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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As we reach the end of another year, it’s time to look back at the books we’ve read in 2021. Here at the Hive, we just love celebrating awesome fantasy fiction, so please sit back and enjoy the following awards – and be sure to check out each of the awesome winners! We know that this time of year there are loads of these kinds of posts: “My Top 20” and “Our Favourite Books”, and it can be disheartening for authors to miss out on these lists. This year, we invited all our contributors to nominate books for each category, and then we voted on our favourites. We’ll be including all the nominations in a small attempt to highlight more book from this fantastic year of fantasy …
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Welcome to our annual Most Anticipated post! That’s right, if our 2021 Awards didn’t destroy your TBR, this list will be sure to finish it… (Note: The list was curated by our contributors, and is ordered by expected publication date. All blurbs and publication information have been gathered from Goodreads, Amazon, and publishers’ websites. Titles are links to Goodreads, or Fantastic Fiction when Goodreads unavailable – adding not-yet released books to your “want to read” list massively helps authors, especially debuts, so please go make someone’s new year extra happy!) DAUGHTER OF THE MOON GODDESS Sue Lynn Tan A captivating debut fantasy inspired by the legend of…
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Goodness, it’s that time of the year again! As we batten down the hatches and distract ourselves from the outside world by getting excited about the wonderful new books coming out in 2022, we can also distract ourselves with the wondrous older books being reissued, brought back into print, and translated into English for the first time. Here’s my list of the stuff I’m currently most excited about. After a busy year for the Gollancz SF Masterworks series last year, production seems to be slowing down this year. However we can still look forward to Gwyneth Jones’ Life, which is being inducted into the series in February. Long-time readers will know that Jones is one of my …
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As some of you may know I am currently undertaking a creative writing PhD with the catchy title Navigating the mystery of future geographies in climate change fiction. This involves reading and watching a lot of climate change fiction (cli-fi) and the Fantasy-Hive have kindly given me space for a (very) occasional series of articles where I can share my thoughts and observations. This time, I’ve turned my attention to the excellent recent Netflix release, Adam McKay’s Don’t Look Up. Nearly two decades ago the iconic The Day After Tomorrow (TDAT) first brought a cinematic lens to bear on the developing field of climate change fiction (cli-fi). In Don’t Look Up (DLU), H…
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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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Time changes all things. This is a fact irrefutable. It is not the browning of the leaves or the hatching of the salamanders that marks the season’s turn, it is that old bastard time, dragging us ever on. It crumbles your towers and mildews your books and makes once virile adventurers fit for little more than circular conversations regarding the weather. All changes. All fades. All but me. Ulesorin is here. Ulesorin shall be here evermore, when the stars blink shut and the cosmos herself falls asleep Ulesorin shall be there to blow out the candles and wish her a sweet repose. Yet even for I, all things do not continue unchanged. To whit, I must make a confession to you,…
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Today, we welcome Ron Walters to the Hive, who has a guest post for us on writing and parenting! Ron’s debut novel Deep Dive is out this week from Angry Robot – you can order your copy HERE Still reeling from the failure of his last project, videogame developer Peter Banuk is working hard to ensure his next game doesn’t meet the same fate. He desperately needs a win, not only to save his struggling company, but to justify the time he’s spent away from his wife and daughters. So when Peter’s tech-genius partner offers him the chance to beta-test a new state-of-the-art virtual reality headset, he jumps at it. But something goes wrong during the trial, and Peter wakes to f…
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Sue Lynn Tan writes fantasy inspired by the myths and legends she fell in love with as a child. Born in Malaysia, she studied in London and France, before settling in Hong Kong with her family. Her love for stories began with a gift from her father, a compilation of fairytales from around the world, and she spent much of her childhood lost in magical worlds. When not writing or reading, she can be found exploring the hills, lakes and temples around her home. Welcome to the Hive, Sue Lynn. Let’s start with the basics: tell us a little bit about Daughter of the Moon Goddess – why should readers check it out? Thank you so much for having me! Daughter of the Moon…
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“Ours was a peaceful life, a pleasant one, and the years passed by as though they were weeks. Who knows how many decades would have swept by in this manner if my life had not been tossed into turmoil, as a leaf torn from its branch by the wind?” Daughter of the Moon Goddess is the debut novel by Sue Lynn Tan. Described as a mythological reimagining of the legendary figure, Chang’e, the moon goddess who stole her husband’s elixir of immortality after he was awarded it by the gods, and then sought refuge on the moon. Tan delves deeper into this tale and gives Chang’e another motive for betraying her husband, to save her daughter’s life. After all, what wouldn’t we do …
