The Fantasy Hive - A U.K. Wonderland
A hub for all things fantasy (plus some SF). Book reviews, games, author interviews, features, serial fiction- you name it. The Fantasy Hive is a collaborative site formed of unique personalities who just want to celebrate fantasy. Btw, the SFF novel to the left by one of our members, Warwick Gleeson, was a "Top 150 Best Books" Kirkus pick in 2019.
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So here we are again, one year after my last Women in SFF list went up. Looking at how many amazing new books I read since then, I think I should have updated earlier! I have sorted them roughly by genre or style. Some of them would fit more than just that one tag, especially Dark and Non Western Setting which have a lot of overlap. I decided to put the grim ones into the Dark section as those definitely have their own target audience. Some of these authors were already on my list with other books, but I’ll add new (to me) titles that I read since then to any of my updates! I’m an audioholic, so I put a little ⊕ symbol next to the ones available as audiobook. So witho…
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“’Definition always presupposes its opposite,’ I say to the woman in the camouflaged combat suit. She’s trying to get me to converse, though what I most long for is just to blunt my faculties here in the Café Bongo buzz and stop myself feeling any more pain. ‘Define the word “normal”, and you have to define “abnormal”. Define “humanity”, then you have to define what humanity is not.’” “They’re on their way back and doing what the sparrow and pigeons and rats do – living alongside us, whether we like it or not. They’re eating our leftovers, they’re even stealing a little, and sleeping in our abandoned buildings and barns, as in the tales. They’re pushing out their own ter…
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Today, we welcome authors Gabriela Houston and Caroline Hardaker to the Hive to discuss Women in speculative fiction. Before we launch into their discussion, check out the synopses of their latest novels, both available from Angry Robot Books: In a world which believes her to be a monster, a young striga fights to harness the power of her second heart, while her mother sacrifices everything to stop her… In an isolated mountain community, sometimes a child is born with two hearts. This child is called a striga and is considered a demon who must be abandoned on the edge of the forest. The child’s mother must then decide to leave with her infant, or stay and try to forget.…
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“This is how humans function. This is precisely how humans function. You know what lies behind the horizon, but you have to carry on in the same direction because that’s what you’ve been doing, that’s what you’ve decided, and changing direction or turning back would be a sign of giving in, of letting go of everything you’ve achieved so far. You keep going, fast, although you know only too well what lies ahead.” Birdbrain (2010) is the second of Johanna Sinisalo’s books to be translated into English, following her remarkable debut novel Not Before Sundown (2003), although Sinisalo had published two novels and a short story collection in her native Finnish in between. Bir…
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Stark Holborn is the author of Nunslinger – the first ever digital serial published by Hodder & Stoughton – as well as the novella series Triggernometry and the SF-western, Ten Low. As well as writing about westerns for Pornokitsch and Screen Queens, Stark works as a games writer for clients like the BBC, Cartoon Network and Adult Swim. Stark is currently a lead writer on the SF-noir detective game Shadows of Doubt. Welcome back to the Hive, Stark. Thanks for having me back! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? Do you like Mad Max? Dune? Firefly? Halo Jones? Cowboy Bebop? Philip K. D…
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Susannah Wise is an actor and writer who grew up in London and the Midlands. A childhood spent outdoors inspired her love of nature and tree climbing. The death of her father in 2015 was the catalyst for THIS FRAGILE EARTH. His preoccupation with astronomy and the beauty of the night sky formed the jumping-off point for the story. Susannah studied at the Faber Academy, graduating in September 2018. She lives in London with her partner and son. Welcome to the Hive, Susannah Wise. Let’s start with the basics: what is This Fragile Earth about? Why should readers check out your work? Hi, thanks so much for having me here. This Fragile Earth is a post-apocalyptic survi…
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When I was very young, I grew up in a house that was largely about stories. My mother read me the Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit aloud from about age four to age nine, and my father — himself a fairly successful novelist – was also a first-rate storyteller. I got stories, or books read aloud, every night. My dad’s ‘Christmas Cowboy’ stories are with me yet. When I was nine, I had a babysitter named Sam. In my opinion, Sam was the greatest babysitter in history, and I wish I knew his last name so I could thank him. His ‘system’ was simple; he’d arrive, we’d build an airplane model (which he provided) and then he’d put me to bed and tell me a story. His stories…
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“Magic could reshape the world. Its power was undeniable. It needed no argument to bolster it, nor any faith to make it true.” The Hand of the Sun King by J.T. Greathouse is the first instalment in The Pact and the Pattern trilogy. This is a novel which first caught my eye ever since we hosted the cover reveal back in February when I became mesmerised by the hand on the cover with all its intricate patterns and hidden details. Patrick Knowles’ design certainly piqued my interest, and I needed to know precisely what this story was all about. Last year my favourite debut was The Councillor by E.J. Beaton which was a novel with vivid worldbuilding and beautiful pros…
