settled with honourable duels. In the shadow of this glory sits Low Town, a vast warren of dark, narrow streets, dirty alleys and...

  • The Wounded LandStephen Donaldson
    The Wounded Land
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    For ten years Thomas Covenant has done his best to move on with his life and get back on top of his illness. While a decade may have passed in Covenant's world, in the Land it's been over three thousand years since he freed the people and defeated the evil Lord Foul. In this time Foul has not been i...

  • Tomorrow the KillingDaniel Polansky
    Tomorrow the Killing
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    Tomorrow the Killing returns to that hive of villainy that is Low Town and to our guide through these mean streets, the Warden. Following on from The Straight Razor Cure and the Warden is back to his usual tricks, that is until he becomes reluctantly embroiled in a missing persons case that opens up...

  • Winters HeartRobert Jordan
    Winters Heart
    by Robert Jordan
    Fantasy

    Winters Heart is the 9th volume in Robert Jordan's epic fantasy series, the Wheel of Time. Now that the natural weather has returned to the land, Winter sets in with a vengeance, almost making up for lost time after the oppressive heat of the Dark One's spell. Rand is finally confronted by the 3 wom...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Needful ThingsStephen King
    Needful Things
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Needful Things is a horror story by Stephen King. The cover says The Last Castle Rock Story, and I guess that King will have a hard time topping this one - if the poor citizens of Castle Rock ever decide that it's worth the trouble to rebuilding their town. Needful Things is about the dark side in u...

  • 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 Long MidnightEd Gorman
    The Long Midnight
    by Ed Gorman
    Horror

    I remember seeing Ed’s books in shops when I was younger, mysterious front covers that looked interesting but back covers that sounded just a bit, well, naff. You then look closer and read things like "Master of Dark Suspense", Koontz stating that, "Gorman’s writing is strong, fast and sleek as a bu...

  • Wamphyri!Brian Lumley
    Wamphyri!
    by Brian Lumley
    Horror

    Second book in the original five book series and it follows directly on from where the first book, The Necroscope finishes. The story revisits old characters, further improving on and immersing us in this world of Espers and monsters. Harry Keogh, the original Necroscope has lost his body but his mi...

  • SmokeDan Vyleta
    Smoke
    by Dan Vyleta
    Fantasy

    Smoke is a book that presents the idea - what if your stronger emotions were visible? People's Anger, Lust and Lies all visible as real smoke and soot that settles around them, permeating their clothes and the space around them. Within this world Children are born carrying "the seeds of evil" within...

  • 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...

  • The SevenPeter Newman
    The Seven
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Seven is Peter Newman's stunning conclusion to the post-apocalyptic Vagrant Trilogy, following on from the events of The Vagrant and The Malice . A number of years have passed since the Vagrant journeyed to the Shining City with a baby Vesper and Gamma's sword. Following in her fathers footsteps...

  • The Call of Cthulhu & Other Weird StoriesHP Lovecraft

    To many, HP Lovecraft is seen as the father of modern horror and The Call of Cthulhu is undoubtedly his most famous work. Like many artists Lovecraft wasn't appreciated during his lifetime and his work only achieved success and literary recognition after his death. Collectively these weird tales (an...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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 Grey BastardsJonathan French
    The Grey Bastards
    by Jonathan French
    Fantasy

    The clue to what makes the Fantasy genre so great is staring you straight in the face; it is fantastical. It gives author the chance to transport their readers to a different time and place. Lands full of wonder, populated by creatures only seen in your dreams. So, it is sometimes a little sad to se...

  • The Mouth of the DarkTim Waggoner
    The Mouth of the Dark
    by Tim Waggoner
    Horror

    The very nature of horror means that it should not always be a pleasant read. You should be unsettled, scared and perhaps even disgusted at times, but a balance must be struck. If an author is failing to get genuine scares into their book they may resort to cheap tricks such as writing things so gro...

  • The Buried DaggerJames Swallow
    The Buried Dagger
    by James Swallow
    Science Fiction

    So this is it, the 54th and final book in the Horus Heresy series. But before you despair, it isn't the end of the story and the mad Titan Horus is only just knocking on the doors of Terra. The final battle will be played out over a series of novels called the Siege of Terra , presumably ending with...

  • Police at the Station and They Don't Look FriendlyAdrian McKinty
    General Fiction

    There are times in history that don’t seem very funny and if you lived through them you would find it hard to laugh. The 1970/80s in Northern Ireland may just be one such era as sectarian violence means that you are always wary of your surroundings. This is exemplified for Detective Inspector Sean D...

