Books tagged with: dark

  • The FiremanJoe Hill
    The Fireman
    by Joe Hill
    Fantasy

    Joe Hill is one of those authors who improve with each book ,and The Fireman is nothing short of spectacular. A highly contagious spore has begun to spread across the World, a pandemic that sees people break out in beautiful gold and black marks before spontaneously self-combusting. Draco Incendia T...

  • A Bag of Bedtime TalesAllen Stroud
    A Bag of Bedtime Tales
    by Allen Stroud
    Science Fiction

    A Bag of Bedtime Tales is an anthology of diverse short stories set in a variety of worlds and genres. The stories are grouped into three sections, one series focuses on the fictional town of Durrington and the strange events that occur there, the next is firmly fantasy genre with stories set in the...

  • A Fistful of ClonesSeaton Kay-Smith
    A Fistful of Clones
    by Seaton Kay-Smith
    Science Fiction

    Occasionally a book and a writer comes along that breaks rules left right and centre, but does so with panache and style that makes you tip your hat. The beginning of A Fistful of Clones clearly sets it out to be one of those books; an accessible science fiction comedy that immediately endears, the...

  • A Planet for RentYoss
    Science Fiction

    Yoss is one of the most controversial and successful of Cuba's science fiction writers. As well known for his rock-and-roll style as he is for his portrait of Cuba under Communism, his work is modern, dynamic and yet deep and thoughtful. A Planet for Rent is set in the near future where Earth, wrack...

  • A Scanner DarklyPhilip K Dick
    A Scanner Darkly
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    A Scanner Darkly is the only Philip K Dick novel that I have been the slightest bit reluctant to read so far - to say I am not a fan of drugs would be a vast understatement and Scanner is PKD's exploration into drugs. My youngest brother has waxed lyrical on a number of occasions about the novel tho...

  • 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...

  • Ada KingE M Faulds
    Ada King
    by E M Faulds
    Science Fiction

    Cyberpunk has always concerned itself with the transformational relationship of man and machine. Times and technology changes, but the contemporary cyberpunk story is still concerned with this and Ada King by E. M. Faulds wholeheartedly embraces that essence whilst invoking new dystopian themes and...

  • Alien 3Alan Dean Foster
    Alien 3
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    WOW! I have not said that in a while and this reviewer surely did not expect that word to come from Alan Dean Foster’s 247-page novelization of Alien 3. Like so many—like millions— who were disappointed with David Fincher’s 1993 film, I did not expect Foster’s novel to change my mind about the “orig...

  • 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...

  • Architect of FateChristian Dunn
    Architect of Fate
    by Christian Dunn
    Science Fiction

    Architect of Fate is a Space Marine Battles Anthology which collects together 4 novellas that make up the series featuring the infamous greater daemon of Tzeentch, Kairos Fateweaver. A master of manipulation who schemes and uses his prodigious power to play with the fates of thousands, even the unwi...

  • ArtificialJadah McCoy
    Artificial
    by Jadah McCoy
    Science Fiction

    Artificial by Jadah McCoy is the authors debut and the first book in a planned series called The Kepler Chronicles . Set in 2256, the story unfolds on Earth’s first colony amongst the stars, the aforementioned Kepler. As humanity traversed through the deep dark of space, they decided to entrust thei...

  • AxiomaticGreg Egan
    Axiomatic
    by Greg Egan
    Science Fiction

    Axiomatic is a collection of science fiction short stories by Greg Egan. Most science fiction fans these days would agree what when it comes to hard science fiction, Greg Egan is one of the best. In ten years he has given us a good handful of novels, all every much driven by the laws of nature, as E...

  • Azanian BridgesNick Wood
    Azanian Bridges
    by Nick Wood
    Science Fiction

    Science fiction set in the near future, Azanian Bridges is a rough diamond, drawing on a variety of influences to deliver a real and wrenching story. Our setting is an alternative South Africa, where Mandela was never released and Apartheid didn’t end. We follow two characters, Martin and Sibusiso a...

  • BarricadeJon Wallace
    Barricade
    by Jon Wallace
    Science Fiction

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

  • BlopeSean Benham
    Blope
    by Sean Benham
    Science Fiction

    Blope is about segregation, plastic surgery gone wrong, and all sorts of messed up religion. For a little background, it is basically another version of history where the American Southwest becomes part of an extreme Taiwanese empire. Its ruler uses the American Southwest as an experiment & segregat...

  • Bringing forth the end of daysSimon Law
    Science Fiction

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

  • Carrion ComfortDan Simmons
    Carrion Comfort
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • Dagger of the MindBob Shaw
    Dagger of the Mind
    by Bob Shaw
    Science Fiction

    Dagger of the Mind is a speculative fiction book by Bob Shaw. Dagger of the Mind, is a strange book. It takes off normally (well..) enough, Redpath is an epileptic living in a small english town. To make a buck, he participates in a series of experiments involving a new drug Compound 183. The book s...

  • Dark IntelligenceNeal Asher
    Dark Intelligence
    by Neal Asher
    Science Fiction

    I've been collecting Neal Asher novels for ages however until now I've not had chance to read much of his work. Luckily Dark Intelligence has been sent in for review and so I've finally had chance to discover the delight that is the Polity Universe. Dark Intelligence is all about transformation. Phy...

  • Dark SeekerK W Jeter
    Dark Seeker
    by K W Jeter
    Science Fiction

    Dark Seeker is a speculative fiction novel by K W Jeter. This is basically a horror novel with group drug use/experimentation as the theme. Like a Tim powers or Phil dick book it's got a skewed version of Los Angeles where a group of kids under a university teacher -and a off track manipulative drif...

  • Dark VisionsDouglas E Winter
    Dark Visions
    by Douglas E Winter
    Science Fiction

    I brought this one by mistake – I thought that it was the new collection containing a new Stephen King short story set in the Dark Tower universe. It wasn't but it's still a nice "little" collection of horror stories. Dark Visions contains seven stories; three by Stephen King, three by Dan Simmons a...

  • Dead LinesGreg Bear
    Dead Lines
    by Greg Bear
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • Do Androids Dream of Electric SheepPhilip K Dick
    Science Fiction

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

  • Earth Made of GlassJohn Barnes
    Earth Made of Glass
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Earth Made of Glass is the second volume in the Thousand Cultures series by the American author John Barnes. It has been ten years and Giraut and Margaret of "A Million Open Doors" have been working as diplomats/undercover agents on just about every possible world in The Thousand Cultures. They are...

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

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

  • EvolutionStephen Baxter
    Evolution
    by Stephen Baxter
    Science Fiction

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

  • ExcessionIain M Banks
    Excession
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    I feel kind of ambiguous about this book – one thing is certain it will never be my banks favourite, but on the other hand it's a must read if you are interested in the Culture. First of all I found it hard to follow, all too often I found myself in doubt as to who was who (or maybe what was what)....

  • 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...

  • FinityJohn Barnes
    Finity
    by John Barnes
    Science Fiction

    Finity is a science fiction novel by the author John Barnes. The writing of a Science Fiction story that takes place in an infinite-multiple-universe setting often runs into the basic problem of stopping the main character from just finding the best possible universe and then staying there. Once rem...

  • FlashbackDan Simmons
    Flashback
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    America of 2036 is a wasteland in economic ruin, plagued by Terrorism and extreme acts of violence. Society escapes from this harsh reality by numbing itself on the drug Flashback - a euphoric yet cripplingly addictive drug that allows its users to re-visit their happier, past experiences. It's also...

  • Fork in the Road to ApocalypseJeff Gonsalves
    Fork in the Road to Apocalypse
    by Jeff Gonsalves
    Science Fiction

    Fork in the Road to Apocalypse is the second volume in the Subnorms, written by Jeff Gonsalves. It's the middle of the 21st Century and much of the World's population have seen their genetic makeup mutated by insidious viruses and powerful radiation. A sub species of human has developed from these g...

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • GhostmakerDan Abnett
    Ghostmaker
    by Dan Abnett
    Science Fiction

    The second novel in the Warhammer 40k Gaunt's Ghosts Series and written by that insanely talented author Dan Abnett, Ghostmaker acts as a reflection on the history of the Ghost's and focuses on telling the story of the major characters within the regiment. This is done through the use of connected s...

  • Good News from Outer SpaceJohn Kessel
    Science Fiction

    Good News from Outer Space is a science fiction novel by John Kessel. This probably the strangest book that I've read in a long time. Taking place in the last days of 1999 the book is mostly about faith run amok. Kessel paints a picture of an alternative timeline that's dark and that I do not care f...

  • Hooded ManPaul Kane
    Hooded Man
    by Paul Kane
    Science Fiction

    Hooded Man collects the three novels Arrowhead, Broken Arrow and Arrowland (along with a short story set between the first and second books), all of which are part of the shared post-apocalyptic universe known as the "Afterbright Chronicles" - which includes this years SF Book of the year School's O...

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

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

  • Infernal Desire Machines of Dr HoffmanAngela Carter
    Science Fiction

    Infernal Desire Machines of Dr. Hoffman is a science fiction novel by Angela Carter. It seems some editor thought War of Dreams is a better title for the Americas than The INFERNAL DESIRE MACHINES OF DOCTOR HOFFMAN which is the UK title...stupid editor!! My copy says "WAR OF DREAMS" but I am choosin...

  • Is Death really necessaryJudi Moore
    Science Fiction

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

  • Jack GlassAdam Roberts
    Jack Glass
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Adam Roberts is one of those rare authors who not only manage to create a rewarding, entertaining story but also does so in a way that challenges your perceptions, encourages you examine that which you take for granted and often plays on accepted norms of the genre. Jack Glass is no exception. We be...

  • JagannathKerry Denney
    Jagannath
    by Kerry Denney
    Science Fiction

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

  • Just Another Judgement DaySimon R Green
    Just Another Judgement Day
    by Simon R Green
    Science Fiction

    Just Another Judgement Day is the ninth volume of Simon R. Green's Nightside sequence, published in hardback by Ace in January 2009, and a useful demonstration of why long-running urban fantasy series end up the way they do. Green has been writing the Nightside since 2003. He produces these books at...

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

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

  • Lies, Inc.Philip K Dick
    Lies, Inc.
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Lies, Inc. is a science fiction novel by the award winning author Philip K Dick. To control the aggressiveness of citizens living on top of one another in crowded file cabinets like anthills in overpopulated urban regions, Lies Incorporated uses computer software to keep people sublimely quiet. A me...

  • LoveDeathDan Simmons
    LoveDeath
    by Dan Simmons
    Science Fiction

    LoveDeath is a speculative fiction novel by the award winning author Dan Simmons. I met Simmons at a recent Danish book fair and had a small talk with him about the range of his published work and the problem of categorising books. Not being a very well read Simmons fan (The Hyperion Cantos and Carr...

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

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

  • MoxylandLauren Beukes
    Moxyland
    by Lauren Beukes
    Science Fiction

    Moxyland is the debut novel of Lauren Beukes and the first book published by Angry Robot Books. It is currently nominated in the longlist for the South African Sunday Times Fiction Prize. Set in Cape-town in the near future, four hip young adults live in a world where your online identity is just as...

  • NeuromancerWilliam Gibson
    Neuromancer
    by William Gibson
    Science Fiction

    Released in 1984, Neuromancer was one of those rare moments that broke the mold, pretty much inventing the notion of cyberspace and beginning the genre of the cyberpunk novel. It's been many years since I first read this book and I am re-visiting it here as part of my desire to read all the Hugo awa...

  • Nightingale’s LamentSimon R Green
    Nightingale’s Lament
    by Simon R Green
    Science Fiction

    Nightingale’s Lament is a novel in the Nightside series by Simon R Green. The Nightside occupies the same space but in another dimension as London does. To travel there one must know the correct portals. John Taylor lived in Nightside all his life until it was discovered that his mother was not huma...

  • NodAdrian Barnes
    Nod
    by Adrian Barnes
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • PureJulianna Baggott
    Pure
    by Julianna Baggott
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

  • RoboteerAlex Lamb
    Roboteer
    by Alex Lamb
    Science Fiction

    Alex Lamb's Roboteer paints a picture of a future, that in the political climate of today, feels far too possible.  In this book, a war rages between two sides of humanity, two different and opposing ideologies and lifestyles.  One side, combining genetic and induced mutation with advanced technolog...

  • Rogue MoonAlgis Budrys
    Rogue Moon
    by Algis Budrys
    Science Fiction

    Rogue Moon is the disquieting story of what happens when aberrant scientific ambition is matched by human obsession. Shortlisted for the 1961 Hugo Award (losing out to the quite wonderful A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr), Rogue Moon is one of the few genre novels that Algis Budrys w...

  • RUR & War with the NewtsKarel Capek
    RUR & War with the Newts
    by Karel Capek
    Science Fiction

    R.U.R. (Russum's Universal Robots) is a "play" written almost 100 years ago and first introduced the world to the word "robot" which was derived from the Czech word "robota" meaning serf labor or hard work. ?apek has actually credited his brother (the painter and writer Josef ?apek) as the actual in...

  • Saint ReborAdam Roberts
    Saint Rebor
    by Adam Roberts
    Science Fiction

    Stories from Adam Roberts are always challenging as well as entertaining. Saint Rebor follows this trend, being a diverse collection joined together by the writer’s conceptual ideas in the prologue. Whilst you might expect a variety of story premises in a collection, in Saint Rebor , you have a much...

  • 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...

  • Space MarineIan Watson
    Space Marine
    by Ian Watson
    Science Fiction

    Space Marine is a rare novel that is set in the Warhammer 40k universe, written by Ian Watson. Space Marine is essentially a piece of history in the Warhammer 40k universe, but one that Games Workshop doesn't actually agree with, and was never re-printed. The novel itself no longer "fit's in" with t...

  • State of MindSven Michael Davison
    State of Mind
    by Sven Michael Davison
    Science Fiction

    State of Mind is a post-cyberpunk science fiction thriller by Sven Michael Davison. In the year 2030 you can eat all you want, take drugs and drink as much as you want without any negative side effects, you can call a friend, surf the web, listen to music, watch a film or even play a game without to...