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We’re super excited today to share with you an excerpt from SAVING SEOUL, the first book in Steven Kelliher’s new series Sword Punk: Akio Prince is one of the best in the world at a dying art. He’s put a lifetime of martial arts training to work in the arena, dueling with pulsing resin blades and glowing carbon fiber for the masses. But winning championships is small consolation while his city is taken over by the Hachinin, ruthless criminals spreading corruption, violence and debauchery across the east. When the same syndicate that claimed the life of Akio’s master threatens the few friends he has left, he decides to make a stand. After refusing to throw a fight at t…
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Published by: Tor Genre: sci-fi space opera Pages: 560 Format: ebook Review Copy: Courtesy of NetGalley Shards of Earth is Adrian Tchaikovsky’s first bona fide attempt at a space opera, the opening to his Final Architecture trilogy, and one of the best science fiction books I’ve read this year. Tchaikovsky’s ambitions for this series are made clear early on—Shards opens with a story of cosmic struggle against an enemy so vast, even humanity’s most advanced weaponry does no more than pinprick them. The Architects are “moon-sized entities that can reshape populated planets and ships” (as per the Glossary) into crystalline sculptures of staggering and repulsive beauty. …
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We’re super excited today to share with you an excerpt from THE RIGHTEOUS, the second part of David Wragg’s Articles of Faith duology, ahead of its release on 10th June. Firstly here’s a quick recap of book one THE BLACK HAWKS, given to you by none other than Lemon! Be warned, there are spoilers for book one ahead! PREVIOUSLY . . . Aye, right, where were we? So our boys Rennic (aka boss) and Chel (aka wee bear, cub, dipstick) have got themselves locked in the dungeons below the old royal citadel, along with a whole bunch of hapless folk who thought they were on the verge of liberating the kingdom from your good old-fashioned tyrannical regime. I’d say executi…
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“’What I want to say is that I hope Siss is telling the truth. And even six or seven of you could be a problem, frankly. If you start changing things, it could ruin our ecology. Your technology might overwhelm our civilisation.’ ‘Indeed it will,’ said Peg. ‘But is your way of life so fine? Dare to dream of more than grubbing in the mud. Yoke, we bring you the power to alter matter with a touch of mind. This is a power our god Om bestows upon us – a power she now sees fit to grant to you. You’re lucky. Thanks to Shimmer’s having been decrypted here, Om has noticed you. Your race will live as sorcerers.’” Realware (2000) is the final volume in Rudy Rucker’s Ware tetralogy…
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Hearken now, mere mortals, for these are words scribed by no mere amphibian. Nay, this quill be betwixt the elegant if somewhat wrinkled fingers of Ulesorin the Green, mightiest mage in all the lands. The fact that I must don the sewn costuming of a newt on occasions such as every time I wish to leave my private chambers is in now way a reflection on my own newtliness. Yes, my beloved readers, it is true. Using the most tried and tested methods of curse breaking – waiting several months for it to wear off on its own – I have been returned to my bearded and bipedal form, providing me with the very hands that I now use to write this missive. In the beginning, I was of cou…
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Images by Svetlana Alyuk, banner by Imyril This year, the Wyrd and Wonder crew are hosting a read-along of Andrea Stewart’s The Bone Shard Daughter. Nils, Beth and Filip have been joining in; for Beth and Filip, it’s a re-read and re-listen along, but for Nils it’s her first time reading Stewart’s epic debut. You can find our previous discussions in the links below, featuring questions set by Beth, as well as Imyril and Lisa. You can follow the conversation on Twitter, or you can check out the Goodreads topic! Week 1: Beginning through Chapter Eleven Week 2: Chapter Twelve – Twenty-three Week 3: Chapter Twenty-four – Thirty-five Week 4: Chapter Thirty-six to t…
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Content warnings: mild violence; some blood magic; description of drowning. The title of this book more or less sums up the main driving force behind the plot – the final prophecy ever given says an Age of Darkness is coming. There will be one last prophet who may be able to see how to avert the disaster, and we pick up the story 16 years after the signs say they were born, with multiple groups searching for them. At first, we don’t know how this is going to fit into the disparate group of characters we meet, but as they all become entangled with each other and the search for the prophet, things get very interesting… It’s a classic fantasy premise, and one that feels lik…
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A.J. Rettger lives on a farm near the small town of Aberdeen Saskatchewan with his dog, Zeke. He has a bachelor’s of education degree, as well as a certificate from a private vocational college. His hobbies include playing Dungeons and Dragons, listening to heavy metal, and reading and writing fantasy books. Oathbreaker is his first book. Welcome to the Hive, A.J. Rettger. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? If you love dark and gritty fantasy with lots of gore, you’ll love Oathbreaker! It starts off as a classic fantasy tale where a young knight sets off to live up to his father’s legacy, but…
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Lucy Hounsom is the author of The Worldmaker Trilogy. Her first book, STARBORN, was shortlisted in the 2016 Gemmell Awards for Best Fantasy Debut. Her fourth book, SISTERSONG, a reimagining of the folk tale ‘The Twa Sisters’ is set in Devon and is published by Pan Macmillan in 2021. She works for Waterstones Booksellers and co-hosts the intersectional feminist podcast ‘Breaking the Glass Slipper’, which won Best Audio in the 2019 British Fantasy Awards. Lucy lives in Devon. Welcome to the Hive, Lucy. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out Sistersong? I fail at elevator pitches, so here’s one from my awesome a…
