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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Welcome intrepid adventurers to Tough Travelling with the Tough Guide to Fantasyland! That’s right, we’ve dusted it down and brought back this feature (created by Nathan of Fantasy Review Barn, revived by our friends over on Fantasy Faction, then dragged kicking and screaming to the Hive). It is a monthly feature in which we rack our brains for popular (and not so popular) examples of fantasy tropes. Tough Travelling is inspired by the informative and hilarious Tough Guide to Fantasyland by Diana Wynne Jones. Fellow bloggers are absolutely welcome to join in – just make your own list, publish it on your site, and then comment with the link on this article! This month…
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Brianna is a proud geek who loves real-life adventure just as much as the imaginary kind. She keeps a busy schedule as a novelist, indie filmmaker, and freelance graphic designer. When she’s not working, she spends her time devouring books, practicing Krav Maga, and hiking in the pine-covered mountains of Colorado. City of Reckoning is her first novel. Welcome to the Hive, Brianna. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? My first novel is City of Reckoning, an epic fantasy about a group of young people who get caught up in a war, only to wonder if they are fighting for the wrong side. Featuring…
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The Fall of Babel is the stunningly imaginative end to an amazing journey. Josiah Bancroft has crafted for himself and his readers the most exceptional and wondrous playground in which to work his magic, one that has few rules if any, one that seems to cross the boundaries of space and time and one I will be truly sorry to say farewell too. I was lucky enough to receive an arc from Orbit and it sat on my bedside table for a month before I picked it up. I felt like Charlie in the book about the chocolate factory looking at his Wonka’s Scrumdiddlyumptious bar and savouring every single moment before tearing off just the tiniest corner. I read the prologue three times and e…
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Aaron Hodges was born in 1989 in the small town of Whakatane, New Zealand. He studied for five years at the University of Auckland, completing a Bachelors of Science in Biology and Geography, and a Masters of Environmental Engineering. After working as an environmental consultant for two years, he grew tired of office work and decided to quit his job in 2014 and see the world. One year later, he published his first novel – Stormwielder – while in Guatemala. Since then, he has honed his skills while travelling through parts of SE Asia, India, North and South America, Turkey and Europe, and now has over a dozen works to his name. Today, his adventures continue… Website | F…
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The second instalment of our Walking Middle-Earth series brings Everard Took to Woody End in search of Elves… Kai Greenwood (@LostDunedan) Woodhall and the Elf Camp: A tranquil woodland walk with traces of Eldar magic. Distance: 5 miles Difficulty: Easy Dangers: A lingering sense of melancholy This sparsely populated corner of the Shire has its own quiet beauty, and has long been rumoured to be the haunt of wood-elves. It’s a land of old forests and rolling hills, perfect for walking, but you will not find this route in certain other guide books. To discover whether this is related to the elves’ famous intolerance of fools, you would need to ask Seredoc Sackville…
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Today we have a special guest post from Alex Thomson author of Spidertouch which is out 14th December from Angry Robot. We’re also bringing you a special discount on this title which can be used on Angry Robot’s brand new website, where you can now purchase physical copies as well as ebooks and audiobooks. Just use code ”fantasyhive” for 25% off until 4th Dec. Below is a glimpse into how Alex created his language within the book: Speaking with your fingers: How I constructed a fictional touch language There are three basic techniques for creating languages in fiction. The first is what you might call the kitchen-sink approach, favoured by Tolkien, which sees an …
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Welcome to the Fantasy-Hive’s SPFBO 7 SEMI-FINALIST WEEK. Just to remind you our team of five judges, me (Theo), Belle, Peter, Scarlett and Calvin have spent the last five months: Sampling our batch of thirty self-published fantasy books to (at least) the 20% mark Identifying twelve* worthy quarterfinalists Running six* quarter-finals, a couple of which went to extra-time, to choose our six semi-finalists All five of us reading all of the chosen-semi-finalists All five of us putting the six semi-finalists in our own personal rank order Adding up those rankings to decide which of semi-finalists we will put forward to the next stage of SPFBO competition, joining nine ot…
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Welcome to the Fantasy-Hive’s SPFBO 7 SEMI-FINALIST WEEK. Just to remind you our team of five judges, me (Theo), Belle, Peter, Scarlett and Calvin have spent the last five months: Sampling our batch of thirty self-published fantasy books to (at least) the 20% mark Identifying twelve worthy quarterfinalists Running six quarter-finals, a couple of which went to extra-time, to choose our six semi-finalists All five of us reading all of the chosen-semi-finalists All five of us putting the six semi-finalists in our own personal rank order Adding up those rankings to decide which of semi-finalists we will put forward to the next stage of SPFBO competition, joining nine othe…