  • Batman: The Court of OwlsGreg Cox
    Science Fiction

    Batman stalks the villains of Gotham and for many he is their worst nightmare. Bats may be inherently scary to some, but in nature they are not the top of the food chain and several animals like to eat them for a snack. One such animal is the Owl, a natural enemy of the Bat. This being Gotham dressi...

  • Blackfish CitySam Miller
    Blackfish City
    by Sam Miller
    Science Fiction

    One of the many hats I wear is that of a professional software engineer. As a junior professional software engineer, I experienced acute imposter syndrome. It didn’t help that I was surrounded by people who had been engineering software for years, even decades, longer than I had. I resolved my pligh...

  • From Divergent SunsSam Peters
    From Divergent Suns
    by Sam Peters
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction is a minefield for any author. So many others genres are available that have a set of rules that you can follow. Crime has it, even most fantasy books follow a pattern, but science fiction can be almost anything. It can be set in an alternative today with only a tiny tweak to our way...

  • We are the DeadMike Shackle
    We are the Dead
    by Mike Shackle
    Fantasy

    The Fantasy genre has the unwarranted reputation of being staid. If you do not read it, you may think that it is all still elves and dwarves hanging out in some sort of fellowship. Fantasy fanatics know different. There are distinct fashions within the genre that has evolved between high and low, ma...

  • Call Him MineTim MacGabhann
    Call Him Mine
    by Tim MacGabhann
    General Fiction

    The politicians in Mexico seriously need to have a word with whoever is in charge with promoting their country. This vast and gorgeous nation is increasingly being known more for its hideous crimes. With drug cartels running rife and corrupt police it seems that a fresh murder happens every few minu...

  • Strange InkGary Kemble
    Strange Ink
    by Gary Kemble
    Horror

    Getting a few tattoo can be a thrill. It is going to hurt, but for many that is part of the joy. Think for a moment about that poor sap who wakes up after a heavy drinking session with a new tat. Not only did they miss out on the anticipation, they also probably have no idea what they got. Tattoo me...

  • Dark InkGary Kemble
    Dark Ink
    by Gary Kemble
    Horror

    People have power over on another. Someone who is charismatic may be able to manipulate others to do their bidding even against their own best interests. The opposite sex can also have power. What would you do to be with the partner you love/lust  for ? Mistress Hel is a Dominatrix who  speciali s e...

  • A Little HatredJoe Abercrombie
    A Little Hatred
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

    A fantasy writer needs to be aware that they could fall into a rut. Another trilogy of books set in the same world, with similar characters doing similar things. This may appease those fans that fear change, but to drive themselves as a writer it is important to evolve; even if evolving within the f...

  • 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...

  • HeartstoneC J Sansom
    Heartstone
    by C J Sansom
    General Fiction

    Offer me a time machine and I would travel no further back than the 1980s. This would allow me to place loads of bets on sporting events I know the results to and invest in Apple Computers. You would not see me travelling hundreds of years into the future or the past, are you mad? The 1980s were saf...

  • The Lost WarJustin Lee Anderson
    The Lost War
    by Justin Lee Anderson
    Fantasy

    The first in the Eidyn series, The Lost War begins its story part way through, in the aftermath of a ruinous war for the kingdom of Eidyn. The location of the opening scenes, in a tavern no less, and the easy interplay of two of the main characters Aranok the draoidh and Allandria, his bodyguard and...

  • Dooku: Jedi LostCavan Scott
    Dooku: Jedi Lost
    by Cavan Scott
    Science Fiction

    Star Wars is a franchise rich with great characters, but who to choose? It is tricky writing a cannon book on the likes of likes Han Solo or Rey lest you impinge on the films themselves. Thankfully, with such an abundance of history to choose from, there is always an interesting character to expand...

  • 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...

  • Are Snakes NecessaryBrian De Palma
    Are Snakes Necessary
    by Brian De Palma
    General Fiction

    The noir genre has an inherent problem, it has the feel of the 1940s and 1950s. You imagine black and white films, men in  fedoras  and women with cascading red locks.  The lack of technology forced the central gumshoe to walk the streets and knock together heads  to gather the intel required to sol...

  • 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...

  • Heart of the AssassinRobert Ferrigno
    Heart of the Assassin
    by Robert Ferrigno
    Science Fiction

    The Butterfly Effect is a device used to explore alternative  versions of our world. The simple action of a time travellers going back to the time of the dinosaurs and standing on a butterfly would alter everything that followed, ripples expanding from that one point. Robert Ferrigno  decided to exp...

  • 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 Rise of the Arch IllagerMatt Forbeck
    Fantasy

    The best villains have depth; a reason why they became villainous. There are few maniacs that comes out of the womb thus, they must be moulded into the cackling psychopaths that you love to hate. In the Minecraft Dungeons game, you go up against the Arch-Illager; a diminutive enemy who has the power...

