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 book is the sequel to A Deadly Education, which was flat-out amazing if you like slightly dark and broody sarcastic protagonists and unique world building. It’s not often a sequel matches the epic-ness of a really fantastic first novel, but let me say to all of you Deadly Education fans: you will not be disappointed with The Last Graduate. The sequel picks up right where the first book leaves off. Galadriel – ehm, El – has actually acquired friends, and a not-boyfriend-but-kind-of in Orion. Things could be looking up, but this is the Scholomance and it only moves down. El has possibly the worst senior class schedule ever, and the school seems to be setting her up t…
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Calder Szewczak is writing duo Natasha C. Calder and Emma Szewczak, who met while studying at Cambridge. Natasha is a graduate of Clarion West 2018 and her work has previously appeared in The Stinging Fly, Lackington’s and Curiosities, amongst others. Emma researches contemporary representations of the Holocaust and has published work with T&T Clark and the Paulist Press. Welcome to the Hive, Calder Szewczak! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? Our first novel, The Offset, is about a dying world where, on your eighteenth birthday, you have to choose one of your parents to die as a carbon offset…
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We’re joined today by self-publishing author JA Andrews for a celebratory post about fellow authors Andrews has met in the SFF community. Before we launch into her article, and discover this new Egyptian Goddess, let’s find out a little about Andrews’ latest novel, Raven’s Ruin, book two of The Keeper Origins: The growing power in Sable’s words nearly changed the world. Until she was betrayed and silenced. A year ago on the land’s biggest stage, Sable’s voice nearly burned down the carefully constructed lies of the Kalesh Empire. Now, Sable’s skills are merely tools in High Prioress Vivaine’s desperate negotiations with the new Kalesh Ambassador, who’s denounced Sable …
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Johanna Sinisalo is a pioneer of the Finnish Weird. Her debut novel Not Before Sundown (2000, translated 2003) won the prestigious Finlandia prize in her native Finnish and won the James Tiptree, Jr Award on its translation into English. The novel is a wonderful mix of the speculative and the realist, imagining an alternative Finland in which trolls really exist from the perspective of the gay community in Sinisalo’s hometown of Tampere. Her other novels translated into English include Birdbrain (2008, translated 2011), a masterpiece of the eco-Weird, the utterly wonderful The Blood Of Angels (2011, translated 2014) which happens to be the interviewer’s favourite book, an…
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Susan Dennard has come a long way from small-town Georgia. With a masters degree in marine biology, she got to travel the world—six out of seven continents, to be exact (she’ll get to Asia one of these days!)—before she settled down as a full-time novelist and writing instructor. She is the author of the New York Times bestselling Witchlands series as well as the Something Strange & Deadly series. When not writing, she can be found slaying darkspawn on her Xbox or earning bruises at the dojo. You can learn more about Susan on her website, blog, newsletter, Twitter, or Pinterest. Welcome to the Hive, Susan! For those who may not know, can you tell us a little bi…
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Sammy H.K Smith lives and works in Oxfordshire UK as a police detective. When not working she spends time with her children, husband and pets, renovates her house, and inadvertently kills plants. A keen writer and lover of all things science fiction and fantasy, she’s often found balancing a book, a laptop, a child, and a cat whilst watching Netflix. Welcome back to the Hive, Sammy! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? I write fiction that focuses on human emotion and the authentic human connection. I like exploring the darker side of emotions and leave the reader asking questions and thinking ab…
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Today, we welcome back Timandra Whitecastle to the Hive to discuss story structures. Before we launch into Tim’s post about the Heroine’s Journey, check out Tim’s latest novel, our SPFBO 6 Semi-Finalist Queens of the Wyrd: Raise your shield. Defend your sisters. Prepare for battle Half-giant Lovis and her Shieldmaiden warband were once among the fiercest warriors in Midgard. But those days are long past and now Lovis just wants to provide a safe home for herself and her daughter – that is, until her former shield-sister Solveig shows up on her doorstep with shattering news. Solveig’s warrior daughter is trapped on the Plains of Vigrid in a siege gone ugly. Desperate to…
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Welcome to our Women In SFF Read-along! If you caught our Read-along Announcement, you’ll know that for Women In SFF, the Hive are hosting a read-along of S. A. Chakraborty’s The City of Brass. Although it’s been on our TBR’s for some time, it’s the first time reading Chakraborty’s magical debut for Nils and myself (Beth). We’ll be sticking to a reading schedule, which I’ll post below; we’ll be posting discussion points and questions every Wednesday via social media, and then Nils and I will be sharing our responses to these every Saturday. Be sure to follow our Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram to catch our Wednesday posts. You can also now join us on Discord! Week 1:…