  • SteepleJon Wallace
    Steeple
    by Jon Wallace
    Science Fiction

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

  • Sunshine RepublicTed Brownstein
    Sunshine Republic
    by Ted Brownstein
    Science Fiction

    Sunshine Republic is a dystopian science fiction novel by Ted Brownstein. It's the year 2130 and the newly independent Republic of Florida is deeply divided over the use of technology, the Futurist party believe that their society could be vastly improved by the use of cheap, abundant robot labour a...

  • Tales of Time and SpacePat Castaldo
    Tales of Time and Space
    by Pat Castaldo
    Science Fiction

    Tales of Time and Space is a collection of science fiction short stories by Pat Castaldo. There are 27 short stories contained within this book, all written by Pat Castaldo. The short stories are: The Immune Man Dr Barron's Boy The Pottery method My other self the test the galactic inn for sale at o...

  • Terminal EarthMichael Stewart
    Terminal Earth
    by Michael Stewart
    Science Fiction

    Terminal Earth is a collection of original short stories that all feature the end of the world in some way, edited by Michael Stewart and Neil Thomas. With 23 tales of the apocalypse, Terminal Earth offers a great deal of compelling tales from talented authors. Despite the common theme there are som...

  • The Beautiful LandAlan Averill
    The Beautiful Land
    by Alan Averill
    Science Fiction

    The Beautiful Land makes excellent use of the parallel dimensions theory as it relates to time travel. Here you don't directly travel in time but to a different point in a parallel world which could be almost like our own or vastly different depending on the changes that have taken place. Here thoug...

  • The BeesLaline Paull
    The Bees
    by Laline Paull
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Black HoleAlan Dean Foster
    The Black Hole
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    Seen as how BOB has been hanging around the website for some time now (he's the robot at the top left) I thought it was about time that I reviewed The Black Hole, the book (and film) that features BOB. The book is a direct novelisation of the 1979 Disney film of the same name, written by Alan Dean F...

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

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

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

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

  • The CulledSimon Spurrier
    The Culled
    by Simon Spurrier
    Science Fiction

    There is something gritty and slightly dirty about Simon Spurrier's writing, making it an acquired taste in science fiction at times. Certainly in The Culled, the first book of the Afterblight Chronicles published by Abaddon Books, we are introduced to our main character in a way that parades his vi...

  • The DamagedSimon Law
    The Damaged
    by Simon Law
    Science Fiction

    Horror comes in different guises, it can be dark, chilling, violent, bloody and psychological; Simon Law’s second novel The Damaged is all of these themes. The story starts in 1987 during ‘The Great Storm’. Law does a great job of writing about the eighties that is both familiar to those who remembe...

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

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

  • The 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 EmpireElizabeth Lang
    The Empire
    by Elizabeth Lang
    Science Fiction

    The Empire is a science fiction space opera by Elizabeth Lang. The Centuries old war with Andromedans is heating up and the Empire is the only force that can stand it's way. One brilliant scientist may hold the key to a weapon that could swing the tide and save the galaxy but the method's of the Emp...

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

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

  • The Killing GroundGraham McNeill
    The Killing Ground
    by Graham McNeill
    Science Fiction

    The Killing Ground is the first novel in the newly released second Ultramarines Omnibus, which also includes several additional short stories and even a nice graphic short. The story see's the Two Ultramarines Pasanius Lysane and Uriel Ventris escaping from the Eye of Terror after the events of Dead...

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

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

  • The 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 New York TrilogyPaul Auster
    The New York Trilogy
    by Paul Auster
    Science Fiction

    The New York Trilogy is a collection of 3 stories by Paul Auster. This is the first book that I've read by Poul Auster. I saw him on TV a few months ago, he read from this book and I was deeply fascinated – the way the words flowed and the richness of his voice, gripped me deeply. And then joy, joy,...

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

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

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

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

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

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

  • The Venom of VipersKC May
    Science Fiction

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

  • The Violent CenturyLavie Tidhar
    The Violent Century
    by Lavie Tidhar
    Science Fiction

    The Violent Century has been one of my Holiday reads, a book I bought when it first appeared but had not had time to enjoy until now. It has to be said that Lavie Tidhar is a master linguist. His voice is confident, it's boldy unique and daring. With The Violent Century the author turns his attentio...

  • The Wasp FactoryIain M Banks
    The Wasp Factory
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    The Wasp Factory is the stunning debut of the British author Iain M Banks. Having read everything by Iain M. Banks and finding this book while browsing my brother's bookshelves, made for some hasty rearrangements of my to-read stack. Mostly the words "first novel" on the cover intrigued me - what co...

  • The World InsideRobert Silverberg
    The World Inside
    by Robert Silverberg
    Science Fiction

    The World Inside is a science fiction novel by Robert Silverberg. Silverberg's "THE WORLD INSIDE" is about the giant apartment communistic/yet caste ridden complex (the floors are divided up according to job 'importance), and thought this is the straight bullet shot to the future. Population goes fl...

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

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

  • The Year of the FloodMargaret Atwood
    The Year of the Flood
    by Margaret Atwood
    Science Fiction

    The Year of the Flood is the second novel in Margaret Atwood's post-apocalyptic series and follows the viewpoints of Toby and Ren, members of a religious cult. The book tells the story of some of the events leading up to the cataclysm mentioned in the previous novel Oryx and Crake and there is a goo...

  • The Years of the CityFrederik Pohl
    The Years of the City
    by Frederik Pohl
    Science Fiction

    The Years of the City is a science fiction novel by Frederik Pohl. Subtitled A Chronicle of New York in the next Century, this book is about actually not as much about the big city as about the people in it and how they interact or rather doesn't. The book is split in to five different stories telli...

  • ThreeJay Posey
    Three
    by Jay Posey
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • UbikPhilip K Dick
    Ubik
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    Death, the final frontier, the one inescapable and inevitable fact of that we call life, or is it? What if even after you died you could come back for a limited time and in some limited form to once again see your loved ones and experience the linear existence we so often take for granted. In the vi...

  • Use of WeaponsIain M Banks
    Use of Weapons
    by Iain M Banks
    Science Fiction

    Buying Bank's Use of Weapons was a long shot - a friend had recommended the danish translation of Player of Games, but the (American) bookstore where I mail order most of my books didn't have PoG stocked, so I decided to try another Banks book (I have been wanting to read something by him, for quite...

  • ValhallaAri Bach
    Valhalla
    by Ari Bach
    Science Fiction

    Award winning novelist and academic Gwyneth Jones asserts that ‘a typical science fiction novel has little space for deep and studied characterisation, not because writers lack the skill (though they may) but because in the final analysis the characters are not people, they are pieces of equipment.’...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • Worlds of Exile and IllusionUrsula K Le Guin
    Worlds of Exile and Illusion
    by Ursula K Le Guin
    Science Fiction

    The first three Hainish novels written by Ursula Le Guin in the 1960s are brought together in this one volume. This is the same science fiction setting as her award winning stories The Dispossessed and the Left Hand of Darkness . Worlds of Exile and Illusion begins with the short story prologue – Th...

  • 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...

  • A Serpent UncoiledSimon Spurrier
    A Serpent Uncoiled
    by Simon Spurrier
    Fantasy

    Dan Shaper is a wreck, a private "fixer" who takes on jobs for those people who won't or can't go to the police. Constantly haunted by an event in his past life while working as a violent underworld enforcer the only way he can keep those crippling memories at bay is by a growing cocktail of drugs....

  • A surfeit of mandrakeChaz Wood
    A surfeit of mandrake
    by Chaz Wood
    Fantasy

    A surfeit of mandrake is a short story Anthology which includes elements of fantasy, science fiction, history poems and original artwork. Edited by Chaz Wood and written by a diverse group of Dundonian's. Surfeit - "An excessive amount of something" Mandrake - a plant belonging to the nightshades fa...

  • A Taste of Blood WineFreda Warrington
    A Taste of Blood Wine
    by Freda Warrington
    Fantasy

    A Taste of Blood Wine is romantic. It’s chock full of smoldering description, intrigue and mystery, dark love, and all sorts of gossip and twists and turns. The novel follows Charlotte, the daughter and lab partner of a scientist, as she rapidly falls for the vampire Karl. But then the plot thickens...

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

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

  • 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...

  • Asbury ParkRobb Scott
    Asbury Park
    by Robb Scott
    Fantasy

    Ten weeks ago Homicide Detective Sailor Doyle worked on his first ever solo case, a horrific double murder in a remote area of Virginia that almost finished him for good. Now he's recuperating from the physical wounds and mental trauma, the near death experience acting as a focus to overcome his oth...

  • Baptism of FireAndrzej Sapkowski
    Baptism of Fire
    by Andrzej Sapkowski
    Fantasy

    The Witcher series is something quite special and Baptism of Fire is no exception. Written by the talented Polish author Andrzej Sapkowski and translated by the equally talented liguist David French (who translated the previous book in the series Time of Contempt). The people behind the series have...

  • Black HaloSam Sykes
    Black Halo
    by Sam Sykes
    Fantasy

    Tome of the Undergates was a fun, bloodthirsty and action packed novel with a young and yet confident voice and Black Halo promises more of the same, picking up where the first book ended. These mismatched and grumpy souls that make up Lenk's rag-tag band manage to get themselves shipwrecked on an i...

  • BlackbirdsChuck Wendig
    Blackbirds
    by Chuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    Blackbirds follows the life of Miriam Black who has a singular gift (or curse) that means each time she touches someone she knows when and how they will die - vividly reliving their final moments. Still in her early twenties she's seen sights most people couldn't even imagine along with countless he...

  • Blood and ChocolateAnnette Curtis Klause
    Blood and Chocolate
    by Annette Curtis Klause
    Fantasy

    Blood and Chocolate’s protagonist Vivian Gandillon loves the change—the sweetly painful way her body moves from human to wolf. At 16, she’s stunningly beautiful and has all the men in her pack running after her. Her pack family, recently driven away from West Virginia where her father lost his life,...

  • Blood ReactionDL Atha
    Blood Reaction
    by DL Atha
    Fantasy

    Asa, the century old, vindictive and cruel vampire invades the home of single mother and physician Annalice forcing her to strike a bargain for her daughters life as the monster takes control of her own life and home. Caught in a race against a genetic timeline she must rely on her skills as a physi...

  • 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...

  • BreedsKeith Blackmore
    Breeds
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    There are odd things happening in a near deserted coastal village. Strangers are appearing, asking questions about the towns recluse while dogs are dissapearing and a local hunter discovers a naked human footprint in the snow. With the onset of deep winter things are about to get a lot worse. Having...

  • Charlotte Markham and the House of DarklingMichael Boccacino
    Fantasy

    Charlotte Markham and the House of Darkling is a unique offering that manages to create a Victorian gothic-esque supernatural adventure that manages to create a tangible feeling of suspense. Set within an ancient, remote manor house, the story begins with the murder of Nanny Prum - carer for James a...

  • Dead by DawnGuido Henkel
    Dead by Dawn
    by Guido Henkel
    Fantasy

    Dead by Dawn is the 7th novel in the Jason Dark series by Guido Henkel. A woman in good health dies overnight, and to make matters worse it's Jason Dark's next door neighbour who's snuffed it, something wicked is at work in London town. As his investigation leads him down to the seedy underbelly of...

  • 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...

  • Deadhouse GatesSteven Erikson
    Deadhouse Gates
    by Steven Erikson
    Fantasy

    Deadhouse Gates is the second book in the Malazan Book of the Fallen by Steven Erikson. Picking up where Gardens of the Moon left off, Deadhouse Gates reunites a host of old characters and throws some new ones into the fray. This time the action is focused not on Genabackis, but on the continent of...

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

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

  • Demon RoadDerek Landy
    Demon Road
    by Derek Landy
    Fantasy

    I’m already a fan of Landy’s previous work, Demon Road shows some of the same great dialogue and riveting narrative that made his Skulduggery Pleasant series such a great read. But his latest offering is definitely darker in tone and content, with murderous demon parents, twisted witches, and even t...

  • 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...

  • Dragon HuntersMarc Turner
    Dragon Hunters
    by Marc Turner
    Fantasy

    At the basic level, Marc Turner’s Dragon Hunters is about three things: huge water-dragons, awesome sword-fights, and Machiavellian politics. The second book in Turner’s Chronicles of the Exiles trilogy - although not strictly a sequel to the first When The Heavens Fall - also has a similarly comple...

  • Dragon RiderDavid Burrows
    Dragon Rider
    by David Burrows
    Fantasy

    Dragon Rider is the second novel is the Prophecy of the Kings series, written by David Burrows. After the climatic cliff hanger at the end of Legacy of the Eldric, we find our intrepid adventurers return to a world that has changed without them. War now threatens the land and Nations who once had st...

  • Dreams and ShadowsC Robert Cargill
    Dreams and Shadows
    by C Robert Cargill
    Fantasy

    Dreams and Shadows is a contemporary urban fantasy fairytale which tells the story of two young boys Ewan and Colby who both become embroiled in the secret world of the Limestone Kingdom - a parallel world where Wizards and Genie's co-inhabit with creatures much older and largely forgotten. Ewan and...

  • DroodDan Simmons
    Drood
    by Dan Simmons
    Fantasy

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

  • Earthquake WeatherTim Powers
    Earthquake Weather
    by Tim Powers
    Fantasy

    Tim's middle names should be has super because there just isn't really any other explanation as to how someone can write the way he does. This is nowhere more evident than in his Fault Lines Trilogy and in particular the finale of the story — Earthquake Weather . The book is set within the San Frans...

  • Ecko RisingDanie Ware
    Ecko Rising
    by Danie Ware
    Fantasy

    Ecko Rising is the début novel from Danie Ware, publicist and events organiser for that famous retailer Forbidden Planet. You've got to admire her ambition, not content to just write her first novel within a standard science fiction or fantasy setting, with Ecko Rising she attempt's that which often...