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Bess Brenck Kalischer – The Mill: A Cosmos (1922, translated by W. C. Bamberger 2021) “The concave mirrors were so oddly dimmed. The big city pierced me. All the flesh had fallen from it. Travel posters were pasted about its skeleton. The dwarves’ dwelling, a goblin-contemplation. No sooner had I read this, which made my stomach turn, than I suddenly also had eyes on the inside, as rockets flew out of the posters and every shell that burst was a little story.” Bess Brenck Kalischer was a German expressionist poet. The Mill: A Cosmos is her only novel. It was published in German in 1922 but has remained unpublished in English until now, thanks to a translation by W. C. …
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The Decision Once they had read all six of the semi-finalists, all five judges ranked the books from 1st (most favourite) to 6th (least favourite) We added up the ranks to get a total rank, and divided by the number of judges to get an average rank. The six books were then placed in order ready for posting. When it came to the two books we have reviewed today this is how the numbers worked out. Illborn Shadows of Ivory Theo 2nd 1st Belle 2nd 1st Peter 2nd 4th Scarlett 1st 2nd Calvin 2nd 1st Total Ranking 9 9 Average ranking 1.8 1.8 It’s a tie! This serves to emphasise how close run the decision was and how, in quite different ways, these are t…
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I’m an author based in the rolling green hills of the Peak District with my two kids and fluffy sidekicks Indy and Maverick. Repped by Sara Megibow of KT Literary and Steve Fisher at APA Talent and Literary (film and TV). I’m also one of the co-founders of the OcTBR Challenge, and write books, screenplays and comics when I’m not at work or wasting time on Twitter. Today Dan is here to talk about the 80s influences behind his latest release Swashbucklers which is out from Angry Robot Books today! When Cisco Collins returns to his home town thirty years after saving it from being swallowed by a hell mouth opened by an ancient pirate ghost, he realises that bei…
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“There was no honest work for a small crew on such a lowly vessel. Every port they approached shooed them off like a fly from a table. They turned to piracy to keep from starving. Senlin sipped his rum and squinted at the memory. “We have gotten quite good at running away,” he said. “We’ve gotten very good at having to,” Edith corrected.” From the very first page of this sequel to Senlin Ascends, life once again takes some drastic turns for our main protagonist, Thomas Senlin. Once a man of letters, then progressing to a man of action, he must now live a life piracy. The hunt for Senlin’s wife, Marya, becomes more complex and as Senlin and his crew struggle to survive u…
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This month in Walking Middle-Earth, Everard Took takes us on a pub crawl across the Shire. Kai Greenwood (@LostDunedan) Three Farthings Pub Crawl: Experience the hospitality of the Shire, and drink it dry, in this long-distance ale extravaganza. Distance: 40 miles Difficulty: Begins easy, growing progressively more challenging Dangers: Drunkenness, debauchery and degradation Here is a walk you won’t find in other stuffy guide books: visiting the finest inns this side of the Brandywine! Calling the route a ‘walk’ is perhaps stretching credibility, unless forty miles a day is within your gift. Luckily, Nibb’s Traps run between all the villages, and Nibb does not ch…
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“The Elantrians represented the ultimate flaw of human arrogance. They had set themselves up as gods. Their hubris had earned them their fate.” Elantris by Brandon Sanderson is the author’s debut novel, one that I was slightly apprehensive to read considering how much I love the Stormlight Archives series and feared this would be a huge disappointment in comparison. Whilst Elantris is clearly not as epic, fast paced, nor as intricate as Stormlight Archives, I was nevertheless amazed by how wonderful and compelling this story was. This is a novel that intimately explores the relationships between piety and righteousness, humanity and savagery, pain and peace. Once …
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John Shirley is one of the original cyberpunk authors, and his Eclipse trilogy, comprised of Eclipse (1985), Eclipse Penumbra (1988) and Eclipse Corona (1990), is one of the genre’s foundational texts. His horror novels Dracula In Love (1979), Cellars (1982) and Wetbones (1991) were hugely influential on the splatterpunk genre. His short story collections Heatseaker (1989) and Really, Really, Really, Really Weird Stories (1999) have become cult classics, and the collection Black Butterflies: A Flock on the Dark Side (1998) won the Bram Stoker Award. A passionate musician, Shirley has fronted numerous punk bands, and has contributed lyrics to albums by Blue Oyster Cult. He…
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Content warnings (from author’s site): child abuse, heteronormativity, (attempted) forced marriage. Jane Paris is everything a young woman should be: polite, charming, and obedient, with a glowing reputation and a good man all but begging for her hand in marriage. If she has any doubts about her role in life, they’re easy to push down. But when she takes a fateful shortcut through the woods, her idyllic life is threatened by an attack from the fabled beasts who stalk the trees. Fortunately, she’s rescued by the equally fabled witch who lives there. Unfortunately, the attack has left injuries that only the witch can heal. Jane is forced to stay with her until she recovers…
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Scott Kimak is the bestselling author of the “I call him HIM trilogy. He is also a history teacher and Kung Fu master. He came up with the story “I call him – HIM” when he was a teenager but failed miserably to put pen to paper. It took nearly forty years for him to make a second attempt. This time the words flowed unrestrained. Mr. Kimak lives in Harlingen Texas with the love of his life Diana and their six annoying pets. Hi Scott, and welcome back to the Hive! Tell us about your new novel, The Angel of Death. Angelica and her companions rise from the ashes of the Battle of Houston, contemplating their next move. After their great victory, they should feel at …
