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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“All my Silly Putters have turned into fucked-up aliens. They’ve been taken over by some kind of rogue software from outer space – I didn’t ask for it, but here it is, and it’s free, whether we want it or not, it’s physical graffiti from dimension Z, the truest freeware there ever was.” The previous two books in the Ware tetralogy, Software (1982) and Wetware (1988), explored Rudy Rucker’s ideas around uploading human consciousness and implanting robot consciousness into human bodies. Freeware (1997), the third book in the series, is a further exploration of the posthuman condition. Rucker transports us to a world in which shapeshifting robots have changed the way humans…
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Hello, everyone! Filip here with another video for you all, this one a short, humorous take on five classic fantasy novels. Yes, of course The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings are on the chopping block. The post Five Classic Fantasy Novels In A Sentence | Lord of the Rings, The Hobbit, Alice in Wonderland, A Wizard in Earthsea, Elric appeared first on The Fantasy Hive. View the full article
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“I have since understood how storytelling works, what it does with your senses. It was as if they somehow became entangled. The meaning of the story presents itself, sensation on top of sensation, all of them building together to create one woven pattern, one in which no one element is primary, the story a single perfect whole made of fragments and patches, moments of understanding, smells, visions.” Marian Womack’s debut English novel The Golden Key (2020) was one of my literary highlights of 2020, a mesmerising work of climate change gothic fairy tale. Womack’s new novel, The Swimmers (2021), builds on the distinctive use of the Weird to explore the unease, alienation …
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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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Series: Impossible Times Previous Book in Series: One Word Kill Published by: 47North Genre: Sci-Fi, YA, Time Travel Pages: 222 Format: ebook Purchased Copy from Amazon’s Kindle Store Time travel is well and good, I thought, but what about all the paradoxes that ought to come with it? I shouldn’t have worried—with Limited Wish, the time-travelling chicken comes home to roost. Nick Hayes comes face to face with two diverging timelines, two distinct fates he must choose between even as both of them threaten to destabilize his own present. It’s almost amusing, seeing the universe trying to kill Nick yet again; would be, too, if I wasn’t so damn invested in his well-b…
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“I’ll watch you while you sleep. Sleep while you watch. I’ll lie to you, but I’ll also lie for you. If you let me do the talking, I’ll make sure you miss the pennycock with the pizzle-itch and get the best wine in the merchant’s barrel. You’ll never again meet a door you can’t get through, nor a wall you can’t get eyes over. I need your arms, yes, but you need my nose. If you do the worst of the fighting, I’ll make sure you know where your foes are coming from and cull the weak ones. I won’t be your dog but, if you’re half the wolf I think you are, you’ve found a fox to run with.” The Blacktongue Thief by Christopher Buehlman is a book I’ve had my eye on since early l…
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We’re very excited today to bring you a guest post from authors Suzannah Rowntree, Angela Boord, Virginia McClain, ML Wang, Rachel Emma Shaw and Krystle Matar. A big thank you to Rachel Emma Shaw for arranging this guest post! Being a female indie-fantasy author is both the most exhilarating and demoralising part of my life. We experience all the usual highs and lows of writing – like stressing over plot holes and creating fantastical new worlds – but we also face many challenges exclusive to female fantasy authors, on top of the extra difficulties of being independently published. To spotlight these challenges, I spoke to some of the biggest names in indie-fanta…
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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. I have been reading a fair few examples of contemporary climate fiction and …
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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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Women in SFF is just under two weeks away! As you may know, we’re super excited to be bringing back our Women in SFF feature this July. Here at the Hive, we love a photo challenge – as expressed by our annual contributions to the Wyrd and Wonder one! So, we thought it would be fun to come up with one of our own… We do have some rules. Well guidelines. Well, suggestions. Please have fun! And if this means interpreting the prompt differently to our suggestion, that’s fine! You don’t have to respond with a photo. If you want to take part, but you’re not on Instragram, or you can’t be bothered to faff about taking photo of books, blog posts are welcome! Or Twitter threads!…