  • 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...

  • The Book of MalachiT C Farren
    The Book of Malachi
    by T C Farren
    Science Fiction

    The way that humans treat each other in real life is far darker and harrowing than any science fiction book that you can create, but this does not stop some authors from exploring the depths of the  human  condi tion. If we are only as good as how we treat the weakest in society, the people who inha...

  • Golden PreyJohn Sandford
    Golden Prey
    by John Sandford
    General Fiction

    The long running series is a dream for an author as it means that your characters and world are successful enough that people are buying them, and you can keep writing. John Sandford's  Lucas Davenport  books must be a success when you realise that  Golden Prey  is the 27th book centred on the chara...

  • InscapeLouise Carey
    Inscape
    by Louise Carey
    Science Fiction

    A lot of the political hustle and bustle in today’s world has its  roots  in how far you think capitalism should go. Some countries are all for state control, others are far more lais s ez faire .  Do  private companies  already  have  too much power  pull ing  the strings behind  our  elected repre...

  • 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...

  • The Somebody PeopleBob Proehl
    The Somebody People
    by Bob Proehl
    Science Fiction

    Who are the goodies and who are the baddies? In most media, the baddies are normally some form of massive entity that is squashing the smaller rebels. These rebels become the de facto good guys as they fight against repression. However, what happens when the power shifts? If the rebels take control,...

  • 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...

  • MomenticonAndrew Caldecott
    Momenticon
    by Andrew Caldecott
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Generation KillerAdam Simcox
    The Generation Killer
    by Adam Simcox
    Fantasy

    The supernatural has always worked well with noir as they are both genres of the night. It is only an undead hop and skip between a detective finding a corpse in the alley and that corpse waking up. Conan Doyle walked the line between the supernatural and the super-real, Holmes always discovered tha...

  • HellSansEver Dundas
    HellSans
    by Ever Dundas
    Science Fiction

    Typography has a larger role in your life than you may think. It is important to get the right font in the right place. No one wants to have Beware of the Cliff written in Comic Sans. Advertisers spend millions on typefaces to make a brand instantly recognisable. All these things are noble pursuits,...

  • 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...

  • 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 Babel ApocalypseVyvyan Evans
    The Babel Apocalypse
    by Vyvyan Evans
    Science Fiction

    Most of us have a subject at school that we struggled with more than others and for me that was languages. Maths, English, Science, I was fine, but my brain does not feel designed for languages. So, if someone offered me a chip that would allow me to instantly understand all languages on Earth, I wo...

  • 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...

  • PenitentMark Leggatt
    Penitent
    by Mark Leggatt
    General Fiction

    Telling a story in the first person means that you are going to want a protagonist that the reader can connect with, but what if that character struggles with relationships? In Mark Leggatt’s Penitent , Hector is a brilliant lawyer, but has far more interest in the process than the people. He has ne...

  • Sword CatcherCassandra Clare
    Sword Catcher
    by Cassandra Clare
    Fantasy

    You are probably a fantasy fan if you are reading a review of this fantasy book. As fans we love the genre, but even we can admit that plenty of the tropes are well trodden and to standout a new fantasy series is going to have to be something different. Sword Catcher by Cassandra Clare opens with a...

  • Lessons in BirdwatchingHoney Watson
    Lessons in Birdwatching
    by Honey Watson
    Science Fiction

    The science fiction genre is open to exploring alien worlds and alien ideas, but many times you find it is a very Terran feeling society being all human about things. It may be an android as the main character, but that android is following a classic crime noir style plot you could find on Earth. Wh...

  • 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...

  • Hellwegs KeepJustin Holley
    Hellwegs Keep
    by Justin Holley
    Horror

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

  • 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...

  • The Death of Sir Martin MalprelateAdam Roberts
    Fantasy

    There are two ways of writing fiction set in the Victorian era; set a fictional book in the real era or write within the Victorian multiverse. This is a playground that I have read many books in, a world where Sherlock Holmes can investigate new cases, but also one in which he can work alongside Mr...

  • 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...

  • The Burning LandDavid Hair
    The Burning Land
    by David Hair
    Fantasy

    Epic fantasy novels are filled with fellowships from the OG to the 700-page opuses of today. What differs across all these books is how close the fellows are. Multiple character perspectives do not a fellowship make if they never meet each other, you want a close group of people all setting out on t...

  • Coded to KillMarschall Runge
    Coded to Kill
    by Marschall Runge
    General Fiction

    Artificial Intelligence is currently the big hope across most industries as a way of increasing productivity on the cheap. It is being used already in the field of medicine as it is ideal at coping with enormous amounts of data and highlighting anomalies. It aids in finding cancers early, but what a...