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The Coward is the first instalment in The Quest for Heroes duology by Stephen Aryan. Although Aryan has published two previous series, this is actually my first taste of the authors’ work and it must be said, I was by no means disappointed. The Coward is a fantastic thought-provoking exploration of what it truly means to be a hero when legends and myths are stripped away and truths are revealed. The story follows Kell Kressier, once a legendary hero who at just seventeen years of age went on a quest with a band of infamous warriors to the frozen North to slay the Ice Lich, who was causing an unnaturally long and harsh winter throughout the Five Kingdoms. Unfortunately…
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When the very lovely Caroline from Angry Robot told us her daughter had written a book review, we welled up with pride. And when we read the review, we recognised a fellow reviewer in the making, albeit one with a bee in her bonnet… Therefore please welcome and enjoy our first book review for younger readers by a younger reader; or, a Busy Little Bee, if you will. Take it away, Ellie. To Puffin, I am very sad and I mean it. Because I read Charlie changes into a chicken and it never actually happens. I picked the book because it had chickens and you lied to me. Please don’t lie in your book names. But I did like the book. I really liked the poo and pee bits. An…
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“Grandma says all fairy mythology comes from the same root, like religion. That it’s one big idea that gets pulled in different directions depending on where it ends up and who’s telling the story. The central beliefs never change, though. She says there’s a pattern at the heart of things, a hidden logic we don’t understand yet and maybe never will.” “How could something that did not exist, still exist? Was the angle between reality and illusion really so small?” Over the course of her previous novels, novellas and short stories, Nina Allan has established herself as one of the UK’s most talented authors, operating with ease across genre boundaries and with an unmatched…
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They say that in the Realm, the sea is in the sky… That’s right! Nils and I have returned with another Buddy Read, seeing as how we enjoyed our buddy read of For The Wolf so much! This time, we’ve read (and nattered about) the brand new novel from Edward Cox – The Wood Bee Queen. The novel is out tomorrow from Gollancz, and to celebrate there’s a blog tour so be sure to check it out! Somewhere in England, in a small town called Strange Ground by the Skea, Ebbie Wren is the last librarian and he’s about to lose his job. Estranged from his parents, unable to make connections with anyone except the old homeless lady who lives near the library, Ebbie isn’t quite sure…
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“They clinked glasses. A sparkling sound, almost magical in its melody. A musical chime that, to Cisco, in that moment, spoke of finally coming home. Because, he suddenly understood, as he took in all their faces, sometimes it wasn’t just about the place you returned to. Sometimes home was the people who were there to greet you.” Swashbucklers is the upcoming novel by Dan Hanks, it’s a book I’ve known about for quite some time now, and it’s one I’ve been more than a little excited to read. This is Hanks’ second novel, with the first being Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire, which I read last year. Although both books are entirely unrelated, Hanks certainly ha…
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Phase 2 of the Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off is drawing to a close today! Keep track of the finalists’ scoreboard here. If you’re following SPFBO 6, let us know about any entries that have caught your fancy! Join the discussion on social media (there’s a Facebook group here) and weigh in on Twitter using the hashtag #SPFBO. Introduction to Round 1 | Meet the Judges In the 1970s and 80s TV of my youth, The Rockford Files starring James Garner was one of my favourite shows. I couldn’t tell you the plot of a single show, but there was an enduring appeal to the down at heel private detective living in a trailer and eking out an existence from one job to the next, alw…
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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 will be 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. Which makes our whatsapp chats quite difficult… We’ll be sticking to the following reaching schedule, and posting a weekly discussion of that week’s chapters every Sunday. Imyril will be doing the same on her blog, and everyone is welcome to join in! If you don’t have a blog, feel free to join in the conversation on Twitter, or you can check out the Goodreads …
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This is only my second time reading a story by Adrian Tchaikovsky but I’ve already begun to see how versatile, bizarre and wonderfully imaginative this author is. One Day All This Will Be Yours is a post-apocalyptic novella set in a time where a war, known as the Causality War has caused much devastation, to be more precise it has ended the world. No one can be sure who started the war but we do know that it began after the invention of time travel; Causality Bombs were unleashed, and time was broken into a million shards. Yet there is one man who did survive, a time warrior who now lives in his own self made Eden. A man who is now hell bent on making sure the war never h…
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