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We’ve reached the end of our second week for this year’s Women In SFF, so let’s see what’s been happening in the feature this week! We’ve been completely floored by the incredible response from the community; we can’t tell you how much we love seeing all your responses to our photo challenge prompts, or how properly excited we get to see blog posts inspired by them! Each week, we’ll try and round up all this wonderful content into one summary-wrap-up post – if we’ve missed you, please comment and link below! We’d love to see the ways you’re taking part. So, what have you all been up to…? Reviews We’re going to kick the wrap-up off with reviews, as that’s what we’re a…
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Rachel has a PhD in neuroscience and delights in using the limitless realms of fantasy to explore the nature of life. Her first published novels were Last Memoria, a finalist in SPFBO 6 (2020-21), and Scars of Cereba. The two books together form the Memoria duology, which uses memory to explore what makes us who we are. Alongside her writing and publishing, Rachel also works as a science communicator for a UK charity, runs a London-based writing group and has more plants than can be considered normal. Welcome to the Hive, Rachel! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? Because how else will you k…
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“I wasn’t surprised this time. My body wanted him. My body sought to please him. What would happen to me when I had two or more mates? Would I be like the sky, constantly changing, clouded, clear, clouded, clear? Would I have to be hateful to one partner in order to please the other? Nikanj looked the same all the time and yet all four of my other parents treasured it. How well would my looks please anyone when I had four arms instead of two?” Imago (1989) is the final book in Octavia E. Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy. If Adulthood Rites (1988) recontextualises our understanding of the Oankali and Human relationship introduced in Dawn (1987), then Imago goes even further. …
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Lord of Secrets manages to pull off a great adventure, some awesome worldbuilding, and some brilliant character work, all in a lighthearted romp that is exciting and joyous to read. It’s The Mummy of fantasy – and that’s high praise coming from me. This kind of fantasy is so rare: it’s not ‘funny’, per se (not in a Terry Pratchett/Piers Anthony/Terry Brooks sort of way, anyway), but it’s unapologetically fun. It feels like playing Dragon Age or even a D&D game where you’re all a bit drunk and someone fails a roll and accidentally kisses an orc… The core of the story is a fairly simple series of quests: Gray wants to rescue his grandfather, so he needs a magical gizzi…
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Grady Hendrix is the author of the novels Horrorstör, about a haunted IKEA, and My Best Friend’s Exorcism, which is like Beaches meets The Exorcist, only it’s set in the Eighties. He’s also the author of We Sold Our Souls, The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires, and the upcoming (July 13!) Final Girl Support Group! He’s also the jerk behind the Stoker award-winning Paperbacks from Hell, a history of the 70’s and 80’s horror paperback boom, which contains more information about Nazi leprechauns, killer babies, and evil cats than you probably need. And he’s the screenwriter behind Mohawk, which is probably the only horror movie about the War of 1812 and Satani…
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Content warnings: murder, violence (not graphic). You ever just read a book so perfect for you that it’s like the author wrote it on spec to your preferences? Yeah, this book is EXACTLY what I’m looking for in a YA fantasy. First things first – how beautiful is that cover? It’s stunningly opulent and really suits the intricate mix of royal intrigue and romance. The design is by Emma Byrne and I hope to see more of her work on covers as this sort of thing is hugely appealing to me! On to the book itself. Queen of Coin and Whispers has two narrators: Lia, the young, recently-crowned Queen of Edar determined to right the wrongs of her dissolute Uncle’s reign; and Xania, a…
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“Intellectually he had always known it was possible. A robot, or a person, has two parts: hardware and software. The hardware is the actual physical material involved, and the software is the pattern in which the material is arranged. Your brain is hardware, but the information in the brain is software. The mind … memories, habits, opinions, skills … is all software.” Software is the first book in Rudy Rucker’s Ware tetralogy, a pioneering work of cyberpunk fiction, and the winner of the first ever Philip K. Dick award. Almost forty years later, it remains as deliriously inventive and delightfully bonkers as it was when it was released. The novel is an early exploration …
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We recently shared our Most Anticipated SFF Releases for 2021, and a great number of those books were second/third or even fourth books within series. So we gathered up our contributors and asked – what’s your favourite series? This of course then posed the question: on-going or completed? We’re aware this can be Hot Topic, but here on the Hive, we’re of the stance that it’s important to support our favourite authors whether they’re at the start of a series, mired in the middle of it, or safely through the other side. So we’ll be recommending a series that’s on-going, as well as one that’s completed (for instant bingeing). As always, a big thank you to our contribut…
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The Fantasy Hive is sorry to hear of the passing of Kathleen Ann Goonan. An American science fiction writer with an abiding love of jazz music, Goonan’s Nanotech Quartet revitalised post-cyberpunk speculative fiction in the late 90s and early 00s. She won the John W. Campbell memorial award and was nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke Award. She leaves behind a remarkable body of work that has been praised by writers as varied as William Gibson, Kim Stanley Robinson and Joe Haldeman. Goonan’s most enduring creation is the Nanotech Quartet, beginning with her first novel Queen City Jazz (1994) and continuing with Mississippi Blues (1997), Crescent City Rhapsody (2000) and …