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“She shook her head. She knew now how the slaves had felt as they lay chained on the bench, the slaver’s hot iron burning into their flesh. In her pride, she had denied that she was a slave. She could no longer deny it. Doro’s mark had been on her from the day they met. She could break free of him only by dying and sacrificing her children and leaving him loose upon the world to become even more of an animal.” Wild Seed (1980) is the first book in Octavia E. Butler’s Patternist series, according to internal chronology. She wrote the book second to last, after already having written Patternmaster (1976), Mind Of My Mind (1977) and Survivor (1978). In a rare case of the pr…
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Paul Di Filippo is an exciting and unique voice in modern speculative fiction. His short story ‘Stone Lives’ was included in the Mirrorshades anthology, making him one of the original cyberpunks. But Di Filippo has refused to stay still, moving onto steampunk with The Steampunk Trilogy (1995), pioneering biopunk with the linked short story collection Ribofunk (1996), and moving to the forefront of the New Weird with his classic A Year In The Linear City (2002). His other titles include Lost Pages (1998), which imagines Di Filippo’s favourite authors in a variety of alternate history contexts, and Fuzzy Dice (2003) which plays Rudy Rucker-esque games with mathematics and h…
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The seventh Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off (SPFBO) is underway! Check out our introduction here | meet this year’s judges here | read all about the contest’s origins here | and keep track of phase one here We have divided the 30 books into 6 batches of five books each, with each batch loosely grouped around a common theme or motif. For the next six weeks our SPFBO posting pattern will be: Monday introduce a new batch of five Wednesday eliminate three of them and identify two quarter finalists Friday post the decision as to which quarter finalists which is our pick for semi-finalist and why The chosen semi-finalists will then each get a full read from all ou…
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(Spoilers present for Tales of Xillia) Tales of Xillia is a sci-fi fantasy Japanese role-playing game. It was released in Japan in 2011 and brought to the west in 2013. The Playstation 3 game follows two lead protagonists, Jude Mathis and Milla Maxwell as they discover a hidden weapon central in a plot to overthrow a nation. The uncovered weapon threatens to disrupt the balance between humans and spirits, and jeopardize peace within the entire world of Rieza Maxia. Jude and Milla’s quest take them all over Rieza Maxia, uncovering secrets and plots posing a danger to the very fabric of the world, all while encountering colorful individuals who join their efforts, a…
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The Lord of Stariel opens with our main character, Hetta Valstar, returning home to her family’s estate after a long absence, so that she can attend her father’s funeral. As he was the Lord, there’s also another reason to come home; for the Choosing ceremony, where the land itself will pick the new Lord. Hetta doesn’t fit in with the traditional society at Stariel any more – she’s a modern woman who’s been working with a theatrical company in the capital city. Oh, and she’s an illusionist, which her family disapproves of. The world of Stariel is on the brink of technological advances – there are electric lights and cars, but they are not commonplace yet. The capital, whe…
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Hey, everyone! One of the upcoming games I’m most excited about in 2021 is Baldur’s Gate 3 by Larian Studios, the long-awaited entry in one of the most influential fantasy RPG series out there. Baldur’s Gate might also be a familiar name to those of you who have spent time in the Forgotten Realms, either through the books of R. A. Salvatore or through countless hours spent playing Dungeons and Dragons with friends and enemies. BG3 is currently in Early Access, meaning that the game’s first act is playable but actively being worked on. As a result, it’s got bugs, lots and lots of bugs – funny ones and weird ones, even downright bizarre ones – and I’m going to highlight se…
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Lee Matthew Goldberg is the author of the novels THE ANCESTOR, THE MENTOR, THE DESIRE CARD and SLOW DOWN. He has been published in multiple languages and nominated for the Prix du Polar. His first YA series RUNAWAY TRAIN is forthcoming in 2021 along with a sci-fi novel ORANGE CITY. After graduating with an MFA from the New School, his writing has also appeared in The Millions, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, LitReactor, Monkeybicycle, Fiction Writers Review, Cagibi, Necessary Fiction, the anthology Dirty Boulevard, The Montreal Review, The Adirondack Review, The New Plains Review, Underwood Press and others. He is the editor-in-chief and co-founder of Fringe, dedicated to publishing fic…