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Ana Stanojevic, author of Fire Wave Trilogy, lives in Calgary, AB with her family. Her dream was always to become an author. She got the idea of her Fire Wave Trilogy when she was on a vacation with her family in Greece and from there, she started to map out the trilogy, jotting down the ideas on paper. She also owns a blog where she fangirls about books as well as sharing updates about her life. After Fire Wave Trilogy, she hopes to write many more fantasy fictions that are on her list including a reimagined Aladdin novel. Website | Instagram | Twitter Welcome to the Hive, Ana. Let’s start with the basics: tell us about your debut Fire Wave – why should readers …
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“What is interesting here, from a disinterested/objective perspective, is how the unimaginable improbable will become, within a surprisingly short period of time, the imagined probable. How the lurid-freakish becomes, within that period of time, particularly if experienced on a daily, hourly basis, in a familiar and delimited space like a family household, normal. What was accepted as the old normal is soon overcome by the new normal. Eventually then, simply the normal. For all things shift, as if tugged by gravity, to the normal.” Those who are familiar with the work of Joyce Carol Oates will know that she is as much a master of the Weird fiction short story as she…
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“Animals are straight up like that. It’s people you have to watch out for.” “Birds are making nonsensical sounds above, but all around me, trails of glowing messages have been laid out overnight. In stench, in calls, in piss, in tracks, in blood, in shit, in sex, in bodies. A big boy wallaroo has rubbed his scent, slick as oil, over the grass at the road edge. It’s like running alongside a urinal in a pub. Piss cakes wafting from the bottom of yellow streams. Shake my stupid head to clear it of the meanings, but they form out of hops, barks, and whiffs. I see these words as: King and ours. Bits and pieces, no damned order or sense. A drunk on the street. Kimberly talking…
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“What’s the good of appealing to senseless machinery? The cogs are moving, the engines are slowly gathering momentum, a low humming noise is perceptible even now. How well I recognise every sound, every tremor of the laborious start. The loathsome familiarity of the routine is almost the worst part of it, intolerable and inescapable at the same time, like a sickness inside the blood. This morning it drives me to rebellion, to madness; I want to batter my head on the walls, to shatter my head with bullets to beat the machines into pulp, into powder, along with my skull.” Writer Helen Ferguson had published six books before her marriage ended, she attempted suicide and was…
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“What a fiendishly efficient machine war is, she thought, remembering him as he was and the writing, a bit immature but sensitive and direct and with much integrity. Now he would never write the things he might have written when he had learned to write well enough. It destroyed very thoroughly this war machine, this incinerator of individuality and talent and life, forgint the sensitive and creative young into the steel fabric of death, turning them out by the million, the murder men, members of Murder Inc., the big firm, the global organisation. Suddenly, she felt acutely angry with him.” Anna Kavan worked through her incarceration at a Swedish clinic following her nerv…
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We’re thrilled to welcome guest contributor Lucy Nield to the Fantasy Hive. Lucy is a PhD student in the Department of English Literature at the University of Liverpool, where she is researching animals in speculative fiction. Today, she shares with us her interview with Adrian Tchaikovsky: Talking Dogs with Adrian Tchaikovsky Lucy Nield PhD Candidate, University of Liverpool. @lucy_nield1 ADRIAN TCHAIKOVSKY was born in Lincolnshire and studied zoology and psychology at Reading, before practising law in Leeds. He is a keen live role-player and occasional amateur actor and is trained in stage-fighting. His literary influences include Gene Wolfe, Mervyn Peake, China Miév…
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Our fifth instalment in the Walking Middle-Earth series takes us out of the Shire to visit the Lone-Lands beyond Bree. Kai Greenwood (@LostDunedan) Visit the Forsaken Inn, and climb up to the Arnorian watchtower of Amon Sûl. Distance: 3 miles Difficulty: Rough terrain, some steep ascents Dangers: Wolves, Crebain Several years ago I received a pipe holder from Seredoc Sackville-Baggins that was modelled on the watchtower at Weathertop. Seredoc claimed to have bought this at the Forsaken Inn in the Lone-Lands, many miles from the Shire. A Sackville-Baggins beyond Bree? A tall story! Mind you, Seredoc has a history of outlandish boasts. Amongst these are: 1. That…