  • 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...

  • EmpressKaren Miller
    Empress
    by Karen Miller
    Fantasy

    Empress is the first volume of the Godspeaker trilogy, by Australian author Karen Miller, and a book that does something unusual enough to be worth describing carefully. Most fantasy novels with a slave-girl protagonist follow a fairly well-marked road: the heroine is mistreated, escapes, gathers al...

  • EntangledGraham Hancock
    Entangled
    by Graham Hancock
    Fantasy

    Entangled is a time-spanning fantasy novel from the best-selling author, Graham Hancock. Leoni is a troubled teenager, living in modern day Los Angeles and after an accidental drug overdose causes her to have a "near-death" experience, she experiences her soul being lifted from her body and thrown b...

  • Fingers and other Fantastic StoriesMarian Coman
    Fantasy

    Fingers and other Fantastic Stories is an anthology by the talented Romanian author Marian Coman, current editor in chief of the newspaper "Obiectiv - Vocea Br'ilei" and a very talented writer. Fingers is his first work to be translated from his own language and includes four short stories that were...

  • Fire SeaWeis and Hickman
    Fire Sea
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    Abarrach, the World of Stone is just that: lava, stone, poisonous fumes, and precious little food that can be grown. The peoples of Abarrach rely on giant rune-inscribed stone pillars called colossi to provide warmth and breathable atmosphere, but the colossi have been failing slowly for many years....

  • Flaming DoveDaniel Arenson
    Flaming Dove
    by Daniel Arenson
    Fantasy

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

  • Foreign DevilsJohn Hornor Jacobs
    Foreign Devils
    by John Hornor Jacobs
    Fantasy

    A steampunk fantasy set in a world that draws some uncomfortable inspiration from our own, Foreign Devils is the sequel to John Hornor Jacobs’ The Incorruptibles and follows the adventures of Fisk and Shoe – two would be mercenaries making their way through a world of demons, feral elves and worse....

  • Full Dark HouseChristopher Fowler
    Full Dark House
    by Christopher Fowler
    Fantasy

    Full Dark House is the first novel in the long running series that follows the enigmatic detectives Bryant and May as they attempt to solves crimes that few would dare to touch. The novel begins in a very unexpected and quite brilliant manner, by one of the main characters dying in a large explosion...

  • Ghost StoryPeter Straub
    Ghost Story
    by Peter Straub
    Fantasy

    Ghost Story is a tale of horror by Peter Straub. It's hard to review this book without talking about the Chowder Society as most of the story centres around this group of old men and their acquaintances. As we meet the Chowder Society, they are a bunch of old guys who meet every couple of weeks and...

  • Gods and Monsters: Unclean SpiritsChuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    Unclean Spirits is the first in a new shared-universe series called Gods and Monsters. Gods (and Monsters) are real. In the past this Pantheon were content to keep the world at arms length, sucking up the belief and devotion of mortals to provide them with the power to wage war against each other. B...

  • Harrison SquaredDaryl Gregory
    Harrison Squared
    by Daryl Gregory
    Fantasy

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

  • HellifaxKeith Blackmore
    Hellifax
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

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

  • In the Shadow of SwordsVal Gunn
    Fantasy

    In the Shadow of Swords is the first volume in the Tales of Ciris Sarn by Val Gunn. When the legendary killer Ciris Sarn ends a life in an empty city plaza with a single dagger thrust, little does he know that an insidious game has been triggered by the brutal slaying. Turning predator into prey, th...

  • InfernalMark De Jager
    Infernal
    by Mark De Jager
    Fantasy

    Stratus wakes up in a field with no idea who he is. All he knows is that his name is Stratus and he doesn't seem to be human. He quickly learns that he possesses an in-human strength, natural gift in magic and an insatiable hunger. Well that and the fact that there seems to be a raging beast inside...

  • Into The LabyrinthWeis and Hickman
    Into The Labyrinth
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    On Abarrach, Xar is attempting to learn the secret of necromancy, but he needs a corpse to test it on. He interrogates the lazar Kleitus about the location of any living Sartan, and Kleitus reveals that Haplo lied to Xar about all the Sartan dying at the hands of the dead; Balthazar and his group re...

  • 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...

  • King MakerMaurice Broaddus
    King Maker
    by Maurice Broaddus
    Fantasy

    King Maker is an Urban fantasy novel by Maurice Broaddus, retelling the the ancient Arthurian legend through lives of Indianapolis street gangs and the first in "The knights of Breton Court" series. The story involves the principal character of King, son of Luther and destined to try and unite the f...

  • King RatChina Mieville
    King Rat
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    King Rat is the debut of the award winning British author China Miéville. The novel begins with Saul returning from a camping trip to the top floor flat he shares with his father, deciding not to wake him he goes straight to bed. In the early hours of the following morning he is rudely awakened by t...

  • King’s JusticeMaurice Broaddus
    King’s Justice
    by Maurice Broaddus
    Fantasy

    King’s Justice is the second novel in the Knights of Breton Court series and the sequel to the phenomenal novel King maker by Maurice Broaddus. From the drug gangs of downtown Indianapolis, the one true king will arise. Spurred on with ever more urgent visions by his mystic advisor Merle, King attem...

  • Knight of the Blazing SunJosh Reynolds
    Knight of the Blazing Sun
    by Josh Reynolds
    Fantasy

    The noble and venerable order of The Knights of the Blazing Sun dedicate themselves to the warrior-goddess Myrmidia and in her name travel the land as Templars. The young knight Hector Goetz is sent to investigate a group of knights gone missing on the distant island of Svunum. Reunited with his com...

  • KonradDavid Ferring
    Konrad
    by David Ferring
    Fantasy

    Some books arrive in your life at exactly the right moment and lodge there for good, and Konrad is one of those for me. I came to it as a young reader, at a time when the Warhammer world was still new and strange and dangerous in my imagination, and whatever its flaws, and I will be honest about the...

  • KrakenChina Mieville
    Kraken
    by China Mieville
    Fantasy

    Kraken is essentially "grown up" urban fantasy - and when I say grown up I don't mean littered with expletives but with a deal of maturity and written without compromise (as all Miéville's works are). You won't find any soppy vampires or angst ridden werewolves here, Kraken is a complicated mix of m...

  • Krysta the Dark QueenPat Castaldo
    Krysta the Dark Queen
    by Pat Castaldo
    Fantasy

    Krysta the Dark Queen is a dark fantasy novel by the author Pat Castaldo. Justice or revenge? was Krysta a saintly spirit dealing out divine justice or was she an evil ghoul, a vampire who carved a bloodthirsty path for her own revengeful malevolence? The first part of the book is taken up with the...

  • London FallingPaul Cornell
    London Falling
    by Paul Cornell
    Fantasy

    London Falling is the first in Paul Cornell's Shadow Police series. For those who don't know, Paul Cornell is an award winning author who writes across a variety of media and one of only two people to have been Hugo nominated for prose, TV and comics. He's also written a number of Doctor Who stories...

  • Lord Foul's BaneStephen Donaldson
    Lord Foul's Bane
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    Lord Fouls Bane is the first volume in the The First Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever, written by Stephen Donaldson. Thomas Covenant was a very successful author before being diagnosed with leprosy, the wasting disease that causes fear, revulsion and even hatred in other people. Fearing...

  • Lord of SlaughterMD Lachlan
    Lord of Slaughter
    by MD Lachlan
    Fantasy

    The wolves are howling outside the city of Constantinople and mysterious sorcery plagues its citizens. On a field of battle littered with the dead and dying stumbles a ragged figure dressed in wolfskin and wreaking of death. Slipping past the guards he enters the tent of the Emperor and draws his sw...

  • Lost WorldsClark Ashton Smith
    Lost Worlds
    by Clark Ashton Smith
    Fantasy

    There are writers you admire, and then there are writers who rearrange something in your head, and Clark Ashton Smith belongs firmly in the second category for me. I came to Lost Worlds more or less by accident, knowing Smith only as a name that hovered at the edge of the Lovecraft circle, and I was...

  • Medusa's WebTim Powers
    Medusa's Web
    by Tim Powers
    Fantasy

    Medusa’s Web by Tim Powers follows the story of siblings, Scott and Madeline, required to stay for a week in their aunt’s house by her recently amended will.  Their cousins Claimayne and Ariel, who live in the house are less than pleased by this requirement. The story has a creepy atmosphere, Scott...

  • MistificationKaaron Warren
    Mistification
    by Kaaron Warren
    Fantasy

    In Mistification Kaaron Warren creates a character called Marvo the magician; a stage magician whose magic is real. It’s a world where a small number of true magicians use the “mist” to keep the horrors of reality hidden from the world. It starts with Marvo trapped in an attic with his grandmother....

  • MockingbirdChuck Wendig
    Mockingbird
    by Chuck Wendig
    Fantasy

    Mockingbird reunites us with that wonderfully screwed-up, dark and acerbic character of Miriam Black; the girl who has the (mis)fortune to witness how someone will depart this mortal coil with just a simple contact of skin. Some time has passed since we last met that crazy bird and after a lifetime...

  • Moon's ArtificeTom Lloyd
    Moon's Artifice
    by Tom Lloyd
    Fantasy

    A man falls from the roof of a building, pursued by agents unknown and Lawbringer Narin is asked personally by none other than a god to investigate the matter and help find a cure to the unconscious mans poison, thus begins Moon's Artifice. What follows is a powerful, rich fantasy tale that hits all...

  • Mountain manKeith Blackmore
    Mountain man
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

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

  • Music in the BoneMarion Pitman
    Music in the Bone
    by Marion Pitman
    Fantasy

    Anthologies from Alchemy Press specialise in bringing myth to a contemporary setting and general involve adult characters living adult lives. Music in the Bone is no exception to this. It’s quite a varied collection of Marion Pitman’s work from a number of different sources and spans a long career o...

  • NekropolisTim Waggoner
    Nekropolis
    by Tim Waggoner
    Fantasy

    Nekropolis is the first volume in a new series of fantasy horror, written by Tim Waggoner and is based on his novella Necropolis. Matt Richter is a former cop now a private eye with a big difference, he is a zombie (could happen to anyone really). A zombie private detective does have it's advantages...

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

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

  • PoisonChris Wooding
    Poison
    by Chris Wooding
    Fantasy

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

  • PoisonSarah Pinborough
    Poison
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

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

  • PremonitionsJamie Schultz
    Premonitions
    by Jamie Schultz
    Fantasy

    It’s the kind of heist Karyn Ames has dreamed of—enough to set her crew up pretty well and enough to keep her safely stocked on a very rare, very expensive black market drug. Without it, Karyn hallucinates slices of the future overlapped with her present until she’s incapacitated and completely over...

  • Pretty Little Dead ThingsGary McMahon
    Pretty Little Dead Things
    by Gary McMahon
    Fantasy

    Pretty Little Dead Things is a urban horror novel by the author Gary McMahon. Thomas Usher used to be a fairly normal guy, a family man with a wife and child, all this changed when a tragic accident took his family away from him. He began to see the dead, and they him, all the lost and lonely souls...

  • Rapunzels DaughtersJosie Brown
    Rapunzels Daughters
    by Josie Brown
    Fantasy

    Rapunzel's Daughters is a short story collection edited by Josie Brown, Rose Mambert, and Bill Racicot. The thirty one stories all hold the common idea of expanding on the classic children's tales with a more modern, adult spin. Each of the short stories are written by a different author and the len...

  • Red CountryJoe Abercrombie
    Red Country
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

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

  • Red GloveHolly Black
    Red Glove
    by Holly Black
    Fantasy

    It's funny how even if you follow a genre closely you can still miss some pretty successful authors, I guess that there are just so many novels published nowadays that this will become increasingly common. I haven't read anything by Holly Black before but I have been aware of her work without realis...

  • Red MoonBenjamin Percy
    Red Moon
    by Benjamin Percy
    Fantasy

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

  • RestorationGuy Adams
    Restoration
    by Guy Adams
    Fantasy

    Restoration is the second part of the duology that began with the quite brilliant The World House , written by Guy Adams. None who enter the World House leave it unchanged. The purpose behind the reality bending dimension has finally become clear but in the same way that you can't observe an event w...

  • Return to CanifisT S Church
    Return to Canifis
    by T S Church
    Fantasy

    Return to Canifis is the sequel to Betrayal at Falador, set within the Runescape Universe and written by T S Church. Varrock is considered to be one of the greatest cities in the known world, but even here danger lurks - people have been dissapearing, or their bodies discovered ripped apart. Some ar...

  • 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...

  • SafariKeith Blackmore
    Safari
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

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

  • Sandman SlimRichard Kadrey
    Sandman Slim
    by Richard Kadrey
    Fantasy

    I'd like to start this review by saying that Richard Kadrey doesn't get the visibility he deserves, not by a long shot. I only discovered him myself by seeing other authors discussing how wonderful his work is. They aren't wrong. Sandman Slim - real name James Stark - has just spent the lat eleven y...

  • 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...

  • Serpent MageWeis and Hickman
    Serpent Mage
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    The novel picks up just where Fire Sea left off. Alfred jumps into Death's Gate as Haplo's ship passes through it, and finds himself in a stasis room like the one he woke up in; in fact, he believes he's on Arianus. Tired, he decides to put himself back to sleep... Only to find someone in "his" stas...

  • ShadowBreedDavid Ferring
    ShadowBreed
    by David Ferring
    Fantasy

    ShadowBreed is the second book of David Ferring's Konrad trilogy, and it picks up the instant the first volume leaves off, ramping the violence and the strangeness up considerably. If you have not read Konrad , start there; this is not a series to come into halfway, whatever the occasional bursts of...

