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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This year, we’d love to see more blogs get involved in Women in SFF, so we’ve come up with blogger tags! So far, we’ve had fun with: #TheTagTeam tag, a trope/theme-association chain. #TheBookWouldBeBetter, checking out what series we’d love to see adapted and who we’d cast in them. #TheBand, we put together our own mercenary band of bad-ass female characters. Ok, here me out. This tag is all about solving the puzzle to guess the book! Similar to Framed, that gives you so many movie frames to guess the movie, and Heardle, that gives you so many seconds of the intro to guess the song, we’re going to share four clues related to a book and you need to try and guess wha…
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This year, we’d love to see more blogs get involved in Women in SFF, so we’ve come up with blogger tags! So far, we’ve had fun with: #TheTagTeam tag, a trope/theme-association chain. #TheBookWouldBeBetter, checking out what series we’d love to see adapted and who we’d cast in them. This week, we’re going on a quest. That’s right. We’re getting the band back together. A dark lord has arisen, except this time around they’re a little less lordly and a lot more ladylike. As such the utterly useless gentleman heroes of the kingdom are defenceless against her, due to chivalry’s recent return to fashion, and we must rely upon the ladies of fantasy to fend off doom, disaste…
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This year, we’d love to see more blogs get involved in Women in SFF, so we’ve come up with blogger tags! Last week, we kicked things off with the #TagTeam tag, a trope/theme-association chain. We haven’t spotted anyone joining in with this tag yet, so if you have let us know, and if you’d like to, you can find it HERE This week, we’d like to welcome you to the Book Would Be Better tag! We’re living in a time when various streaming platforms are bringing all kinds of epic fantasy series to the screen! Wheel of Time! Lord of the Rings (again)! Game Of Thrones! Foundation! The Other Game of Thrones Thing! The Shanara Chronicles! Discworld! I feel like these all have some…
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While the SPFBO dust briefly settles let’s take a moment to look back (but not in anger of course) For those who say “What’s SPFBO?” (or even how do you pronounce it?) The TL:DR is it’s a competition featuring 300 self published fantasy books, 10 blogger judging teams and one winner. More info can be found here Rules and Submission Info SPFBO Facebook Group SPFBO 6 Introduction Like the apocryphal painting of the Forth Road Bridge – SPFBO is a near continuous process as the competition cycle settles into a 5 month first phase, a 6 month second phase and a one month turn around in the month of May. Which does not mean that May is in any way a quiet hiatus. We will …
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“Not the soldiers. Those – those are the same as soldiers anywhere. The Chinese invaders return to their homes from the battlefield here, broken. Their bodies can be fixed, easily enough, but minds need more precision. The best Omissioners in China working as the sun comes up, after it goes down, day after day, on those soldiers. Wiping memories, taking away the worst things they have seen. And done. Then they are ready again, to go back to central Vietnam. To the gene-scrambled crops and the heat that melts the lungs, the wet heat that never lets up, makes the skin leprous. Back to the pyres of burning dead on a long brown horizon. To the starving children, with their ho…
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Happy Pride everyone! To celebrate, we thought it would be great idea to bring you another 5-Star Books in 5 Words feature – this time focusing on books with either authors or characters of the LGBQTA+ Community. Whether you want to celebrate Pride, or you want to diversify your reading, we highly recommend the following! Graeme It Trans Fantasy- ends Peter France and Pan Masochist you hot Spy/ grieve. Hook Courtesan Gender Parallel re-modelled worlds; silkpunk monsters political and drama magic Julia Diversity Murder, all mystery, around, magic, bloody adventure, brilliant gay! Scarlett Gothic Blo…
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It’s a Women in SFF Five Words! To celebrate Women in SFF, we thought it would be a great idea to bring you another 5-Star Books in Five Words feature – this time focusing on books by BAME female authors. Whether you want to celebrate with us, or you want to diversify your reading, we highly recommend the following! We’d love to add to our list, so if you have any recommendations for us, please let us know! GD Pristine Very regency lesbian fantasy Cinderella of fantasy manners retelling Deconstructing Love One colonialism your intense in starfish story, spaaaa- alien but aaace invaders fractured Fallen Vampires angels…
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Five-Star Fantasy Books in Five Words is BACK! For today only. As it’s today’s prompt for this year’s Wyrd and Wonder photo challenge. BUT STILL. We have great fun doing these posts, so we’re super pleased to be bringing you another list of five-star recommendations. Thanks go to Scarlett, Julia, Nils, Beth, and Jonathan for your contributions! Battles Blood Monsters Vengeance Ferocity Scarlett Capable Thief Joining Traveling Troupe Julia Bones Secrets Challenges Magic Heart Scarlett Lust Addiction Decadent Lyrical Chimera Nils Friendship Travel Prophecy Destiny Humour Scarlett Disaster Viking Mums Kill Monsters Beth Hogs Orcs Gore Thrill…