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“I think of you in the cafeteria, holding my gaze. We’ve spent every lunchtime together for over a year. I feel the places where our languages don’t quite meet, but I believe there’s a deeper state than surface understanding, and I feel it with you most when you make the effort to pretend for my sake. Our lunches have become the thing I look forward to. You make me feel seen.” “That’s all it takes to turn someone against you – one instance of not being the thing they want you to be.” Readers familiar with Aliya Whiteley’s previous work will know when opening a new one of her books to expect something completely wonderful and utterly different from her previous stories. …
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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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Welcome to our Third Eliminations post for SPFBO 7. This week, we have grouped our five brave entrants together into a “Leaving Home” batch. You can find out more about this week’s posts in our Meet the Batch post. Read on to find out which three of them fell in our third batch of eliminations, listed in alphabetical order. The Burial by Drew Montgomery Theo: The fantasy is rather light in this one (so far). We do have a secondary world with a kind of early medieval setting, and a protagonist Eira haunted by dreams even before her husband Gwil is summoned away on a crusade to the holy land. The story is very focussed on Eira’s experience as the wife and mother…
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The seventh Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off (SPFBO) is underway! Check out our introduction here | meet this year’s judges here | read all about the contest’s origins here | and keep track of phase one here We have divided the 30 books into 6 batches of five books each, with each batch loosely grouped around a common theme or motif. For the next six weeks our SPFBO posting pattern will be: Monday introduce a new batch of five Wednesday eliminate three of them and identify two quarter finalists Friday post the decision as to which quarter finalists which is our pick for semi-finalist and why The chosen semi-finalists will then each get a full read from all ou…
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“But human society wasn’t built on rock and roll. No, it was cobbled from the commodified poor. When in doubt, the species creates itself something to beat up, beat down, bludgeon into grease for the gears of society. All the Minds did was ensure that people like Maya were made. And people like Maya, well, they were born without fucks to give out.” Cassandra Khaw has made their name as one of the most exciting voices out there writing short fiction, from their darkly lyrical short stories to the brilliant and disturbing Lovecraftian Persons Non Grata series of novellas. The All-Consuming World (2021) is Khaw’s debut novel, and shows that they are just as powerful and ad…
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The eponymous protagonist of Stark Holborn’s far future set sci-fi novel is an ex-convict with a past she is trying to make amends for, but chance has dealt her a harsh hand and continues to torment her with half glimpsed possibilities along a path to redemption. The world, or rather universe, of Holborn’s imagination sprawls across several systems, planets and moons, with a civilisation recovering from a civil war with the rebel “Free Limits” brutally supressed by the governing “Accord.” However, the novel’s action focuses on the desolate moon Factus. For all the emphatic nature of their victory, the Accord’s grip on its outer possessions is tenuous. Government is in nam…
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As you may remember our fifth quarter-final – the one from the “starting anew” batch – could not be settled in “normal time.” Having read both books to the 20% mark or so, our judges couldn’t decide which of The Spear of Akvaloon and Windward deserved the accolade of Fantasy Hive SPFBO7 semi-finalist, so the contest went to “extra time.” Each judge has read on in both books far enough to clarify their judgement. We’ll go through each judge in turn and out of the five of us the decision will be on a simple majority vote to decide the sixth and final Fantasy Hive SBFO 7 Semi-finalist. So without further ado! Theo In The Spear of Akvaloon the first 20% introduced us …
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“Fog shrouded the great city of brass, obscuring its towering minarets of sandblasted glass and hammered metal and veiling its golden domes. Rain seeped off the jade roofs of marble palaces and flooded its stone streets, condensing on the placid faces of its ancient Nahid founders memorialised on the murals covering its mighty walls” The Daevabad trilogy by Shannon Chakraborty starts with The City of Brass, then continues in The Kingdom of Copper and ends with The Empire of Gold. Although I‘ve already shared my in-depth thoughts on The City of Brass back in July when Beth and I hosted a Women in SFF readalong, which you can read here, now that I’ve completed two of th…
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