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Trigger Warnings: Abuse, rape, domestic abuse. I’m old enough to remember when the Jordaches arrived in Brookside Close, including Anna Friel in her first TV role as eldest daughter Beth. Brookside – the innovative pub-less soap opera that gave us the first gay kiss and the first lesbian kiss also gave us the first domestic violence story line in a UK Soap. The reality of coercive and controlling men has been replayed in other soaps since, most recently with the largely psychological abuse and gaslighting that Jeff levelled at Yasmeen in Coronation Street. However, the grim reality of men victimising women sadly pervades societies of the past, present – and in Sammy H…
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Elizabeth Knox is a Fantasy writer from New Zealand. Her marvellous novel The Absolute Book (2019) is a lyrical work of the Fantastic, involving hidden knowledge, Fairlyand, demons and talking crows, as well as being a powerful exploration of grief. The novel was published originally in New Zealand, and was hailed as an instant classic of the genre. It is published this year in the UK by Michael Joseph and in the US by Viking. She has also written The Vintner’s Luck (1988), a multi-award winning novel about the relationship between a French winemaker and a fallen angel, as well as horror novel Wake (2013), YA series, and novels drawing on her childhood growing up in New Z…
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Published by: Gollancz Series: The Last War Genre: Fantasy Pages: 488 Format: Paperback Purchased Copy: From my local bookstore – support yours, folks! Be warned, the written version of the review and the video are different this time around – you might want to take a look at both! The Jiya have had peace for a thousand years—until their ancient enemy, the Egril, strike back with a vengeance, wielding the same magic that was once the Jiya’s ancestral right. In less than a week, the Jiya people and their proud Shulka warriors are decimated and under the yoke of their new conquerers. So opens Mike Shackle’s We Are the Dead—and I can’t promise you things will look u…
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“Nahri found herself pressing her knuckles against her temple, hard enough to hurt. Was this a dream? Or maybe Daevabad had been the dream. The nightmare. For surely it was more likely she was a human back in Cairo, a poor thief, a con artist taken in by her own scheme rather than someone who had lived the past six years as the future queen of a hidden kingdom of djinn.” From the moment a con artist in Cairo is swept away on a flying carpet by a magical warrior, to her entering the fabled land of Daevabad, meeting two very different princes, magical creatures and a tyrant king, then discovering her true powers, her turbulent heritage and an age old war between the Qahtan…
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“Like time, hope is something that does not stay but comes and goes.” We’ve all reacted to the pandemic differently. Whilst some people have found watching Contagion to be a cathartic experience during lockdown, I have studiously been avoiding any kind of pandemic-based fiction since reading Mary Shelley’s The Last Man (1826) in early 2020 just before the UK went into lockdown. I have broken this streak with Choi Jin-young’s To The Warm Horizon (2021). Choi’s novel is a post-apocalyptic story in which the world is devastated by a global pandemic. These novels inevitably hit differently in a post-pandemic world, despite the fact that when Choi’s novel was published in th…
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The Seventh Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off (SPFBO/Spiffbo) is officially underway! We’re super excited here at the Hive; we’ve already lined up our judges and interviewed them, and now we can reveal to you our process for this year. It’s… it’s going to be a lot like our process for SPFBO 5 and SPFBO 6. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it – but we will probably tinker with it as we go along – must be the Gnomish nature that Laura M Hughes instilled in us all! You can learn about the origins of SPFBO HERE, and you can catch up with the SPFBO community on Facebook HERE. Our Process The 300 books have now been split between the ten blogs. And in round one – we have a bat…
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My name is Lauren, and I’m a fantasy author of character-driven stories and epic adventure. My books usually contain dragons, rarely feature romance, and are typically fun and hopeful. I live in a tiny village in the UK, have a degree in Psychology, and was a professional copywriter before going full-time as an author—swapping corporate copy for magic and dragons! I’ve previously published under the name L.L. McNeil. Welcome to the Hive, Lauren! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? DRAGONS! MAGIC! CURSES! VENGEFUL SPIRITS! Honestly no idea if shouting random things will help or not, but hopefu…
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After revealing the spectacular cover for Ashley Stokes’ upcoming Gigantic, we’re thrilled to be back at Fantasy Hive to reveal another 2021 release, this time with cover design by long-time Unsung collaborator Vince Haig: a new collection from Malcolm Devlin called Unexpected Places to Fall From, Unexpected Places to Land. Who better to introduce the cover and the book than author Malcolm Devlin? “Dodos have always struck me as rather jovial looking birds. Plump, wide-eyed, their long hooked beaks curved in a slightly bashful grin. The images you see of them are almost invariably based on Roelant Savery’s seventeenth century painting, donated to the Natural Histo…
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