Dec 1
2021

Library Journal on Crowbones

Crowbones by Anne Bishop

“A new entry (following Lake Silence) in Bishop’s “World of the Others” urban fantasy series set in an alternate North America. It’s Trickster Night in Lake Silence, a celebration of ghosties and ghoulies and things that go bump in the night. Lake Silence is a mostly human settlement in an area controlled by the terra indigene, or the Others (a group of supernatural beings and cryptids), making Trickster Night a perfect chance to generate tourism from humans who want to walk a bit closer to the real wild side. It’s all fun and games and just a bit of a fright, until someone uses those small fears to turn humans and terra indigene against each other in order to cause trouble and learn how to get the better of the powerful Others. It’s up to the human storyteller, the police chief, and the local vampire leader to figure out what’s gone rotten in town before the overseeing council sweeps in with a permanent and deadly solution.

VERDICT A compelling exploration of manipulative personalities, small town murders, and the lengths to which these fascinating and beloved characters will go in order to protect one of their own.” — Library Journal

Nov 16
2021

Amazon’s Best Science fiction and Fantasy of 2021

Amazon’s Best Books of 2021 list includes Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells!

Sep 9
2021

Battle Ground wins Dragon Award!

Congratulations to Jim Butcher on Battle Ground, the seventeenth book in the Dresden Files series, winning the 2021 Dragon Award for Best Fantasy Novel (Including Paranormal)!

Aug 13
2021

2021 Dragon Award nominees include Bear and Butcher!

The 2021 Dragon Award nominees include Elizabeth Bear and Jim Butcher!

Best Science Fiction Novel
Machine, Elizabeth Bear (Saga; Gollancz)

Best Fantasy Novel (Including Paranormal)
Battle Ground, Jim Butcher (Ace)

Aug 3
2021

Locus on Star Eater

Star Eater by Kerstin Hall

“This is an exquisitely gripping novel with a bloody, unflinching heart. And yet, for all the intricate brutalities of its worldbuilding, it holds out the hope of revolutionary change….The queerness of Star Eater rests as much in its unsqueamish examination of power relations and the meaty, bloody metaphor of its magical mechanics as in its normalising treatment of queer relationships and the sexualities of its major characters: it’s a novel with teeth, and it sets those teeth into a thematic argument about – an indictment of – the hereditary transmission and constant maintenance of power that comes from acts of, essentially, theft and consumption….It’s striking how full and complex Hall’s world is here, how invested with communities and meanings. Neither support for the Sisterhood nor opposition to it is an uncomplicated thing. Hall writes with striking, assured pose, bringing her world and characters vividly to life. Both in style and (thematic) substance, her work here reminds me of Max Gladstone’s Craft novels, of Aliette de Bodard’s novel-length fantasy work, of A.K. Larkwood’s blisteringly good debut The Unspoken Name. (Hardly surprising, then, to find both Gladstone and Larkwood have contributed advance praise.) Star Eater is a fantastic book. I recommend it highly.” — Locus

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