  • Sharp EndsJoe Abercrombie
    Sharp Ends
    by Joe Abercrombie
    Fantasy

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

  • Something Wicked This Way ComesRay Bradbury
    Fantasy

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

  • Soul StealersAndy Remic
    Soul Stealers
    by Andy Remic
    Fantasy

    Soul Stealers is the sequel to the Andy Remic Epic novel - Kell's Legend, and the second volume in the Clockwork Vampire Chronicles. The indomniable Kell is still being hunted by the evil clockwork vampires and to make matters worse, he is now being tracked by two beautiful but deadly female vampire...

  • SplinteredJamie Schultz
    Splintered
    by Jamie Schultz
    Fantasy

    If you like your urban fantasy dark and gruesome with an added touch of horror, Splintered and its predecessor Premonitions are right up your alley. This sequel picks up shortly after the first book, following Anna Ruiz and the rest of the crew. Since the events of the previous novel, Karyn is out o...

  • Storm ThiefChris Wooding
    Storm Thief
    by Chris Wooding
    Fantasy

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

  • Strange Tales VRosalie Parker
    Strange Tales V
    by Rosalie Parker
    Fantasy

    World Fantasy Award winning series Strange Tales has now reached its fifth volume, offering again a bunch of tales ranging from SF to horror, from fantasy to supernatural, sharing a "strange" or "weird" character. The present book includes sixteen brand new stories, penned by authors from both sides...

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

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

  • Sword of the NorthLuke Scull
    Sword of the North
    by Luke Scull
    Fantasy

    The first novel in The Grim Company was a singular example of the traditional fantasy novel for the 21st century. I stand by my comment of it being one of best fantasy novels of 2013. Sword of the North is the direct sequel to this debut and follows the spectacular events at the end of the first boo...

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

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

  • TerrorlordGuido Henkel
    Terrorlord
    by Guido Henkel
    Fantasy

    Terrorlord is the 9th volume in the Jason Dark series by Guido Henkel. Released by a dark and ancient ritual, the Terrorlord is freed once more onto the mortal plane, his one desire to open the seven gates of hell and unleash the undead hordes upon mankind. Jason Dark has the misfortune to have alre...

  • The Blood WitchGuido Henkel
    The Blood Witch
    by Guido Henkel
    Fantasy

    The Blood Witch is the 8th volume in the Jason Dark: Ghost Hunter series of Novellas by Guido Henkel. An ancient curse re-surfaces and from deep within England's dark forests comes a hideous terror, stronger than ever and stalking the fog wrapped streets of Victorian London. Young girls are disappea...

  • The Bloody Red BaronKim Newman
    The Bloody Red Baron
    by Kim Newman
    Fantasy

    Those good fellows over at Titan books have released a brand new edition of the best-selling sequel to Anno Dracula, complete with an additional novella. Continuing the alternative history tale where the vampire hunter Van Helsing was defeated by Dracula, bringing Vampirism into the open and for a t...

  • 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 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 Cathedral of Known ThingsEdward Cox
    Fantasy

    The Cathedral of Known Things is the sequel to the fantasy novel The Relic Guild by Edward Cox. The ongoing story of the agents of The Relic Guild as they seek to oppose their enemies, the Genii. The Guild is trying to prevent them from achieving what they started in the previous war, the destructio...

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

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

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

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

  • The Death HouseSarah Pinborough
    The Death House
    by Sarah Pinborough
    Fantasy

    I have been lucky enough to be one of a select few to receive an early copy of The Death House , wrapped in brown paper and twine and promising much. I have to say it's an impressive read. The story involves a unique childrens home (The Death House) where those who are found susceptible to an unexpl...

  • The Dragon in the StoneAllan Scott
    The Dragon in the Stone
    by Allan Scott
    Fantasy

    The Dragon in the Stone is a standalone novel by Allan Scott, published by Orbit in 1991, and one of the better and quieter pieces of mythologically grounded fantasy that came out of British genre publishing in the early nineties. Scott is the rarer of the two halves of his long collaboration with M...

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

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

  • The Executioners HeartGeorge Mann
    The Executioners Heart
    by George Mann
    Fantasy

    The Executioners Heart is the fourth novel in the Newbury and Hobbes series and follows on from the events of The Immorality Engine - although you don't need to have read that or any of the previous books to enjoy The Executioners Heart. The Queen's agents Sir Maurice Newbury and Miss Veronica Hobbe...

  • The Final Testimony of Raphael Ignatius PhoenixPaul Sussman

    There is a bittersweet air that surrounds the publication of The Final Testimony of Raphael Ignatius Phoenix . It was the authors very first work and yet it has also proved to be his last. Paul Sussman passed away at the untimely age of 45 in May 2012. The book remained unpublished until his wife ma...

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

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

  • The Grim CompanyLuke Scull
    The Grim Company
    by Luke Scull
    Fantasy

    The Grey city of Dorminia, surrounded by granite walls thrice the height of a man and at least three feet thick at it's weakest point. These walls provide a barrier for those without as they do those within, patrolled by the harsh Crimson watch and observed from the skies by the Mindhawks - magical...

  • The Hand of ChaosWeis and Hickman
    The Hand of Chaos
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    Haplo takes a submersible back to Draknor to retrieve his ship. He finds Samah there— wet, haggard, and lost. The leader of the Council has opened Death's Gate, allowing the dragon-snakes free access to all the four worlds. Haplo decides he is too tired to physically capture Samah and uses his ship...

  • The Heir of NightHelen Lowe
    The Heir of Night
    by Helen Lowe
    Fantasy

    The Heir of Night was reviewed by me for the 2012 David Gemmell Morningstar Award, which went on to win the award! I've been aware of the novel for some time now but as it was never sent to me it remained one I'd been meaning to buy and I'm very glad that I'm getting the chance to read it for the Ge...

  • The Illearth WarStephen Donaldson
    The Illearth War
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    The Illearth War follows straight on from the events in Lord Foul's Bane and just as Thomas Covenant is getting used to the idea that his recent experiences were just a dream he is again summoned to the Land. On his return however he discovers that 40 years have passed in his absence with the Counci...

  • 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 Janus CycleTej Turner
    The Janus Cycle
    by Tej Turner
    Fantasy

    Every now and then I am sent something that stretches the boundaries of my reading interest. The Janus Cycle is one such book. Whilst this book is billed as a novel, it is really a collection of linked short stories. The linked theme follows a disparate group of individuals seemingly connected by th...

  • The King of the CragsStephen Deas
    The King of the Crags
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    The King of the Crags is the follow up to The Adamantine Palace by Stephen Deas. Prince Jehal is now reaping the fruits of his new found power after murdering, poisoning and backstabbing his way to the top, enjoying the confidence (and Bed) of the new speaker. Those loyal to the old regime are still...

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

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

  • The Last WishAndrzej Sapkowski
    The Last Wish
    by Andrzej Sapkowski
    Fantasy

    The Last Wish is the first of two short story collections that precede the main Witcher Saga, written by the polish author Andrzej Sapkowski. The majority of the stories that make up this novel were originally published in the Polish science fiction magazine Fantastyka which have been intertwined wi...

  • 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 MalicePeter Newman
    The Malice
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Malice is the follow-up to one of my favourite fantasy reads last year, Peter Newmans The Vagrant . It's a story set in a post-apocalyptic future where forgotten technology intermingles with demonspawn and twisted lands full of twisted mutants. It had the dark, haunted flavour of Stephen Kings D...

  • The Missing BoatmanKeith Blackmore
    The Missing Boatman
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    All over the World, Miracles are taking place, on a wintery highway in Quebec a man crashes his car and survives, in New York a homeless person is run over by a bus and lives. In Tokyo, a teenager jumps off a high rise building and fails in taking her own life. While many see these marvels as a posi...

  • The Ocean at the end of the laneNeil Gaiman
    Fantasy

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

  • The Order of the PhoenixJ K Rowling
    The Order of the Phoenix
    by J K Rowling
    Fantasy

    The latest book in the Harry Potter series is twice as long as the previous one (which was twice as long as the one before it), it darker and somebody actually dies in it. Somebody not evil. That doesn't make it worth reading though. The fact that it's well written and highly entertaining, does make...

  • The Power That PreservesStephen Donaldson
    The Power That Preserves
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    Thomas Covenant is once again summoned to the strange alternative world where magic exists and an ancient enemy threatens the land. Although for Thomas mere days have passed, for the inhabitants of "The Land" it's been over seven years since the unbeliever was abroad. The land is much changed since...

  • The Relic GuildEdward Cox
    The Relic Guild
    by Edward Cox
    Fantasy

    Sometimes a book comes along that reminds you of the pleasure of being a reader and/or a writer, a book that you start at the right time and cannot fail to admire. In a measure, The Relic Guild is this kind of book. From the first page, the description crackles and draws you into the story and certa...

  • The Sad Tale of the Brothers GrossbartJesse Bullington
    Fantasy

    The Sad Tale of the Brothers Grossbart is a dark fantasy novel, the debut of Jesse Bullington. The year is 1364 and in the plague infested, devil-haunted darkness of Medieval Europe most of the population struggle to survive, living in abject poverty while the opulent few enjoy a life of luxury. The...

  • The Seventh GateWeis and Hickman
    The Seventh Gate
    by Weis and Hickman
    Fantasy

    In the Labyrinth, Marit and Hugh venture out to try and find Alfred. He turns out to be the prisoner of a Labyrinth dragon, which are almost the equal of the dragon-snakes in cruelty and savagery. With the help of the Cursed Blade, they drive it off and rescue Alfred. On Abarrach, Haplo is dying. He...

  • The SilenceTim Lebbon
    The Silence
    by Tim Lebbon
    Fantasy

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

  • The 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 SunderingGav Thorpe
    The Sundering
    by Gav Thorpe
    Fantasy

    The most tragic tale from the Time of Legends tells of the fall of the greatest houses of the elves and the fates of three kings: Pheonix, Witch and Shadow. There was once a time when all was order, now so distant that no mortal creature can remember it. Since time immemorial the elves have dwelt up...

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

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

  • The VagrantPeter Newman
    The Vagrant
    by Peter Newman
    Fantasy

    The Vagrant was an unexpected delight, showing up totally out of the blue with a mature, confident writing style and a deliciously dark and twisted world. The flawed protagonist known only as "The Vagrant" is a masterstroke — here we have a figure who doesn't give much away. He doesn't speak, but he...

  • The Vanishing ThroneElizabeth May
    The Vanishing Throne
    by Elizabeth May
    Fantasy

    The Vanishing Throne by Elizabeth May is the second in a series of books following the adventures of Lady Aileana Kameron (or Kam) and the action follow on directly from the first book. If you haven’t read The Falconer I suggest you do, as this review definitely contains spoilers for the ending of t...

  • The WeirdAnn Vandermeer
    The Weird
    by Ann Vandermeer
    Fantasy

    The Weird is a landmark tome of leviathan proportions, gathering together the best weird fiction from the last 100 years or so (beginning in 1908) from some of the most talented people that ever put pen to paper. It's difficult to convey just how much information is contained in this truly gargantua...

  • The World HouseGuy Adams
    The World House
    by Guy Adams
    Fantasy

    The World House is the first novel of a two part modern fantasy, written by Guy Adams. An unassuming wooden box, small enough to hold in one hand and carved with Japanese writing, except it doesn't open as you would expect a box to, it opens the door to the most unusual house you could ever dream (o...

  • 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...

  • TitheHolly Black
    Tithe
    by Holly Black
    Fantasy

    I first read Tithe when I was young, probably the same age as the main character, Kaye—16. I was entranced. It was so dark, so beautifully written, and so enticing. I wanted more of the silver knight, more of the deliciously dark faery world. It isn’t by any means glorious—there’s teen drinking, gru...

  • 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...

  • ViciousV E Schwab
    Vicious
    by V E Schwab
    Fantasy

    V.E Schwab’s Vicious is a superhero novel, but perhaps not the one you’d expect. There’s no comic action, no explosions, no duels in the sky before frightened citizens. Those with powers work in the background, still regarded as a myth or urban legends. Vicious is about what happens when two college...

  • Viking DeadToby Venables
    Viking Dead
    by Toby Venables
    Fantasy

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

  • VivisepultureAndy Remic
    Vivisepulture
    by Andy Remic
    Fantasy

    Vivisepulture is an ebook collection of weird tales from some seriously talented authors, edited by the singular Andy Remic. (According to the online dictionary Vivisepulture is the act of burying someone alive by the way and you get some odd articles looking that one up on Google I can tell you!)....

  • White Gold WielderStephen Donaldson
    White Gold Wielder
    by Stephen Donaldson
    Fantasy

    White Gold Wielder is the last book in the second of Stephen Donaldson's trilogies about the Leper Thomas Covenant and his journeys to the parallel reality known as "The Land". Regular visitors to the site may recall that I didn't think that much of the previous volume - "The One Tree" and I almost...

  • Wicked LovelyMelissa Mar
    Wicked Lovely
    by Melissa Mar
    Fantasy

    Aislinn has always seen faeries. They are powerful, cruel, and dangerous. She and her grandmother have avoided them all of their lives—don’t stare, don’t speak, don’t attract their attention. But now, faeries have started to stalk her, including Keenan, the Summer King. Keenan has searched high and...

  • Wolf in ShadowDavid Gemmell
    Wolf in Shadow
    by David Gemmell
    Fantasy

    I will put my cards on the table at once: Wolf in Shadow is one of the finest novels I have had the pleasure of reading, and I would argue it contains some of David Gemmell's very best writing. Gemmell is rightly celebrated as a master of heroic fantasy, but here, in the first full Jon Shannow novel...

  • Zombies: A CompendiumOtto Penzler
    Zombies: A Compendium
    by Otto Penzler
    Fantasy

    Brains, Brains, BRAINS!, you just have to love those lurching, decaying animated corpses. The living dead make a great enemy and here we have wall-to-wall flesh eating monsters, ghouls and things that go bite in the night, brought to (un)life by some of the best horror and fantasy writers in the wor...