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“Hron’s a country, I guess,” Sorros said, “in that we’re a collection of people with a somewhat-shared culture who commonly defend certain rough borders and principles. But we’re not a country like Vorronia or Borolia or even the Floating Isles. We don’t have a king of a parliament or a council or a royal priesthood or trade barons or capitalists or really any of the vestiges of power at all. We’re a country, but we’re an anarchist country.” “What does that mean?” I asked. “It means that everyone in Hron is the master of their own destiny,” Sorros said. “It means that there are no laws here, no prisons.” Dory chimed in. “The free Confederation of Hron is a voluntary as…
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This book is so sweet. I’m always trying to fill a particular gap on my shelves: light-hearted, character-centric fantasy that just makes you smile. Oh, and if it features queer romance, then so much the better! A Deceptive Alliance fits perfectly into this niche – it had me beaming throughout as the story unfolded in such a lovely way. This is a story that plays heavily with tropes – arranged royal marriage that turns out to be a love match, twins disguised as each other, royalty playing at being commoners – but it feels fresh and fun, and I think this is due to the warmth with which our POV character, Kel, is written. Kel’s only trying to help his twin sister out, but …
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A Desolation Called Peace makes half or more of the sci-fi works I’ve read over the last few years seem woefully incompetent. Arkady Martine’s second book is the sequel to the Hugo award-winning A Memory Called Empire. Memory introduced us readers to Martine’s masterfully crafted culture of Teixcalaan, which draws from many real-world empires and people to create something fresh and unique—central concepts of the Teixcalaanlitzlim such as civilized people versus barbarians and the political importance of poetry are borrowed from the Roman and Byzantine empire; the naming conventions of Teixcalaan’s citizens is drawn from the Mixtec people of Oaxaca; and the cultural domin…
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“But there you are wrong, for this is no longer the world you knew, the world any of us knew. That world is dead, everything is divided, Before-Auschwitz and the Now, for there is only now, even to think of a life beyond is to indulge in fantasy. But to answer your question, to write of this Holocaust is to shout and scream, to tear and spit, let words fall like bloodied rain on the page; not with cold detachment but with fire and pain, in the language of shund, the language of shit and piss and puke, of pulp, a language of torrid covers and lurid emotions, of fantasy: this is an alien planet, Levi. This is Planet Auschwitz.” “I believe in law, in order. There must alway…
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After buddy reading A Spindle Splintered together, Nils and Beth are back with a buddy read review of the (MUCH ANTICIPATED) sequel, A Mirror Mended. Zinnia Gray, professional fairy-tale fixer and lapsed Sleeping Beauty is over rescuing snoring princesses. Once you’ve rescued a dozen damsels and burned fifty spindles, once you’ve gotten drunk with twenty good fairies and made out with one too many members of the royal family, you start to wish some of these girls would just get a grip and try solving their own narrative issues. Just when Zinnia’s beginning to think she can’t handle one more princess, she glances into a mirror and sees another face looking back at her: th…
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Nils and I received copies of Once upon a Winter from MacFarlane Lantern Publishing, a collection of folk and fairy tales with a winter theme. Fellow reviewer Asha, writing as Adie Hart, has a story in the anthology that we couldn’t wait to read – A Pea Ever After. I do intend to read the rest of the anthology and review it as a whole, but this is just a mini review of A Pea Ever After, as Nils and I read it together. Well ish. Nils read it in one sitting! Nils: I did, didn’t I?! Sorry about that, Once I started though it was pretty hard to put down. Like you, I intend to read the other stories too but having never read any of Hart’s stories before I was eager to begin…
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“Within these walls, we take few things. Clothes, personal belongings, photos of loved ones whether family, friends or pets; precious books, maybe a volume like this; our favourite means of hearing music, digitised or analogue. Our arts, our sports, our trinkets. Our personal effects, verifications of self. Remember this: nothing is more important than what we carry upright each day when we rise from our pods to greet the world. Ourselves.” Courttia Newland’s A River Called Time (2021) is an ambitious, confounding and thought-provoking book. Set in an alternate history in which colonialism and slavery never happened, the novel is an attempt to imagine a decolonised world…
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A Sense of Community By Karen Heuler I have never been a witch, but I wouldn’t mind it. As I understand it, having done some research for my book, The Splendid City, and watched some TV shows or maybe just remembered them, the fun part of witchcraft is casting spells and doing transformations. I wonder if a lawn chair was the preferred flying craft for an older witch with physical disabilities. Generally speaking, witches must be sprightly if they’re flying on broomsticks; they’re just so awkward. But logically, that can’t be so. I have one (young) witch ask an initiate why the un-sprightly older witch can’t just cure herself through magic. Ah! She’s still subject to…
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let’s not pretend girls with swords don’t get shit done… The Buddy Read Dream Team (Nils and myself, Beth) are back. Nils managed to get her hands on arcs of Alix E. Harrow’s brand new fairy-tale retelling A Spindle Splintered. It’s out TODAY from Tordotcom Publishing (you can grab a copy here) and is the first novella in a new series called Fractured Fables (omg): It’s Zinnia Gray’s twenty-first birthday, which is extra-special because it’s the last birthday she’ll ever have. When she was young, an industrial accident left Zinnia with a rare condition. Not much is known about her illness, just that no one has lived past twenty-one. Her best friend Charm is intent on …