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“We all live in the interstices of each other’s lives, and we would all get a surprise if we could see everything.” Under The Net (1954) is Iris Murdoch’s first novel, and it immediately established her as an important literary figure. It was published as literary fiction, and Murdoch is generally considered a literary writer, her work certainly cannot be contained by mere realism. Under The Net tells the picaresque misadventures of Jake Donaghue, a writer who ekes out a living on translations and sponging off his friends in London. So why am I writing about it for a genre fiction website? Under The Net is the story of how Jack falls under the influence of the mage-like …
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To celebrate the UK release of her debut novel OBSIDIAN, Sarah. J Daley is here to tell you how not to get published. First, we’d be remiss not tell you about her exciting debut: Shade Nox is a fiend, a rogue, and a wanted murderer, though her only true crime is that she chooses to dress like a man. Proud and defiant, she wears her tattoos openly as any bloodwizard would, and carries obsidian blades at her hips. Those who laughingly call her a witch to her face soon learn an unfortunate lesson: Shade Nox might be an abomination, but she wields her blades with devastating precision, gleefully shedding blood for elemental magic that matches any man’s. Shade scratches out …
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“An orc who has seen more than his fair amount of fighting, Arek wants nothing more than to spend the rest of his days cooking and away from the chaos of combat. However, when Ming and her group of adventurers hire him as their full-time chef, his plans of avoiding violence crumble. He longs to leave his blood-soaked mistakes in his past, but old friends and foes have different ideas.” I wasn’t quite sure what to expect from Cleaver’s Edge – subtitled “A LitRPG Fantasy Cooking Adventure” – but I was intrigued enough by that description to give it a shot, and I’m very glad I did so. While Actus, the author, has and continues to write serials on the popular website Royal …
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Dearest Readers, There comes a time in every wizard’s life when he feels the weight of the world upon him. When the vast empty tower looming over their domain feels empty no matter how many tomes of boundless lore are stuffed within its shelves. A time when they no longer have any court mandates dictating their movements and actions, and as such they are free to make decisions for themselves once more. In short, my stalwart companions, the time has come for me to select an apprentice from amidst the thronging mass of the unworthy. Someone to whom the full weight of my immense wisdom may be passed down. While I have an abundance of worthy candidates doing their best to …
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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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“One Kettu is worth a thousand armies, if she has courage deep and blade sharp.” The Shadow Glass is the remarkable upcoming novel by Josh Winning. To share his love for the golden age decade which brought us fantasy films featuring puppets on high-stake quests, Winning delivers an 80’s nostalgic revival tale which will have you longing to crack out those VHS tapes and become lost in an era of magic, adventure and escapism. Back in 1986 a film by Bob Cormac was created, The Shadow Glass was born and released into the world only to become a flop at the cinema. This film had been Bob’s lifelong dream, a passion, an obsession, and it’s failure had left him broken. Ye…
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“We all have the exact curses we deserve” The Atlas Six, Olivie Blake – Coming March 2022 from Tor Lucy Nield PhD Candidate, University of Liverpool. Twitter: @lucy_nield1 Instagram: @lucy_dogs_books Olivie Blake is a lover and writer of stories, and is the pen name of Alexene Farol Follmuth. Many of her stories involve the fantastic, the paranormal, or the supernatural, but not always. More often, her works revolve around what it means to be human (or not), and the endlessly interesting complexities of life and love. Olivie Blake’s The Atlas Six, is the first book in what Amazon calls an ‘explosive’ trilogy. Blake’s novel challenges the concepts of team work, s…
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Kay Dick – They (1977) “’One must never forget,’ Russel said. ‘I hold it in my mind all the time. That way I’m continually on the lookout. It helps me move more quickly, knowing danger is there. It’s when you try and forget that trouble begins. That’s the way they approach, through the unguarded moment.’” “’Love is unsocial, inadmissible, contagious.’ He grinned. ‘It admits communication. Grief for lost love is the worst offence, indictable. It suggests love has value, understanding, generosity, happiness.’” Kay Dick was a pioneering queer writer and journalist who published five novels, a literary biography and a study on the commedia dell’arte. Then in 1977 she publi…
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We’re here today to bring you an exciting cover reveal for Stephen Aryan’s much anticipated sequel to The Coward. The Warrior, continues the story of Kell Kressia in this gripping fantasy duology, Quest for Heroes. Kell, two time saviour of the Five Kingdoms, is now the King of Algany. He has fame, power, respect, and has never been more miserable… Before we reveal the cover, here’s a few words from Stephen: I had a lot of input into the cover on The Warrior, much like on The Coward. Originally, I put together a Pinterest board of themes, ideas and book covers that I liked, and based upon this the designer came up with several different themes and styles. We t…
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