  • Zoo CityLauren Beukes
    Zoo City
    by Lauren Beukes
    Fantasy

    Zoo City is an Urban fantasy novel by the South African author Lauren Beukes. Zinzi December is a woman with a gift, and perhaps a curse - over ten years ago a remarkable and disturbing event changed the lives of many, and the world in general. Those who have committed the crime of murder, or otherw...

  • Becoming DavidPhil Sloman
    Becoming David
    by Phil Sloman
    Horror

    A horror novella that sets out its stall early on, Becoming David by Phil Sloman is a carefully constructed novella that investigates the mind of a perfectionist serial killer from both the inside and the outside. To begin, we are introduced to Richard, a self-sufficient serial killer who has worked...

  • 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...

  • Darkly Dreaming DexterJeff Lindsay
    Darkly Dreaming Dexter
    by Jeff Lindsay
    Horror

    I must admit I watched the entire series of Dexter before I even picked up one of Lindsay’s novels. Did I do the right thing? Yes and no. I absolutely loved the show, one of my faves. The book? Awesome too. I will definitely be adding them to my collection in the near future. Are they the same? No....

  • 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...

  • Death DreamGraham Masterton
    Death Dream
    by Graham Masterton
    Horror

    Although Graham never seems to have reached the dizzy heights of other horror writers he has been a very prolific writer over the years, and has seen a few of his works hit the silver screen. However, forever in the shadow of the likes of Herbert, another British horror novelist, these movie adaptio...

  • Demon SeedDean Koontz
    Demon Seed
    by Dean Koontz
    Horror

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

  • FiendPeter Stenson
    Fiend
    by Peter Stenson
    Horror

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

  • HexThomas Olde Heuvelt
    Hex
    by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
    Horror

    Thomas Olde Heuvelt won last years Hugo award for his novelette The Day the World Turned Upside Down . Reading Hex I can see why. The idea is incredible — A woman named Katharine is killed as a witch in the 16 th Century and then begins haunting the woods around the village of Black Spring where she...

  • HornsJoe Hill
    Horns
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

    Ignatius Perrish awoke with the usual hangover symptoms that accompany a drunken night of debauchery - raging headache, bad breath... and a pair of horns growing from his temples. Ig had it all, a privileged upbringing, a caring family, a famous dad and the love of the beautiful, vivacious Merrin Wi...

  • MongrelsStephen Graham Jones
    Mongrels
    by Stephen Graham Jones
    Horror

    Mongrels is a book that grips you by the jugular right from the start, a bit like the way a werewolf might. Funny enough that's what Mongrels is all about - a family of werewolves who are forced to travel around the USA avoiding the authorities and others who take a dislike their kind. It's a countr...

  • N0S4R2Joe Hill
    N0S4R2
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

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

  • NecroscopeBrian Lumley
    Necroscope
    by Brian Lumley
    Horror

    By the time Lumley got around to writing this book he had already written thirteen others. His early works expanded heavily the Cthulu mythos with some subtle differences. He introduces us to a guy named Titus Crow. But that was then and this is now and we have a new hero to thank. Harry Keogh. Harr...

  • 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...

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

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

  • Pig IslandMo Hayder
    Pig Island
    by Mo Hayder
    Horror

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

  • Salems LotStephen King
    Salems Lot
    by Stephen King
    Horror

    Salem's Lot was Kings second published novel, following on from his success with Carrie. Written shortly after King moved to Maine (the bulk of the story was actually written before Carrie), it follows the writer Ben Mears as he moves back to the small town of Jerusalem's Lot (known locally as Salem...

  • SawbonesStuart Macbride
    Sawbones
    by Stuart Macbride
    Horror

    What a neat little idea in a neat little book.  Book is probably a touch generous coming in at just over a hundred pages but don’t let that spoil your fun, what you have here is actually a twisted tale, gruesome in the telling and packs a punch other books only hope to imitate. Sawbones tells the ta...

  • The Birthing HouseChristopher Ransom
    The Birthing House
    by Christopher Ransom
    Horror

    A debut novel from an aspiring novelist. The book reached number 6 on the London Times fiction best seller list. A traditional tale of a haunted house. And already reading this. You feel like you are. Reading the novel. I’m sorry Christopher but I’m honestly not sure how you managed to create the ra...

  • 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 FungusHarry Adam Knight
    The Fungus
    by Harry Adam Knight
    Horror

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

  • The 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...

  • The Long WalkRichard Bachman
    The Long Walk
    by Richard Bachman
    Horror

    Review by Arron Clegg. Wow, what a novel. Not my first time for reading it, but I just seemed to enjoy it even more this time around. Now, most of you out there are already aware that Richard Bachman was a pen name for Stephen King. He chose to do this purely because in his early days, even as today...

  • The Scarlet GospelsClive Barker
    The Scarlet Gospels
    by Clive Barker
    Horror

    It has to be said that even though I don't entertain much horror, Clive Barker is somewhat of a legend. Growing up in the 80's his name was often spoken in quiet awe by impressionable teenagers, not least due to his infamous Books of Blood collections. For me though it was the character of Pinhead t...

  • The VoicesFR Tallis
    The Voices
    by FR Tallis
    Horror

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

  • VictimsShaun Hutson
    Victims
    by Shaun Hutson
    Horror

    Back in his heyday Shaun Hutson was a prolific writer of horror novels. When people ask what defines a horror novel, depending on who you ask, you will get a plethora of answers. The horror genre has changed so much over the years as also the number and type of things people are frightened of has ch...

  • 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...

  • We Are All Completely FineDaryl Gregory
    We Are All Completely Fine
    by Daryl Gregory
    Horror

    Cannibals ate Stan’s hands and legs. A psychopath cut Barbara open and carved pictures on her bones. They and other people with similarly intense and unbelievable experiences attend group therapy sessions at the center of Daryl Gregory’s novella We Are All Completely Fine. At the start of the story...

  • Call of CthulhuHP Lovecraft
    Call of Cthulhu
    by HP Lovecraft
    Fantasy

    Call of Cthulhu is the original short story by HP Lovecraft that has since spawned the whole Cthulhu mythos, with films, video games, roleplay games and many novels by authors in the shared Cthulhu universe (known as the Cthulhu Mythos or the Lovecraft Mythos), which was the intent of Lovecraft. The...

  • 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...

  • Spoils of WarAdrian Tchaikovsky
    Spoils of War
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    Spoils of War , by Adrian Tchaikovsky, is a volume of short stories set in the Tales of the Apt world and takes place (in the chronology of the world) before Empire in Black and Gold which is the first novel in that series.  It tells stories of some of the minor characters from the main book series,...

  • Touch of IronTimandra Whitecastle
    Touch of Iron
    by Timandra Whitecastle
    Fantasy

    Touch of Iron is not, as the Amazon blurb suggests, a tale of an epic quest of a Prince for a magic sword, although there is a Prince and he is on a quest for a magic sword.  Neither is it is a story about Fae, as evoked by the title in the trend of supernatural fantasy.  It is instead, the story of...

  • A Head Full of GhostsPaul Tremblay
    A Head Full of Ghosts
    by Paul Tremblay
    Horror

    A Head Full of Ghosts was first released last year and won the coveted Bram Stokers award for Best Novel. It's also received pretty much the finest compliment a Horror novel can receive when Stephen King said of the book:   Scared the living hell out of me, and I'm pretty hard to scare.   Titan Book...

  • DefenderGX Todd
    Defender
    by GX Todd
    Science Fiction

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

  • MigrationDaniel David
    Migration
    by Daniel David
    Science Fiction

    What if our day to day behaviour was recorded, analysed and mapped to create a copy of us in a  digital utopia? How would this new reality transact with our own where people need to be born and grow up before they can be absorbed? What would the consequences be for those left behind? Migration tells...

  • Marked to Die: A Tribute to Mark SamuelsJustin Isis

    First of all: don't worry. Mark Samuels - the well known British horror writer- is alive and well ( although, maybe, crossing his fingers). It's not common to dedicate a new short story anthology to celebrate a living author ( whose career, hopefully, will last for many, many years to come) but that...

  • Sherlock Holmes and the Shadwell ShadowsJames Lovegrove
    Fantasy

    I've always had a soft spot for Sherlock Holmes. The books are wonderful pieces of classic fiction (my favourite being the Hounds of the Baskervilles) and modern interpretations such as those penned by Moffat and Gattiss help to keep this  Centenarian alive in the minds of millions. I've never consi...

  • Dust and DesireConrad Williams
    Dust and Desire
    by Conrad Williams
    General Fiction

    I don't often get the chancce to read a crime novel and so when Titan Books let slip that the third novel in the Joel Sorrell series was about to be released I couldn't resist giving the series a try. Dust and Desire is the first book featuring the PI and sets the scene prefectly. The prologue descr...

  • RelicsTim Lebbon
    Relics
    by Tim Lebbon
    Fantasy

    Angela thinks she knows her boyfriend Vince pretty well, that is until he goes missing. She quickly learns he has a hidden employment, his boss the infamous London crime lord Frederick Meloy (known as Fat Frederick, but nerver, ever as Fat Freddy). His secret job? tracking down arcane relics succh a...

  • Nightmares Realm: New Tales of The Weird and FantasticST Joshi

    "Life is but a dream" wrote Calderon De La Barca and "All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream" confirmed Edgard Allan Poe. Dreams and nightmares constitute part of our nightly life, but they usually vanish as soon as we wake up. Sometimes, however, they stay with us and haunt also our...

  • The Winter Hunt and Other StoriesSteve Lockley
    Horror

    Steve Lockley and Paul Lewis form a British writing duo ( although they also publish individually) whose work has been appearing in various  genre anthologies during the years. Fifteen of their tales of horror and terror are now assembled in an enjoyable collection from Parallel Universe. The overal...

  • Haunted FuturesSalome Jones
    Haunted Futures
    by Salome Jones
    Science Fiction

    Haunted Futures is a collection presenting the uncertain future in many guises. Originally funded as part of a kickstarter campaign and edited by Salome Jones it features short stories from authors including Warren Ellis, Jeff Noon, Tricia Sullivan and SL Huang (amongst others). The brief these auth...

  • Crow ShineAlan Baxter
    Crow Shine
    by Alan Baxter
    Horror

    A well respected novelist, Australian writer Alan Baxter is also the author of many short stories, appeared in various venues, but never before assembled in a single volume. Crow Shine is a massive collection of Baxter's dark tales which will pleasantly surprise the reader not yet acquainted with th...

  • Dreaming in the DarkJack Dann
    Dreaming in the Dark
    by Jack Dann
    Fantasy

    Readers and reviewers of dark fiction have certainly noticed, during the last years, that the number of Australian authors appearing in books published in the UK and in USA is constantly on the rise, and that the quality of their contributions is usually top notch. This Australian renaissance, reach...

  • A Time for GriefAdrian Tchaikovsky
    A Time for Grief
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    This is the second in the series of books of short stories in the shadows of the apt world from Newcon Press written by Adrian Tchaikovsky.  You don't need to have read Tales of the Apt book 1, Spoils of War, to appreciate this one, but it would probably help if you were familiar with the world as a...

  • BlackwingEd McDonald
    Blackwing
    by Ed McDonald
    Fantasy

    Blackwing is a book that suprised me more than any other has so far this year. It's the debut of Ed McDonald and boy what a way to make an entrance. The book follows Galharrow, leader of the mercenary squad known as Blackwing. Galharrow and his band take on jobs most would consider too dangerous, es...

  • Gun MachineWarren Ellis
    Gun Machine
    by Warren Ellis
    General Fiction

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

  • Alien: CovenantAlan Dean Foster
    Alien: Covenant
    by Alan Dean Foster
    Science Fiction

    I've been a big fan of the Aliens series ever since I saw the first film back in the 1980's. I've read all the books, including the expanded universe (non-canonical) ones from Bantam, and more recently from Titan books. I've watched and read the Aliens vs Predator crossover media, some which is grea...

  • A Song for No Man's LandAndy Remic
    A Song for No Man's Land
    by Andy Remic
    Fantasy

    I've been reading Remic's stories for a number of years now. His Clockwork Vampire Series is heroic fantasy at it's very best.  What I didn't realise though was how much he has grown as an author since, that is until I discovered  A Song for No Mans Land on Amazon. I've always been a fan of world wa...

  • 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...

  • The Valancourt Book of Horror Stories: Volume 2James D Jenkins

    Valancourt Books is an American, independent small imprint especially devoted, among other things, to unearth and reprint forgotten and rare gems of gothic fiction from the past, as well as samples of classy, long gone out of print horror fiction. Thus, after the successful Valancourt Book of Horror...

  • Electric DreamsPhilip K Dick
    Electric Dreams
    by Philip K Dick
    Science Fiction

    It's great to see Philip K Dick stories continue to be explored and consumed in different forms of media. His writing still popular long after his death. For those who aren't aware, the UK TV station Channel 4 (Broadcast in the US via Amazon Video) has started a new 10 part anthology series called E...

  • Strange WeatherJoe Hill
    Strange Weather
    by Joe Hill
    Horror

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

  • Body in the WoodsSarah Lotz
    Body in the Woods
    by Sarah Lotz
    Horror

    Newcon Press’ second novella series continues with Body in the Woods by Sarah Lotz. This book is perhaps the least fantastical of the set. The story is in first person, our narrator is Claire, a single mother who has recently moved into a remote house that backs on to a swathe of woodland. One night...

  • BlackbirdND Gomes
    Blackbird
    by ND Gomes
    Fantasy

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

  • Final GirlsRiley Sager
    Final Girls
    by Riley Sager
    Horror

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

  • RavencryEd McDonald
    Ravencry
    by Ed McDonald
    Fantasy

    Last year one of the most impressive debut's I read was Ed McDonald's Blackwing . It's dark, confident and bold fiction with some exceptional world-building and even finer characters, Ravencry is the sequel and does everything a sequel should, building on the best elements of the first novel and tak...