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“HERE’S OUR IDEA, TRINA, ABOUT WHY HUMANS ARE SO FOCUSED ON THE PAST AND THE FUTURE, ALL AT ONCE. IT’S ABOUT LEARNING! THAT’S THE GREAT GIFT OF LINEAR TIME! YOU CAN LOOK BACK ON YOUR EXPERIENCES IN THE PAST AND USE THEM TO MAKE CHOICES FOR THE FUTURE. TIME IS EMBODIED LEARNING! THAT’S WHY MEMORY EXISTS! WHY FAILURES ARE NEVER TRULY FAILURES, AND MISTAKES ARE ALWAYS GLORIOUS! NO MATTER WHAT, NO MATTER WHAT, NO MATTER WHAT, NO MATTER WHAT!” Chana Porter’s debut novel The Seep (2021) marks the emergence of a crucial new voice in speculative fiction. The Seep is a striking work of utopian fiction, a work that delves deep into what it means to be human in a world transformed,…
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Aparna Verma was born in India and immigrated to the United States when she was two-years-old. She graduated from Stanford University with Honors in the Arts and a B.A. in English. The Boy with Fire is her first novel. When she is not writing, Aparna likes to ride horses, dance to Bollywood music, and find old cafes to read myths about forgotten worlds. You can connect with Aparna on Twitter and Instagram at @spirited_gal. Welcome to the Hive, Aparna. Let’s start with the basics: tell us about The Boy With Fire! Why should readers check out your work? The Boy with Fire is about a world teetering on the edge of war, and the people who push it over. It has …
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Heather Child has returned to the Hive for Women in SFF with a guest post on the concept of time and how, as a theme, it crops up in fantasy literature – well, time and time again. Heather herself played with the notion of time in her novel The Undoing of Arlo Knott: What if your life had an ‘undo’ button? Arlo Knott develops the mysterious ability to reverse his last action. It makes him able to experience anything, to charm any woman and impress any friend. His is a life free of mistakes, a life without regret. But second chances aren’t all they’re cracked up to be. As wonderful as his new life is, a mistake in Arlo’s traumatic childhood still haunts him and the tem…
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Reviewer’s Note: As this is a review for the seventh book in Marko Kloos’s ongoing Frontlines series, it will contain minor spoilers for overarching story elements in earlier books in that series. While Orders of Battle is the seventh book in the Frontlines series, it feels like it could stand on its own as the first book in a new story. Marko Kloos summarizes just enough of what’s come before that readers can pick this book up cold and still be immediately drawn into the ongoing war against humanity’s implacable, seemingly-genocidal foe: the Lankies. This alien race first attacked our colonies without provocation and then struck directly at Earth and Mars before we defe…
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“Then it suddenly struck me that what I was doing to my novel draft was similar to what I knew of mutability. The original text, the first draft, was forced into changes by my rewriting them. Once I had written them the new version seemed so natural, so organic to the book, that not only were they an improved version, I could no longer remember what my original draft had said. The outer perception of material reality, the inner perception of change without memory – as Frejah had tried to explain it to me.” The Evidence (2020) sees Christopher Priest return to The Dream Archipelago to deliver one of the most focused, playful and enjoyable books of his career. Revolving a…
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Happy Tuesday, everyone! I’ve got another video for you all, in which I talk about my favourite science-fiction reads of the past year. You can’t go wrong with reading any one of these novels! In case you prefer text to video, here are the highlighted discussions of each book–sans all the visual jokes and my horrifying, sentient hair. Some of these texts are adaptations of older reviews in part–I’ve added the links to those reviews, as well, in case your curiosity is piqued. Will Destroy the Galaxy for Cash by Yahtzee Croshaw I’m a big fan of Yahtzee Croshaw. The risqué jokes, the cute little sprites, the cutting critiques—there’s plenty to admire in the mind behind …
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Today, we welcome sci-fi author Ginger Smith back to the Hive. Before we get into her guest post about her Women in SFF influences, check out the blurb for novel The Rush’s Edge, available now from Angry Robot Books: With the help of his commanding officer, a genetically engineered ex-soldier fights back against the government that created him and others like him to be expendable slaves. Halvor Cullen, a genetically-engineered and technology implanted ex-solider, doesn’t see himself as a hero. After getting out of the service, all he’s interested in is chasing the adrenaline rush that his body was designed to crave. Hal knows he won’t live long anyway; vat soldiers like …
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We’ve reached the end of our first full-week for this year’s Women In SFF, and what an incredible start to the feature it’s been! We’ve been completely floored by the incredible response from the community; we can’t tell you how much we love seeing all your responses to our photo challenge prompts, or how properly excited we get to see blog posts inspired by them! Each week, we’ll try and round up all this wonderful content into one summary-wrap-up post – if we’ve missed you, please comment and link below! We’d love to see the ways you’re taking part. So, what have you all been up to…? Reviews We’re going to kick the wrap-up off with reviews, as that’s what we’re all…
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