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A new series by Laurell K Hamilton, featuring a male protagonist. Enter, Zaniel Havelock (Havoc), a police Detective, veteran, and former student at the cult – I mean College – of Angels. The College of Angels accepts students who have a gift of communicating with angels, but once accepted, it can be hard to leave. Havoc managed to leave the College only after some traumatic events that are hinted at, but not fully fleshed out in this first book (I’m looking forward to the full story later). In a world where most people are born with Guardian Angels they can’t see, and witches, familiars and spirit guides are common, the police are starting to actively recruit gifted co…
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Today we’re joining the blog tour for J.T. Greathouse and we’re extremely excited to be sharing with you all an exclusive bonus chapter from the release of his sequel The Garden of Empire. Please note there will be SPOILERS FOR THE HAND OF THE SUN KING. A Turning Point Harrow Fox Harrow Fox, Sun King of Nayen, crouched at the edge of a cliff, looking down through the gentle fall of snow on the fortress of Greyfrost Keep, the last bastion of his rebellion against the Empire of Sien. A conjured storm of wind and flame had scoured a ring of smoking ash through the winter-dusted forest, where imperial banners moved in steady, unhurried retreat. The boy was power…
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“Human beings fear difference,” Lilith had told him once. “Oankali crave difference. Humans persecute their different ones, yet they need them to give themselves definition and status. Oankali seek difference and collect it. They need it to keep themselves from stagnation and overspecialization. If you don’t understand this, you will. You’ll probably find both tendencies surfacing in your own behavior.” And she had put her hand on his hair. “When you feel a conflict, try to go the Oankali way. Embrace difference.” Adulthood Rites (1988) is the second book in Octavia E. Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy. Set some years after the end of Dawn (1987) when Lilith and the other Hum…
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Hey, I’m Stark Holborn, author of Nunslinger and Ten Low and it’s great to be back at the Hive to reveal the cover for the second instalment of my Triggernometry series: Advanced Triggernometry. Triggernometry is an alt-history western, taking place in a world where mathematicians are dangerous outlaws. It mixes the grit of the west with a cast of mathematicians from across history to create a truly unique and unforgettable adventure. Thanks to readers, the first Triggernometry had a great outing last year despite the pandemic, and was featured in The Washington Post and on Tor.com as well as on some of my favourite blogs (including right here)… Check out the sy…
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“For one night, Kithamar is a city between worlds and between ages. It falls out of its own history, at once the end of something and the beginning of something else.” Age of Ash is the first in a new epic fantasy trilogy by well-known author Daniel Abraham. Despite owning The Dagger and Coin series for years, this is my first foray into Abraham’s novels, and after being utterly enchanted by his prose, I definitely want to read more. Our tale is set in the illustrious city of Kithamar, a city full of beauty, but with a rich history of blood and war, a city where every person has a story to unfold, a city where a sinister secret has long been kept hidden. It is al…
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Happy Monday to everyone! I’m D.P. Woolliscroft (or just Dave to most folks) and I’m really excited to be here today to reveal the cover for Volume 3 of the Wildfire Cycle, Ajiwiak, and to share some other goodies from inside the book. The Wildfire Cycle For those of you who aren’t familiar with The Wildfire Cycle, it begins with Kingshold (a SPFBO semi-finalist) and is the focused story of a realm transitioning from a monarchy to a proto-democracy via a magically enabled election. A down on his luck bard, the daughter of the ancient wizard who founded the country, a high-end thief and a palace servant girl eventually come together to try to sway the election to an outco…
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This is an occasional series of posts drawing on my excursion into the academic side of creative writing. Having taken a career break from secondary schooling to further my own education with some post graduate study I’ve completed an MA in Creative Writing at Queen’s University Belfast. I’ve now started on a PhD project at the same university with the catchy title “Navigating the mystery of future geographies in climate change fiction.” So the Hive has kindly given me space to post reviews of climate fiction books as well as blogging thoughts and articles on other aspects of my PhD experience. Having looked at M.D.Presley’s World Building for Fantasy Fans and Authors i…
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Content warnings: violence and death; mild body horror; blood magic; mention of abusive relationships. Amora is the princess of the island kingdom Visidia, and in order to take her throne, she must demonstrate full control of her family’s brutal magic in a huge performance of skill. When things don’t go quite as planned, it could mean death for Amora, unless she can escape – and willing to help her do just that is sarcastic pirate Bastian, who opens her eyes to just how rotten things are in Visidia. Amora finds herself learning more about her kingdom than she ever could as queen, and it might just come down to her to save it. This is great piratical fantasy, full of sark…
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