  • 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 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...

  • 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...

  • Empire of the VampireJay Kristoff
    Empire of the Vampire
    by Jay Kristoff
    Fantasy

    I've been meaning to read this book for quite some time. It's been staring accusingly across the room. But I'm still trying to find time to read right now and it's not the most sveltely of shapes, coming in at a weighty 730+ pages. I finally gave in, and I'm glad I did. This does invariably mean how...

  • HoneycombS B Caves
    Honeycomb
    by S B Caves
    Science Fiction

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

  • Pay the PiperGeorge A Romero
    Pay the Piper
    by George A Romero
    Horror

    There are many unique and diverse names in horror making it, for me, one of the most interesting genres out there, but to the layperson they may only know a few names. Stephen King, maybe Dean Koontz. In film they may have heard of Wes Craven, or one of the newer horror auteurs. Zombie fans should h...

  • Jekyll & Hyde: Consulting DetectivesTim Major

    I always forget how unpleasant some of the antiheros were in Victorian era fantasy and science fiction. In my mind I think of the era being full of ladies and gentlemen, but there were plenty of loathsome people too. Looking back on the working conditions and how society treated its poor, perhaps I...

  • Antartica StationA G Riddle
    Antartica Station
    by A G Riddle
    Science Fiction

    What is your plan for when the apocalypse comes? One of the best things about reading speculative fiction is that you get loads of clever ideas on exactly what to do should a meteor plummet to Earth or the undead rise from their graves. The truth is that your plan is to curl up and inevitably succum...

  • VigilanceAllen Stroud
    Vigilance
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    Vigilance is the third book in the Fractal series from Allen Stroud, following Fearless and Resilient . You know how it is with series; by the time you hit book three, you've got a pretty good idea of what you're getting into. The big question is whether the author can keep the momentum going, or if...

  • The Final OrchardC J Rivera
    The Final Orchard
    by C J Rivera
    Science Fiction

    When the apocalypse inevitably comes do you want to know about it? Would you like the chance to peer out of the window and see the world burning, perhaps you can make a run for the high ground? Another option is to live in pure ignorance underground, competing with your fellow residents for the perc...

  • 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 Mask of FearAlexander Freed
    The Mask of Fear
    by Alexander Freed
    Science Fiction

    The reason that I enjoy the Star Wars Universe so much is that it vast and can be explored in new and interesting ways. The Skywalker stories will always be there, but there are shady towns and abandoned Sith temples spotted all over the Universe. You can follow an eccentric archaeologist hunting fo...

  • Fleet LandingWendy Gee
    Fleet Landing
    by Wendy Gee
    General Fiction

    There are so many angles and directions that you can tackle the crime genre in. Being a police officer is obvious, but you also get Private Investigators, or even the local busybody or vicar solving a crime. I enjoy all these approaches, but if you are drawn to particularly thoughtful and informed c...

  • 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...

  • FiendAlma Katsu
    Fiend
    by Alma Katsu
    Horror

    Being successful and superrich would be great to allow you to do what you want, but it also comes with limitations. My mother never wanted to be too rich as she thought one of us would get kidnapped. She needn’t have worried had she made a deal with a demon, if anyone had tried to take one of us, th...

  • The CaptiveKit Burgoyne
    The Captive
    by Kit Burgoyne
    Horror

    I enjoy genre books of all kinds. I love a good kidnapping story as a well-oiled plan starts to unravel. I also like a horror story about the Old Gods, of human sacrifices and bloody gore. What you don’t normally get is a story that is both. The kidnapping crew in Kit Burgoyne’s The Captive have tak...

  • KrakenShannon Eric Denton
    Kraken
    by Shannon Eric Denton
    Horror

    If pop culture has only taught me one thing it is that siding with the creatures from other realms is not a great idea. They tend to renege on contracts once they have what they want, usually via sucking your brain out through your nose. Also, the partnerships are not normally people you would want...

  • 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...

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

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

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

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

  • Blood RivalJake Arnott
    Blood Rival
    by Jake Arnott
    General Fiction

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

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

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

  • SentientMichael Nayak
    Sentient
    by Michael Nayak
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • Side HustleWendy Gee
    Side Hustle
    by Wendy Gee
    General Fiction

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

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

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

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

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

  • Fever HouseKeith Rosson
    Fever House
    by Keith Rosson
    Horror

    Some books refuse to sit still in any one genre, and Fever House is one of them. I picked it up at a recent convention while browsing the dealer room, not even knowing the author, and I came away convinced that he is one of the more interesting voices currently working at the messier end of horror....