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

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

  • Daughters of the Forgotten LightSean Grigsby
    Science Fiction

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

  • 131 DaysKeith Blackmore
    131 Days
    by Keith Blackmore
    Fantasy

    Blackmore is a vastly under-appreciated author. His Mountain Man novels are a superb example of a post-apocalyptic / zombie series. 131 days does for heroic, gladiatorial fantasy what Mountain Man did for Zombies, a charged, fast-paced story that has confidence, style and plenty of GrimDark. Every y...

  • 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 Folio Book of Horror StoriesRamsey Campbell
    Horror

    The Folio Book of Horror Stories is a new anthology, collecting some of the finest stories of the macabre written over the last two hundred years or so. The collection is edited and introduced by the award winning, legendary author and critic Ramsey Campbell, who has thoughtfully provided an insight...

  • 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...

  • Corax Lord of ShadowsGuy Haley
    Corax Lord of Shadows
    by Guy Haley
    Science Fiction

    Corax Lord of Shadows is the tenth book in the pre-Horus Heresy Primarch series, featuring the leader of the Raven Guard. Set During the great Crusade, the immense void-cities of the Carinae must be brought under the control of the Imperium. Corax joins his Legion with an Imperial War Host to being...

  • 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 Killing JokeChrista Faust
    Batman: The Killing Joke
    by Christa Faust
    Science Fiction

    The Batman Universe comes in all shades as long as they are dark blue, dark grey or black. You have your lighter fare such as LEGO Batman or the 60s incarnation and you also have your darker versions. Tim Burton’s Batman was dark, Christopher Nolan’s was darker still, but both owe homage to the iter...

  • The Time Machine and The Island of Doctor MoreauHG Wells

    Illustration ©Grahame Baker-Smith from The Folio Society edition of The Time Machine by H.G. Wells The work of H. G. Wells is both seminal and formative to our current interest in Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy. The collection of these two novellas in one volume is a common publication format....

  • The HungerAlma Katsu
    The Hunger
    by Alma Katsu
    Horror

    The hardback version of  The Hunger was originally launched last year and it drew some critical acclaim from authors including Sarah Pinborough and Joanne Harris. Both the Observer and the Guardian loved it. Stephen King said of it: Deeply, deeply disturbing, hard to put down, not recommended readin...

  • The Ruin of KingsJenn Lyons
    The Ruin of Kings
    by Jenn Lyons
    Fantasy

    The Ruin of Kings is the debut of Jenn Lyons, it's an impressive way to make an entrance. The beginning of epic fantasy series A Chorus of Dragons, the book has just been optioned to be turned into a TV series. Growing up in the slums of the city Suur, Kihrin learns to entertain with music while als...

  • 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...

  • DrakePeter McLean
    Drake
    by Peter McLean
    Fantasy

    I picked this book up as I was looking for more urban fantasy to try. I love the Dresden files and given that new books in that series only seem to appear infrequently, I was getting an urban fantasy itch. This book stood out as it was recommended by talented and under-appreciated author Dave Hutchi...

  • The PassengersJohn Marrs
    The Passengers
    by John Marrs
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

  • 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...

  • WanderersChuck Wendig
    Wanderers
    by Chuck Wendig
    Science Fiction

    There seem to be a worryingly large number of ways we, as a species, could become extinct. From huge extra terrestrial rocks hurtling through space or climate change making our world uninhabitable to Trump pressing the wrong button at the wrong time. A virus that seems to strike at random, causing t...

  • Green ValleyLouis Greenberg
    Green Valley
    by Louis Greenberg
    Science Fiction

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

  • 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...

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

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

  • CrowfallEd McDonald
    Crowfall
    by Ed McDonald
    Fantasy

    Crowfall is the third novel in Ed McDonald's Raven's Mark series, following on from Blackwing and Ravencry . If you haven't read the previous two books I recommend you do so before reading this book, or indeed this review.   Some time has passed since the events of Ravencry , and the world is change...

  • The Best of British Fantasy 2018Jared Shurin
    Fantasy

    An exciting collection of short stories, for many different tastes. I enjoyed them all. They vary from what looks like a traditional sword and sorcery tale (but is a lot else besides), to modern myths exploring identity and the impact of childhood neglect on the adult. The characters of these storie...

  • The Triumph of the Spider MonkeyJoyce Carol Oates
    The Triumph of the Spider Monkey
    by Joyce Carol Oates
    General Fiction

    A lot of crime fiction is told from the prospective of an investigator. We follow them as they stumble across clues and finally get their suspect. This method provides structure and cohesion as even amateur sleuths follow some sort of logical pattern. Authors such as John Sandford and his Prey serie...

  • The Imaginary CorpseTyler Hayes
    The Imaginary Corpse
    by Tyler Hayes
    Fantasy

    Where do dreams go when we forget them? Do they dissipate into the ether, or do they settle somewhere? This is the intriguing premise of Tyler Hayes’ The Imaginary Corpse , an alternative detective noir novel. How alternative? It stars a stuffed toy triceratops private investigator called Tippy who...

  • 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...

  • CTRL+SAndy Briggs
    CTRL+S
    by Andy Briggs
    Science Fiction

    Computer Games used to be a child’s plaything, but as gamers grow older and are still playing this is no longer the case (if it ever was). As many gamers mature their reflexes deaden and will they one day even be able to pick up a conventional controller? Something like Virtual Reality may be the so...

  • 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...

  • Fate of the fallenKel Kade
    Fate of the fallen
    by Kel Kade
    Fantasy

    I love Fantasy, I believe it creates a sense of the epic better than any other genre. Not only do big events happen but you often get a manifest destiny. The issue can be that too much might happen. Our heroes come across so many monsters, pitfalls and dead ends that even the most ardent of Fantasy...

  • 84KClaire North
    84K
    by Claire North
    Science Fiction

    Despite repeated and continued efforts by the UK government (amongst others) of turning it into a reality, I still enjoy the odd dystopian fiction. More and more often though it does feel like things that will be rather than things that may . 84K is a good example. Set in a future where the inevitab...

  • The Manifestations of Sherlock HolmesJames Lovegrove
    General Fiction

    When you think of a Sherlock Holmes do you imagine a novel or a short story? The reality is that many tales that we know from Arthur Conan Doyle are from his short stories and it is more the modern reimagining of the character that have taken the longer form. James Lovegrove is a leading modern Sher...

  • 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...

  • Night TrainDavid Quantick
    Night Train
    by David Quantick
    Science Fiction

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

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

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

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

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

  • Bystander 27Rik Hoskin
    Bystander 27
    by Rik Hoskin
    Fantasy

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

  • Alpha OmegaNicholas Bowling
    Alpha Omega
    by Nicholas Bowling
    Science Fiction

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

  • Blood of EmpireBrian McClellan
    Blood of Empire
    by Brian McClellan
    Fantasy

    Fantasy is known as an epic genre; stories can span generations and civilisations rise and fall. As a fan of the  genre,  you also notice some regula r tropes that  occur,  similar races and similar storylines.  Within the pages of  Brian Mc Clellan ’s  Powder Mage  trilogy and follow up threesome ...

  • A Cosmology of MonstersShaun Hamill
    A Cosmology of Monsters
    by Shaun Hamill
    Horror

    H P Lovecraft’s shadow casts a long one over the horror  genre . He  developed  new types of horrors that reverberate today ;  psychological  and body horror are just two. What has changed is the way that people  perceive  horror. Whilst once  upon a time witnessing the horrors from a different dime...

  • 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...

  • Divine HereticJaime Lee Moyer
    Divine Heretic
    by Jaime Lee Moyer
    Fantasy

    Power is an interesting dynamic; some people want it, whilst others have no interest at all. Joan of Arc had a lot of power for a while but then it went (being burned at the stake will do that to you).  Was  she a heretic and a witch that craved this power , o r was she someone caught up in  events?...

  • 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...

  • The Nobody PeopleBob Proehl
    The Nobody People
    by Bob Proehl
    Science Fiction

    Modern life has highlighted the plight of The Other. People are marginalised for all sorts of reasons and from what I can tell it is more noticeable than ever. If you are different but can blend in with everybody else, would you keep it a secret or not? The Nobody People are hidden from view for now...

  • The Invention of SoundChuck Palahniuk
    The Invention of Sound
    by Chuck Palahniuk
    Horror

    Sound can be powerful, get the tone right or the volume loud enough and you can cause real damage. There are skyscrapers that have been buil t  that hum  when  the wind perfectly hits the building   t o make it vibrate . The worse thing that happens here is an annoying sound when the wind blows in t...

  • The Farseer TrilogyRobin Hobb
    The Farseer Trilogy
    by Robin Hobb
    Fantasy

    The Farseer Trilogy is one of those series that is so well crafted, unique that it defines a genre. It's been twenty five years since Robin Hobb (a pseudonym of Margaret Astrid Lindholm Ogden) started writing about the Realm of the Elderlings and the adventures of Fitz and the Fool. Since then she h...

  • JuddermanD. A. Northwood
    Judderman
    by D. A. Northwood
    Horror

    Some people love the city life, there is something to do every hour of the day. I find it a little odd. You can  open the door of  your million - pound house an d have to  step over  the  passed  out  person on your step. One street can look like it is from a movie set, whilst only one road over it...

  • A Fool's HopeMike Shackle
    A Fool's Hope
    by Mike Shackle
    Fantasy

    To the uninitiated, the fantasy genre is stagnant. The same old dwarves and  elves  going on long journeys and then back again. Any fan of the genre knows that this is just not the case. The genre has evolved with soc iety. The fantasy books of the 80s and 90s differ greatly from Tolkien and modern...

  • 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...

  • The Best Horror of the Year - Volume 12Ellen Datlow

    Volume 12 of Ellen Datlow’s annual “Best of” anthology is a must for any horror lover, assembling a bunch of short stories selected by this distinguished Editor from the usual annual deluge of dark short fiction appeared in print or online. In addition the volume,as always, includes detailed informa...

  • Battle GroundJim Butcher
    Battle Ground
    by Jim Butcher
    Fantasy

    A brief admission to start. I've just finished Twelve Months and realised, slightly to my embarrassment, that I never actually got round to writing a review for Battle Ground . So here, six years late, is that review. I will keep this one largely spoiler-free; the events of Battle Ground are by now...

  • Bloody BritainAnna Taborska
    Bloody Britain
    by Anna Taborska
    Horror

    The latest collection by Anna Taborska, a British filmmaker and horror writer, includes fourteen stories, five of which previously unpublished. The volume is graced by a witty introduction by distinguished fellow writer Robert Shearman and enhanced by a number of  beautiful illustrations by Reggie  ...

  • The Moonsteel CrownStephen Deas
    The Moonsteel Crown
    by Stephen Deas
    Fantasy

    Life in a Fantasy novel is often epic. A grand journey to destroy a ring or a fight to the death against an invading force. Our heroes rush from one end of the land on a mission , but if you look behind them you may see some of the normal people pass in a blur. The shopkeepers, the local police, the...

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

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

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

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

  • Dark LullabyPolly Ho-Yen
    Dark Lullaby
    by Polly Ho-Yen
    Science Fiction

    They all tell you that having children is not easy, but nothing prepared us for the first six weeks of having a  defenceless  little t y ke in the house. You may have read the books, been to a few classes or asked r elatives and friends, but when it comes down to it, this is all on your shoulders al...

  • The ActualityPaul Braddon
    The Actuality
    by Paul Braddon
    Science Fiction

    I sometimes like to think about a singular change to  the  world and how  it  would affect the future. It  says  a  lot  about me that in most cases my thoughts  end up at dystopia.  Humans   are  always going to end at some point, I was just hoping that it would be a few years after I had gone. I a...

  • Judge Dredd: AmericaJohn Wagner
    Judge Dredd: America
    by John Wagner
    Science Fiction

    Growing up my group of friends was obsessed with America and  all wanted to move there. They had all been taken in by the glossy American films and TV shows that suggested that even if you were  unemployed, you would own a swanky loft apartment. I had relatives who live there and was far more aware...

  • Shadow Service Volume 1Cavan Scott
    Shadow Service Volume 1
    by Cavan Scott
    Horror

    Some of my favourite Urban Fantasy is about a normal world that is unaware of the creatures that lurk in the night. Whilst we are all safely asleep, there is are demons and witches lurking around the corner. Most of us will never even know that these things exist, but what if we did require someone’...

  • RabbitsTerry Miles
    Rabbits
    by Terry Miles
    Science Fiction

    Are you playing the game? Made you look. The idea of a metagame that embroils a hero is not a new one, but it is hard to pull off. The amount of financial resources and secrecy that is required to convince Michael Douglas to jump off a building is beyond what the average person can afford, unless yo...

  • Blackheart KnightsLaure Eve
    Blackheart Knights
    by Laure Eve
    Fantasy

    One of the wonderful things about genre fiction is that an author can take their imagination anywhere and run with it. I can imagine a lot of things, but an alternative urban fantasy that has Knights on motorbikes. That is a new on me. Laure Eve’s  Blackheart Knights  takes some of the essence of th...

  • The Cottingley CuckooA J Elwood
    The Cottingley Cuckoo
    by A J Elwood
    Horror

    Fairies are not real. If they   were  we would have more evidence of them than a  suspect  looking photo taken by a couple of Victorian School Girls. However,  Fairies  are just brighter than you   think. Why would they risk being seen by humans who have in recent years proven to have a poor  track...

  • The 22 Murders Of Madison MayMax Barry
    Science Fiction

    Obsession can be a powerful emotion and lead you down a dark path. Being stalked causes the victim so much fear, not only because they are having to deal with the reality, but also what might happen. In the case of Madison May, she does not know she is being stalked until it is too late. A strange m...

  • CORALESQUE and Other Tales to Disturb and DistractRebecca Fraser

    Australian authors of dark fiction often remain scarcely known outside their country and that’s a shame because the quality of their work is usually very good. The present volume is the debut collection by Rebecca Fraser, a mix of short stories, flash fiction and dark poems. I’m not qualified to com...

