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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What is a wizard without a tower? Like a hermit crab without a shell, I should say. Lost and devoid of his natural countenance. So how grand is it then to see Ulesorin the Green restored to a teetering construct of abnormal height? His unstocked libraries, laboratories and study swaying gently in the breeze, higher than the mountains, as he frantically reinforces everything with spells since the contractors did such a bloody awful job. Don’t hire goblins to build things. Just don’t. They think that spit and mortar are interchangeable. If you learn nothing else from this moon’s missive, then let it be that. Dwarves are the way to good. Those people have a head for right…
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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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Fantasy fans, John Gwynne is back and this time he’s brought all the monsters with him. The Shadow of the Gods is the first book in The Bloodsworn saga, a Norse inspired tale of blood and vengeance. In a world where gods have fought and died and in their wake opened a pit unleashing monsters of land, sea and sky, surviving is no easy task to say the least. The lands of Vigrið and the Battle-Plain are a perilous place to call a home, it is a place where Jarls plot to become the most powerful, where mercenaries battle for gold and fame, where war is an ever looming threat. It’s a grim, harsh, unforgiving world and it breeds the hardest of people – you either mercilessly …
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“In the forest, even familiar things were strange. The constant wet patter of the night became the chilly drip of a dungeon. The creak of tree branches was the shifting of giant, scaly limbs. The snagging pull of a twig was bony fingers grasping at my sleeve – the fingers, maybe, of something that had once been a child, who wandered into the green light and never returned. I began to be scared. I squeezed Mommy’s hand. She squeezed back.” The Last House on Needless Street by Catriona Ward is a dark, twisty psychological thriller with strong elements of horror, and even hints of fantasy. These are the genres I attributed to the book when I began reading, yet what set…
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John Buchan – The Gap In The Curtain (1932, reissued 2021 by Handheld Press) “‘But it was worth it,’ he added, getting up and reaching for his hat, ‘for I have learned one thing which I shall never gorget, and which I commend you to notice. Our ignorance of the future has been wisely ordained of Heaven. For unless man were to be like God and know everything, it is better that he should know nothing. If he knows one fact only, instead of profiting by it he will assuredly land in the soup.’” John Buchan was a Scottish author, politician and historian, who is best known these days for his spy thriller The Thirty-Nine Steps (1915). However, he was also an author of supernat…
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Today we’re delighted to bring you an exciting cover reveal for The Collarbound by Rebecca Zahabi, coming 12th May 2022 from Gollancz. Let us tell you right now, this book sounds incredible! As the world faces rebellion and chaos, two people – one an escaped slave, one an amnesiac mage – will discover that their pasts are entwined, and their futures destined to collide. On the other side of the Shadowpass, rebellion is brewing and refugees have begun to trickle into the city at the edge of the world. Looming high on the cliff is The Nest, a fortress full of mages who offer protection, but also embody everything the rebellion is fighting against: a strict hierarchy bas…
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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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S.K. Marlay is an Irish fantasy author. She’s been a fruit picker, a maths teacher, a factory worker, a touring singer and a boat hand, not to mention a bunch of other jobs not worth mentioning. Before writing her first novel she was a songwriter. She thinks the discipline of having to distil a song’s story down to sixty words or less really stands to you when writing a book, though she does miss being able to just repeat the chorus when stuck. She still doesn’t quite believe writers are real people; this is likely to trigger something of an existential crisis when her own first book is published. Welcome to the Hive, Stella. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us wit…
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Content warnings: Death of parents and children, and grief; spousal abuse in all forms; drug use; pregnancy complications and intense postpartum depression. Welcome to the Winter Garden. Open only at 13 o’clock. You are invited to enter an unusual competition. I am looking for the most magical, spectacular, remarkable pleasure garden this world has to offer. On the night her mother dies, 8-year-old Beatrice receives an invitation to the mysterious Winter Garden. A place of wonder and magic, filled with all manner of strange and spectacular flora and fauna, the garden is her solace every night for seven days. But when the garden disappears, and no one believes h…
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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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Hail to you peasants and pedants, tis I, Ulesorin, returned to you once more in all of my glory. Take a look at the verdant forest green of my accoutrements. Marvel at their richness. Neither the blandness of blue nor the putridity of yellow, but a far finer vestment than either, now that my rightful colours have been returned to me following the ultimate gruesome end of the dread dragon divorce dealings. They are the only thing that I still have from my old home in the free kingdoms. Them and the kobold lawyers on retainer, constantly chittering and whining at me that answering letters from pathetic reprobates on other planes of existence is a term of my public service f…
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The Tide Child series was a pretty damn emotional ride and this final book was definitely the hardest to get through. Rest easy the writing is as spectacular as always, cutting right to the bone when it needs to, but the content is a little harder to stomach. Meas has been captured and is being pointlessly tortured for information she has already given up. The Gullaime is still being hassled by the fanatical religious nut job who controls almost his every move. Joron has a death sentence on top of a death sentence as the rot slowly consumes him and is desperate to find his shipwife, so desperate that he will burn, pillage and plunder anyone who stands in his way without a…
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Please note this review may contain spoilers for the first two books and mild spoilers for The Hod King. “The Tower did not care if a man was righteous or vile. The Tower ruined the just and the unjust with equal appetite.” The Hod King by Josiah Bancroft is the third instalment in the Books of Babel quartet and once again I was transported to the surreal, bizarre, whimsical and cruel world within the Tower of Babel. With the looming threat of a Hod uprising Senlin and his friends are all sent on separate assignments at the bidding of the Sphinx, this time the crew find themselves travelling to the lavish ringdom of Pelphia. Under the disguise of Cyril Pinfield, Se…
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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! We’re star…
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“She felt along an edge of awareness in her too, the massive distinction between well and sick, the slender shade of difference between sick and dead. Whichever man or god created this demon, they’d raised the question in her: What makes life worth living? She had one answer: It’s more than breath.” “The hierarchy of grief is measured in words and silence. The closer the death, the less words it can hold.” adrienne maree brown’s Grievers (2021) is, along with Margaret Killjoy’s A Country Of Ghosts (2021), the lead title in AK Press’s Black Dawn series, which was set up to imagine anticapitalist, anticolonialist and antiracist futures in honour of Octavia E. Butler’s w…
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Content warnings: ableism (including internalised); human trafficking including of children; discussions of abusive family relationships. I did not choose this fate. But I will not walk away from it. Children have been disappearing from across Menaiya for longer than Amraeya ni Ansarim can remember. When her friend’s sister is snatched, Rae knows she can’t look away any longer—even if that means seeking answers from the royal court, where her country upbringing and clubfoot will only invite ridicule. Yet the court holds its share of surprises. There she discovers an ally in the foreign princess, who recruits her as an attendant. Armed with the princess’s support, R…
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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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Please note this review will contain spoilers for the first book The Final Empire. “I want to be more than my ideas, though. I want to—need to— be a man others can look up to.” The Lord Ruler is defeated, yet the lands within the Final Empire have far from prospered. King Elend desperately tries to fight for his rulership, to install a fairer government, to bring peace to the nation and maintain freedom for the skaa, but at every turn his father, Straff Venture, seeks to usurp him. As if that wasn’t bad enough, a second army led by Lord Cett also threatens to invade Luthadel. Meanwhile the people starve, fall prey to diseases and live in chaos and squalor. As Ele…
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Our fourth instalment in the Walking Middle Earth series takes us to Bywater for a spot of fishing. Be sure to check out the earlier posts using the series link above! Kai Greenwood (@LostDunedan) Catch your own lunch, and pay respect to the fallen of the Battle of Bywater, in this riverside walk that takes in a number of fine angling spots. Distance: 3 miles Difficulty: Easy Dangers: Fast flowing water, finger-biting pike This walk starts at Bywater, location of the terrible Battle of Bywater just a few years ago. Memories of that day are still raw, but life goes on, and the fish still bite. Bywater’s pools and waterways are renowned amongst Shire anglers, and t…
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Today we’re delighted to bring you an exciting cover reveal for Blood Legacy by Tej Turner, the second novel in his Avatars of Ruin series. It’s being released by Elsewhen Press digitally on 11th February 2022, and physical copies will be available from 14th March 2022. Let us tell you right now, this book sounds incredible! The ragtag group from Jalard have finally reached Shemet, Sharma’s capital city. Scarred and bereft, they bring with them the grim tale of what happened to their village, and a warning about the ancient powers that have been awakened and now threaten all humanity. Despite this, some of them still hope that reaching sanctuary within the Synod will me…
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The Justice of Kings is the fantastic debut novel by Richard Swan and marks the first book in the Empire of the Wolf trilogy. This is a book which surprised me in many ways, most predominantly we are led to believe the narrator of this tale would be Konrad Vonvalt, the Emperor’s Justice, yet it is not. Helena Sedanka is our narrator, and she gives us a first person account of all that happened during the periods she spent as a clerk accompanying Vonvalt on his duties throughout the Empire. By no means was I disappointed by this, in fact this novel truly shines because Swan creates such a compelling narrative voice through Helena. The Justice of Kings is an addictive fant…
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Un-su Kim – The Cabinet (2006, translated by Sean Lin Halbert 2021) “This is a story about a new species, one that has been hitherto considered an abomination, a disease, a form of madness. It is a story about people who have suffered from the side effects of that evolution. A story about people who have been ensnared in a powerful and nameless magic spell, unable to receive insurance benefits, proper treatment, or counselling. A story about people who have been physically and mentally devastated, and who have willingly or unwillingly lived a lonely and melancholic life away from the rest of the world. A story about people who – because they exist in an intolerant scient…
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It’s that time of year again where I look back at all my favourite reads of the year. It seems that 2021 has been the year of sequels and endings for me, which is rare because I’m usually one to procrastinate reading them because I rarely want to say goodbye to the characters. Yet I’ve thoroughly enjoyed and found comfort in being back in familiar worlds, with characters I know I love and I have to say they’ve all been cracking reads. There were many books I immensely enjoyed this year, so it was hard choosing my overall favourites, but to all the authors I read this year thank you for your stories and the hours of entertainment and escape you gave me. Thank you also …
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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! Merry Chri…
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Please note this review will contain spoilers for The Bone Shard Daughter. To the relief of many, Emperor Shiyen is no more, his legacy of tyranny and oppression has finally reached its end, and new horizons lay ahead for The Phoenix Empire. But can the people learn to trust their new Emperor? As Emperor Lin Sukai sits upon her newly won throne, she ponders the same question. You see she may now be their leader but the people have no love for the Sukai’s, her alliances from the other island leaders are weak as they are reluctant to lend their support, and amidst all this several new threats emerge, all determined to bring the Emperor’s rule to its knees. A growing arm…
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