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

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

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

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

  • The Naked eyePaul Kane
    The Naked eye
    by Paul Kane
    Horror

    The prolific, versatile, award-winning  British author Paul Kane returns with a collection of eight novelettes, four of which reprints and four previously unpublished. Kane is a veteran in the area of dark fiction and it shows,because all of the included stories are graced by a firm, enticing narrat...

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

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

  • The Gauntlet and the Fist BeneathIan Green
    Fantasy

    People moan about the rain, but I don’t always mind it. Many of my best memories of childhood are of sleeping under canvas and listening to the patter of rain, safe in the knowledge that I am all snuggly in my sleeping bag and close to loved ones. These fond memories would have quickly turned to ter...

  • What Big TeethRose Szabo
    What Big Teeth
    by Rose Szabo
    Horror

    I do enjoy a good gothic novel. A tale about a once impressive house that has fallen into ruin, its location remote, its inhabitants an enigma. The tales are often full of thrills, romance and even a little horror. But what do you do about a gothic house full of horrific creatures? A story that tell...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • The HoodLavie Tidhar
    The Hood
    by Lavie Tidhar
    Fantasy

    The legend of Robin Hood has changed over the years. I know it is hard to believe but he was not always imagined as a mullet haired Kevin Costner trying to save Nottingham with a dodgy English accent. One element of the story that has fallen out of fashion is Robin Hood’s links with the world of Fae...

  • WhitesandsJohann Thorsson
    Whitesands
    by Johann Thorsson
    Horror

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

  • Shadow Service Volume 2: Mission InfernalCavan Scott

    We all have a past. For most of us it is dull. I went to school, Uni and then got a job. It is rare that I have to face off against the hideous undead or talk to the local rat population. Gina Meyers does not have it so easy, and her past is coming back to haunt her. The issue is that she does not k...

  • There Is No Death, There Are No DeadAaron J French
    Horror

    The present book, featuring twenty-four stories ( twenty-three of which are brand new) addresses the subject of the fragile, thin link between life and death and of how the dead are closer to us than we care to believe. As in every theme anthology, some issues tend to recur - although in different s...

  • The Dead of WinterNicola Upson
    The Dead of Winter
    by Nicola Upson
    General Fiction

    There are two types of Christmases: merry or blue. Whether you are more Slade or Elvis will depend on the experiences you have had in the past on December 25 th . Have your winters been full of family fun and presents? Do you get a sense of wellbeing and good tidings to all? Great. However, perhaps...

  • Were Tales: A Shapeshifter AnthologySd Vassallo
    Horror

    A whole anthology addressing the subject of shapeshifters ( beyond the time honored example of werewolves)  is a real challenge because the risk of repetitiveness ia always around the corner and so is the hazard of making suspension of disbelief an unreachable goal. Editors SD Vassallo and Steven M...

  • 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...

  • PennybladeJ L Worrad
    Pennyblade
    by J L Worrad
    Fantasy

    The days of High Elves and spiffing adventures being the only choice in fantasy are long over. This is a vast genre that still has books of High Fantasy, but it also has Low Fantasy. This gritty version of the genre is more prevalent than ever with some of the best being made into TVs shows and film...

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

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

  • PodLaline Paull
    Pod
    by Laline Paull
    General Fiction

    Nature, red in claw and tooth. It is a world of the strong surviving the weak dying. Therefore, fiction that tells a story from the animal perspective can be full on. Watership Down and The Animals of Farthing Wood have managed to traumatise many a youth and even the jolly Redwall books I used to re...

  • Where Decay SleepsAnna Cheung
    Where Decay Sleeps
    by Anna Cheung
    Horror

    I do not like to think about death much as it makes it seem a little too real for my liking. I am still sticking to the hope that they invent that infinity pill before it is my time. If you are going to explore death, you may as well make it as beautiful as you can, and poetry can have a beauty. It...

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

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

  • The Tangleroot Palace & Other StoriesMarjorie Liu
    Fantasy

    If you go down to the woods today, you are in for a big surprise. Something far worse will be waiting for you than a few bears holding sandwiches. These are the ancient woods that our ancestors grew up near, pockets of civilisation surrounded by darkness and danger. When myths and folklore were bein...

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

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

  • MaliceHeather Walter
    Malice
    by Heather Walter
    Fantasy

    Are villains made or are they born? I believe more in nurture over nature, that someone is not born inherently evil but is made so by their experiences. Alyce is not a bad person, but her heritage as half-Vila makes her a pariah in the Kingdom of Briar. The people hate her, but her elixirs are usefu...

  • MisruleHeather Walter
    Misrule
    by Heather Walter
    Fantasy

    Everyone knows the story of Sleeping Beauty, or do they? Malice by Heather Walter retold the story leading up to Aurora falling asleep, but with far more detail on Aurora and her relationship with Alyce, the person responsible for her curse. Misrule opens 100 years later and tells the second part of...

  • Vampires of AvonmouthTim Kindberg
    Vampires of Avonmouth
    by Tim Kindberg
    Horror

    There are seminal books aplenty in genre fiction. These books are giants and other fiction stands on their shoulders to reach greater heights. Bram Stoker’s Dracula is one of the biggest influences on the horror genre bringing with it a folklore and character that still resonates today. With Dracula...

  • Dark StarsJohn F D Taff
    Dark Stars
    by John F D Taff
    Horror

    I am a massive genre fan, but I have not always had a good relationship with horror anthologies for the simple reason that they have scared me in the past. The shorter form of horror story can give a jolt to the reader’s senses and then disappear, only to live on in freaky flashbacks. From 13 Tales...

  • Black MouthRonald Malfi
    Black Mouth
    by Ronald Malfi
    Horror

    A group of adults tormented by their past when a carnival worker changed their lives forever. Sound familiar? No not It , but Ronald Malfi’s Black Mouth , the author’s own take on how the memories of youth haunt the present. This is dark horror with glimpses of the supernatural, but also plenty of t...

  • 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...

  • EquinoxDavid Towsey
    Equinox
    by David Towsey
    Fantasy

    Are you a night person or a day person? Do you like to wake up at 5am and then go to the gym before a full day at work and an early night? Perhaps you like to wake up in time for Bargain Hunt and work from home into the late hours? Either way, you are you. The night owl and the early bird, same pers...

  • The Stage Mother's ClubRon Capshaw
    The Stage Mother's Club
    by Ron Capshaw
    Horror

    It is amazing what can inspire a writer. A little thought worm can drill itself into their head and the only peace to be found is to write the thing out. Ron Capshaw’s inspiration for The Stage Mother’s Club seems to be the author’s fascination with all the failed stage Mums who could not get their...

  • The Eaters of LightRona Munro
    The Eaters of Light
    by Rona Munro
    Science Fiction

    Doctor Who is the same, but also different, in each iteration and that is what makes the characters so interesting. The Twelfth Doctor is one of the latest incarnations and one that reflected on the Doctor’s past as much as the present. The humour was still there, but also more of the historic grump...

  • 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...

  • CackleRachel Harrison
    Cackle
    by Rachel Harrison
    Fantasy

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

  • The HollowsDaniel Church
    The Hollows
    by Daniel Church
    Horror

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

  • The ButcherLaura Kat Young
    The Butcher
    by Laura Kat Young
    Horror

    I find sometimes find myself wondering how a dystopian world became so bad. What happened in a society that they thought making children battle to the death was a good idea? Or how a world forced woman to bear children? Sometimes it is better not to know how a society got there, but just embrace the...

  • LeechHiron Ennes
    Leech
    by Hiron Ennes
    Horror

    We have all come to loath the Flu virus and its even worse cousin, but how are we as humans to prevent the spread of life? It will find a way. For mammals it is making babies, for a virus it is infiltrating a host and multiplying, then moving onto the next host. The virus does not care that it destr...

  • Sherlock Holmes and Mr HydeChristian Klaver
    Sherlock Holmes and Mr Hyde
    by Christian Klaver
    Horror

    Sherlock Holmes is such an iconic figure that it is easy to believe that he was real. A great detective walking the streets of Late Victorian London solving crimes that conventional police could not hope to solve. But he was not real, neither was Watson and they are both out of copyright which means...

  • The NurseryRoark Arnett
    The Nursery
    by Roark Arnett
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction writers love a dystopia, there are so many ways that it could all go wrong. Overpopulation is one. It not a pleasant thing to think about, but we already use too many of the world’s finite resources and as the population grows, this is going to get even worse. In The Nursery by Roark...

  • Dredd vs DeathJohn Wagner
    Dredd vs Death
    by John Wagner
    Science Fiction

    I read and listen to books in all formats, but still prefer the feel of paper in my hand. Audiobooks are great for the commute, but they are just not pacy enough for me, I read quickly, and a narrator often seems to go in slow motion even at 1.5 speed. 2000AD and Penguin Audio must know my brain as...

  • FluxJinwoo Chong
    Flux
    by Jinwoo Chong
    Science Fiction

    Time travel is one of the most complex and difficult concepts to write in fiction. On the screen you can use visuals as shorthand to try and explain what on Earth is going on, but in fiction you are required to explain it all, or not. There is a choice. Do you go down the route of hard science and t...

  • BurrowedMary Baader Kaley
    Burrowed
    by Mary Baader Kaley
    Science Fiction

    When the apocalypse happens, science fiction has taught us that some of us will run below and others will be left on the surface. Pick a side. Down below could be a Fallout or Wool situation, better than being on the surface, dead or a mutant. Up above could be The Time Machine or Mary Baader Kaley’...

  • For the Benefit of MankindLiu Cixin
    Science Fiction

    The Trolley Problem is an interesting mental exercise that asks you would you let one person die to save many? To do so you would have to divert the trolley from the path of the five and be culpable for it hitting the one. In theory it makes sense, the many not the few, but could you really pull tha...

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

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

  • Birds in the Black WaterKodie Van Dusen
    Birds in the Black Water
    by Kodie Van Dusen
    Horror

    The mind is a powerful tool. It can make a person do spectacular things but can also be their undoing. A trauma earlier in life can impact your day to day living. Perhaps talking to someone would help, be it a friend or a professional? Neviah is a counsellor who has a unique way of unpicking people’...

  • 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...

  • The Wheel of DollJonathan Ames
    The Wheel of Doll
    by Jonathan Ames
    General Fiction

    The humble Private Investigator is a put-upon character, often lonely, whenever they find love, that love seems to end up dead. No wonder so many of them have a problem with drink, gambling, or drugs – perhaps a mix of all three. Few PIs can hold a candle to Happy Doll, he is not even a PI anymore h...

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

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

  • Perilous TimesThomas D Lee
    Perilous Times
    by Thomas D Lee
    Fantasy

    I love an Arthurian Legend retelling, Perilous Times by Thomas D Lee is not even the first one that I have read this year, but it shows how flexible authors can be with Old King Arty. Lee does not retell the tales of yore but extrapolates into the present and the future. When Arthur was buried, he w...

  • Bang Bang BodhisattvaAubrey Wood
    Bang Bang Bodhisattva
    by Aubrey Wood
    Science Fiction

    What is the near future going to be like, utopian, dystopian, a bit of both. Chances are that it will be just as messed up as the past and the present. The future may be a little grim, but that does not mean it cannot be fun. Aubrey Wood’s future is as bright as neon, but also as dark as pitch. Bang...

  • Marchs EndDaniel Polansky
    Marchs End
    by Daniel Polansky
    Fantasy

    Keeping it in the family sounds like a wonderful idea. Surround yourself with people you can trust, blood is thicker than water, but do family businesses work? Why do so many fail by the third generation? The first generation build the company from nothing, the second grow it further, the third – sq...

  • Black WolfKathleen Kent
    Black Wolf
    by Kathleen Kent
    General Fiction

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

  • Squeaky CleanCallum Mcsorley
    Squeaky Clean
    by Callum Mcsorley
    General Fiction

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

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

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

  • The First Bright ThingJ R Dawson
    The First Bright Thing
    by J R Dawson
    Fantasy

    Circuses are magical places; they are also mysterious and occasionally a bit murderous. All the elements that make them perfect for romantic visions of running away and visiting new places each week, are also perfect for someone who likes to snatch victims and not be around when the police start to...

  • VagabonderR T Coleman
    Vagabonder
    by R T Coleman
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction is one of the best genres because you can explore subjects via a prism of the future. Writing a book about how we treat others does not have to be told via a historic story, or the present, you can look far to the future and draw parallels between that world and ours. What would happ...

  • Silver NitrateSilvia Moreno-Garcia
    Silver Nitrate
    by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
    Horror

    There is something magical about the silver screen. I enjoy watching films at home, but I love going to the cinema. A group of people in a dark room with a large screen and superior sound. I feel like I am immersed in the film, it draws me in, there is a power. But what if that power was real? What...

  • In the Lives of PuppetsT J Klune
    Science Fiction

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

  • Sons of DarknessGourav Mohanty
    Sons of Darkness
    by Gourav Mohanty
    Fantasy

    Fantasy is a wonderful genre, and it has become more so in recent years as it has grown in diversity. It felt for a while that fantasy was always epic and set in some sort of alternative Europe. There were plenty of alternatives to find if you looked, but today theses are abundant and that is fantas...

  • Planet of the OodKeith Temple
    Planet of the Ood
    by Keith Temple
    Science Fiction

    It can be hard for the casual Doctor Who viewer to see the character as alien. They may have two hearts, regenerate once in a while, but fundamentally the Doctor looks human. It does not help that they are obsessed with human culture and like to hang around on Earth a lot (cheap sets). But fundament...

  • The Waters of MarsPhil Ford
    The Waters of Mars
    by Phil Ford
    Science Fiction

    I am a massive fan of the Target imprint of Doctor Who books. Recently they have been filling in the gaps from the older series and producing new adaptations based on the past few Doctors. Taking stories out of any given season is a risky business. It could be a standalone monster of the week story,...

  • PromiseChristi Nogle
    Promise
    by Christi Nogle
    Science Fiction

    I set a high bar set for science fiction short story collections that is in no way the fault of any modern author. Unfortunately for them I read The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury at an influential age. I rate a collection against the creepy science fiction/horror tones that Bradbury was able to cr...

  • Inquisitor: Rise of the Red BladeDelilah S. Dawson
    Inquisitor: Rise of the Red Blade
    by Delilah S. Dawson
    Science Fiction

    You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain. For years, the Jedi have been considered a paragon of virtue, everything that is good to the Sith’s bad. But there must be a reason so many Jedi fall. The path to the Dark Side is not pathed with sex, drugs, and rock...

  • Womb CityTlotlo Tsamaase
    Womb City
    by Tlotlo Tsamaase
    Science Fiction

    At its best science fiction can be a prism to view the current world’s ills in a more palatable manner. Reading about the destruction of our world in a dystopian future feels one step removed from simply looking out of the window. Like environmental catastrophe, some themes are too powerful to go un...

  • Silent KeyLaurel Hightower
    Silent Key
    by Laurel Hightower
    Horror

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

  • 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...

  • Asian Ghost Short StoriesLee Murray
    Horror

    Editing a collection of short stories must be a task. Whittling down all the possibilities to just a few that represent a vision. The key is to make the subject matter attainable; stories about monsters in pubs or griffons on an aeroplane. Taking on all Asian Ghost Short Stories is an almost impossi...

  • 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 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...

  • 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...

  • Anatomy of a KillerRomy Hausmann
    Anatomy of a Killer
    by Romy Hausmann
    General Fiction

    Having watched plenty of True Crime documentaries I am often struck how loyal some friends and family are to the criminal. They have been convicted of the crime, but sometimes family just will not accept the outcome. Injustice is one reason, people do get sent down for something they never did, but...

  • My Brothers KeeperTim Powers
    My Brothers Keeper
    by Tim Powers
    Horror

    The stories that the Brontë sisters wrote have an extreme gothic appeal and you only need to visit their old home in Haworth to know what inspired them. There did not seem much else to do than walk the moors and avoid dying. Whilst the town may be picturesque now, full of cobbled streets and Hovis a...

  • 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...

  • Christmas and Other HorrorsEllen Datlow
    Christmas and Other Horrors
    by Ellen Datlow
    Horror

    The Festive Period evolves over time and where you celebrate it has a major impact. Even in my lifetime we have gone from lording a jolly red man called Father Christmas to worshipping a strange soda drinking fellow on the side of a big van called Santa. He will always be the big FC in my house. The...

  • The Siege of Burning GrassPremee Mohamed
    The Siege of Burning Grass
    by Premee Mohamed
    Science Fiction

    Science Fiction can be upbeat and utopian or downbeat and dystopian. The current trend is to focus on the negatives, but even these books have a glint of hope in them. When it comes to dystopian visions of the future, they do not come much more intense than Premee Mohamed’s The Siege of Burning Gras...

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

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

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

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

  • House of Open WoundsAdrian Tchaikovsky
    House of Open Wounds
    by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    Fantasy

    There are authors that you love because you can pick up one of their books and know what you are going to get, like putting on your favourite pair of comfortable slippers again. There is also that rarer breed of author that you love, maybe even a little bit more. Those authors that will not be pigeo...

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

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

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

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

  • The Redemption of Morgan BrightChris Panatier
    Horror

    I love to read books; they transport me to unfamiliar places. I will go there even if these unfamiliar places are dangerous like the Hollyhock Asylum found in Chris Panatier’s The Redemption of Morgan Bright . A story can transport you, as can characters, but sometimes the structure of a book does t...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • These Deathless ShoresP H Low
    Fantasy

    You either die a hero or live long enough to see yourself become the villain. Peter Pan is cheeky, certainly a hero, but he was also annoying and domineering. Did the Lost Boys want to stay on the island, or did Peter force them? On reflection, Peter Pan had some issues, but Disney put an airbrush t...

  • GorseSam K Horton
    Gorse
    by Sam K Horton
    Fantasy

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

  • Death Comes Too LateCharles Ardai
    Death Comes Too Late
    by Charles Ardai
    General Fiction

    There is an art to the short story. They should not try to emulate their longer cousins, or even the novelette format. A short story should pop up, throws a few punches then head off again without a backwards glance, but the best of them with leave an impression, a lingering sense of something in a...

  • Into the NightCornell Woolrich
    Into the Night
    by Cornell Woolrich
    General Fiction

    What makes a good noir story? Is it the setting, the characters, a murder? All these things, but also none of them. I have read many ‘classic’ noir stories about a grizzled PI investigating a femme fatale set some time in the 40/50s, but I have also read them set in alternative universes where super...

  • How Like a GodRex Stout
    How Like a God
    by Rex Stout
    General Fiction

    When you enter midlife, you must watch out that you do not get lost in the past. Past glories that may have been, lovers that were or could have been. There is a reason that some people drift into a crisis, seeing the grass could have been greener had they picked a different path. When you are going...

  • The BrandedJo Riccioni
    The Branded
    by Jo Riccioni
    Fantasy

    There are all types of fantasy from the high to the low, but for some fans it can be tricky to enjoy one type or the other. For someone interested in starting to read low fantasy they may be turned off by the violence and darkness that this part of the genre emits. On the other hand, high fantasy ca...

  • SmothermossAlisa Alering
    Smothermoss
    by Alisa Alering
    Fantasy

    There is a long tradition of Folk Horror in the UK, but plenty of other countries bring their own flavour to the genre. American Gothic has all the trappings of classic Folk Horror, but has that distinct US flavour. The woods out there seem different, ancient landscapes unused to the people that roc...

  • ExtremophileIan Green
    Extremophile
    by Ian Green
    Science Fiction

    Cyberpunk has always been an interesting mash up of ideas, taking the science fiction forward ideas of technology and giving it a gritty edge. Mixing the equivalent of early 80s synth with the raw punk that preceded it in a giant science fiction blender sounds like chaos, but both have origins of ri...

  • 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...

  • BenothingedAlvar Theo
    Benothinged
    by Alvar Theo
    Horror

    You do not have to delve onto the fiction shelves to find horror, you can just watch the news. Wars breaking out, people starving. Closer to home there are murders and violence. Most of us are cocooned from these horrors, living in bubbles of our own creation, but some horrors we cannot escape; grie...

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

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

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

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

  • Coup de GraceSofia Ajram
    Coup de Grace
    by Sofia Ajram
    Science Fiction

    People read for all sorts of reasons. I read to escape and have fun, my preference is for high action and laughs, but I understand that some people like to be challenged by their reading. This could be a complex Space Opera, or a piece of literature that tackles the life of a downtrodden mother in 1...

  • Bound in BloodJohnny Mains
    Bound in Blood
    by Johnny Mains
    Horror

    If you are reading this, you have some interest in books, enough to read a review about one. Bound in Blood is not just a book, this is a book about books. Well at least a collection of spooky short stories about books, authors, libraries, and all things bibliophile. For those of us in the know, 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...

  • The RaveningDaniel Church
    The Ravening
    by Daniel Church
    Horror

    Horror comes in many shapes and sizes. The horror could be on this plane of existence, a creature that stalks you and your family through generations. It could be even closer to home, the horror of the mundane, the terror of ordinary people willing to do anything to achieve their goals, even if this...

  • 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...

  • Marc Spector Was Host to Venom?Mike Chen
    Science Fiction

    Comics have a complex history with some storylines going back decades. Even the relatively new superheroes can have intricate lore. Moon Knight has had plenty of time to muddy the waters with almost 50 years of stories to look back on, but it is not the depth of the stories that make Moon Knight so...

  • Spells, Strings and Forgotten ThingsBreanne Randall
    Fantasy

    In some books there is more one thing that a reader can focus on. It could be the characters that draw the reader in, or the narrative, or the world building. As a long-term fantasy fan, one element that I often end up focussing on is magical systems. How magic works in a fantasy world can change ev...

  • Seven Recipes for RevolutionRyan Rose
    Fantasy

    The fantasy genre is a form of comfort reading for me. The genre often follows similar tropes, and you can get into the rhythm of the story quickly. However, increasingly often in modern fantasy, authors are creating new and challenging ideas to shake up the genre. Magical systems are an area you ca...

  • 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...

  • At Dark I Become LoathsomeEric Larocca
    At Dark I Become Loathsome
    by Eric Larocca
    Horror

    Like every genre, there are several aspects to Horror that you can focus on. My preference is the supernatural, something big and scary, preferably not overexplained. There is another subgenre, one that is arguably far scarier. I call it the horror of the mundane. Those killers that live among us, t...

  • The Ninja DaughterTori Eldridge
    The Ninja Daughter
    by Tori Eldridge
    General Fiction

    There are many reasons that an investigator in fiction gets involved in a case. Perhaps they are a Detective, and it is their job, or they are a Private Investigator getting paid. You may stumble across a body and suddenly find yourself drawn into a mystery. All these paths lead to a different motiv...

  • The Poorly Made and Other ThingsSam Rebelein
    Horror

    There is something to be said for designing a creative sandpit, a place that you can return to and play within. Rather than writing new characters in a new place every book, you can return to the known. A shorthand exists. However, this is a double-edged sword, you can end up recreating the same sta...

  • A Palace Near the WindAi Jiang
    Fantasy

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

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

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

  • Listen to Your SisterNeena Viel
    Listen to Your Sister
    by Neena Viel
    Horror

    I come from a large family and there is a special way that you can wind one another up. Years of experience and knowledge comes in handy when you are trying to annoy someone, you may not have seen each other for ages, but one shared experience can bring it all back in an instant. In a healthy family...

  • Alien: Seventh CirclePhilippa Ballantine
    Alien: Seventh Circle
    by Philippa Ballantine
    Science Fiction

    It is not that the aliens in Alien are constantly evolving, it is that they are constantly adapting to the scenario they are in. We usually see them egging up humans, but if they landed in a world populated by cows it would only be a few days that a bovine Alien was ripping up the locals. Aliens are...

  • 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...

  • 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 Butcher's DaughterCorinne Leigh Clark
    The Butcher's Daughter
    by Corinne Leigh Clark
    Horror

    I enjoy a retelling of a classic tale from an unfamiliar perspective. I have read about Sherlock Holmes from the point of view of almost everyone he ever met. I have read about Beowulf written by his niece. King Authur, Robin Hood, many others, but never a character as dark as Sweeny Todd. The Demon...

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

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

  • Killing ItMike Bockoven
    Killing It
    by Mike Bockoven
    Horror

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

  • The Night AlphabetJoelle Taylor
    The Night Alphabet
    by Joelle Taylor
    Science Fiction

    There are books in a person’s life that helps to define their taste in genres. I was lucky enough in my teenage years to work my way through some of the classics of science fiction instilling a lifelong love of the genre. One novel that stands out among the best was Ray Bradbury’s The Illustrated Ma...

  • 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...

  • 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...

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

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

  • Acquired TastesClay Mcleod Chapman
    Acquired Tastes
    by Clay Mcleod Chapman
    Horror

    What do you want from a collection of horror short stories? A complex mix of different styles and authors, or a single voice? When it comes to horror, I want them to feel like a quick punch to the guts, only for you to look down and find that the punch was more of a stab. Clay McLeod Chapman knows w...

  • 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...

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

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

  • 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...

  • 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,...

  • The Last ManPeter Roberts
    The Last Man
    by Peter Roberts
    Fantasy

    I found this book while wandering around the Dealers' room at EasterCon 76 (Belfast Reconnect). I had the honour of being the first person to buy the book, and had a chance to meet the author, who had travelled from the distant lands of Paris to make an appearance. I believe it's his debut novel, bu...

  • Wings of Steel and FurySarah Daley
    Wings of Steel and Fury
    by Sarah Daley
    Science Fiction

    If you read about the gods, most of them are a little messed up. If they are not descending to pretend to be a swan so they can sleep with woman, they are basically ignoring all the human suffering going on. Are gods omnipotent or just much more powerful than humans? Everything feels like magic, unt...

  • Cry, VoidbringerElaine Ho
    Cry, Voidbringer
    by Elaine Ho
    Fantasy

    I enjoy a dose of Low Fantasy; a bit of grimdark and violence feels like a good counterpart to High Fantasy with its heroism and magic. A fantasy tale that is told from the muck and the trenches just feels more real, even if it is fantastic, a fantasy for our modern troubled world. But there is Low...

  • Coffin MoonKeith Rosson
    Coffin Moon
    by Keith Rosson
    Horror

    Vampire lore is well documented, the rules and regulations differ from book to book, but in most cases if you are a vampire, you cannot do much during the day. In modern life not being able to escape during the daylight hours after leaving a few emptied bodies would be a problem. Cameras would catch...

  • Terms of ServiceCiel Pierlot
    Terms of Service
    by Ciel Pierlot
    Science Fiction

    I love a good magic system in a fantasy novel, one that sets the rules in an interesting way and is still able to amaze. It is one of the reasons that I am not a huge fan of Fae magic with all its side clauses and tricks. You never know what you are really going to get or what you can trust, therefo...

  • 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...

  • 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...

  • The DescentChristian Francis
    The Descent
    by Christian Francis
    Horror

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

  • 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...

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

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

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

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

  • 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 Night ShipAlex Woodroe
    The Night Ship
    by Alex Woodroe
    Horror

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

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

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

  • 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...

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

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

  • Paved With Good IntentionsPeter Mclean
    Paved With Good Intentions
    by Peter Mclean
    Fantasy

    They say never judge a book by its cover and this is a good lesson to take heed of with Peter McLean’s Paved With Good Intentions , as the UK cover stars Eline dressed in regal splendour. You see, Eline is also someone you should not judge from by her looks. She may be presenting as a member of the...

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

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

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

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

  • The Peachy ParadoxCornelius Moon
    The Peachy Paradox
    by Cornelius Moon
    Science Fiction

    A science fiction story that describes the gradual development of artificial intelligence and demonstrates the inadequacies of human beings as they try to train it and interact with it, The Peachy Paradox begins with a lightness and humour, but as it continues, the humour is satirical, sporadic and...

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

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

  • 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...

  • 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....