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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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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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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Katherine Addison is the pen name of Sarah Monette. Katherine Addison’s short fiction has been selected by The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror and The Year’s Best Science Fiction. Her novel The Goblin Emperor won a Locus Award. As Sarah Monette, she is the author of the Doctrine of Labyrinths series and co-author, with Elizabeth Bear, of the Iskryne series. She lives near Madison, Wisconsin, with spouse, cats, and books. Welcome to the Hive, Katherine. Congratulations on your sequel to The Goblin Emperor, The Witness for the Dead. For those who may not know, could you briefly tell us a bit about both books please? The Goblin Emperor started because I wanted to w…
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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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“The dead call me Sycamore,” I told the storm above Old Castle. “I am their Shepherd” The Song of the Sycamore by Edward Cox is a beautifully complex and surreal novel, one which blends the fantasy and sci-fi genres to bring us a tale of vengeance, of grief, and of sacrifice. The world of Urdezha is broken, a war rages on two fronts; the first being between the barbaric Clansfolk, who dwell in the Wasteland, and the citizens of Old Castle. The second is a war between the Scientists and the Magicians. Meet Wendal Finn, a former soldier who gave his life to fighting against the Clansfolk. Presumed dead in the Wasteland, Wendal returns to Old Castle – but not alone. A spir…
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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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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 have been 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. You can find our previous discussions in the links below, featuring questions set by Beth, as well as Imyril and Lisa. You can follow the conversation on Twitter, or you can check out the Goodreads topic! Week 1: Beginning through Chapter Eleven Week 2: Chapter Twelve – Twenty-three Week 3: Chapter Twenty-four – Thirty-five Week 4: Chapter Thirty-six to t…
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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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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. Week 1: Beginning through Chapter 6 Week 2: C…
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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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“Indeed, the workings of animal biology seemed to mirror the workings of human society. Joseph’s ecology lecturer introduced the students to three terms for how organisms coexist: ‘Parasitism,’ he intoned, ‘is when one organism benefits, while the other one is harmed – this is what viruses do. Mutualism is mutually beneficial, like when the plover bird cleans the crocodile’s teeth or scraps. And commensalism,’ he concluded, ‘is when one organism benefits another without affective it, like the lice that eat human skin flakes or the vultures that trail lions for carcasses.’ Later that day, using the hotspot at the Mingling Bar campus café, Joseph googled the term commensal…
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“’We’re going to start making meat bodies for ourselves, Cobb,’ said Loki. ‘So we can all go down to Earth, and blend in. It’s fair. Humans built robots; now the robots are building people! Meatboppers!’ ‘You two are asking me to help you take Earth away from the human race?’ ‘Meatboppers will be of an equal humanity,’ said Berenice smoothly. ‘One could legitimately regard the sequence human-bopper-meatbop as a curious but invevitable zigzag in evolution’s mighty stream.’” In Software (1982), Rudy Rucker drew the connection between computer software and the human brain, suggesting that the human mind could be uploaded onto a digital medium. In the sequel Wetware (1988)…
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Content warnings: violence and death; mild body horror; blood magic; mention of abusive relationships. Amora is the princess of the island kingdom Visidia, and in order to take her throne, she must demonstrate full control of her family’s brutal magic in a huge performance of skill. When things don’t go quite as planned, it could mean death for Amora, unless she can escape – and willing to help her do just that is sarcastic pirate Bastian, who opens her eyes to just how rotten things are in Visidia. Amora finds herself learning more about her kingdom than she ever could as queen, and it might just come down to her to save it. This is great piratical fantasy, full of sark…
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“Kindred closed her eyes into the prairie wind, feeling it’s familiar whisper against her cheek, neck, eyelids. The low-slung slant of late-afternoon light might have grown too warm, but the wind tempered it until Kindred’s face felt perfectly warmed, perfectly cooled.” Joshua Johnson’s debut The Forever Sea immediately caught my eye after seeing the vibrant and quite magical cover art on both the US and UK editions. The multicoloured grass and the ship sailing upon it immediately caught my eye and lured me into finding out exactly what this tale was all about. The world of The Forever Sea has to be one of the most ingenious and completely mesmerising fantasy worlds …
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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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My name is Dorian Hart, and I am extremely grateful to The Fantasy Hive for allowing me to unveil the cover for my upcoming book, The Infinite Tower. The Infinite Tower is the fourth book in my Heroes of Spira series, a five-book classic fantasy saga about a hodgepodge team of would-be heroes constantly out of their depth. I can’t share the entire blurb without massive spoilers for the previous book(s), but I think it’s safe to share the last bit: “…But Het Branoi is a bizarre and deadly place, a baffling construction full of mystery and danger, of magic and chaos, with unexpected allies and terrifying monsters. Horn’s Company will need courage, perseverance, and mor…
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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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Composite Creatures by Caroline Hardaker is a thought-provoking dystopian debut which continuously questions what it truly means to be alive in a dying world. Over the years Earth has essentially become toxic, the soil and air has become contaminated, many species of wildlife and plants have become extinct, and sickness reigns through the human race cutting their lifespan far too short. Yet a beacon of hope emerges in the form of a medical institution called Eastern Grove, scientists cannot yet promise a cure, but they have found a way to prolong life. The only drawback is what will it cost? The novel begins with our main protagonist Norah meeting a writer called …
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The first sci-fi novel I ever read by Robert A. Heinlein got me from the very first: If a man walks in dressed like a hick and acting as if he owned the place, he’s a spaceman. It is a logical necessity. His profession makes him feel like boss of all creation; when he sets foot dirtside he is slumming among the peasants. Our protagonist is the actor Lorenzo, a man whose narrative voice is immediately appealing partially because of how strongly defined it is, and in part because you can’t help but suspect Heinlein is having a go at a certain class of refined folks who project erudition yet are facile beyond belief; take the following quote, upon our protagonist observing…
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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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Welcome to our Second Eliminations post for SPFBO 7. This week, we have grouped our five brave entrants together into an “Epic” 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 second batch of eliminations, listed in alphabetical order. The Klindrel Invasion by Jason A Holt Theo: This is a bit different, and I sort of like the narrative style. It almost feels like a second person narrative because the sense you get is of a historian/storyteller telling the tale of the eponymous invasion from the point of view of its victims, the small brown skinned people of the Redwood valle…
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Published by: 47North Genre: Science Fiction Pages: 201 Format: ebook Purchased Copy from Amazon Do you ever get exhausted by humongous fantasy sagas? I don’t blame you in the least–there’s something intimidating about series that are thousands upon thousands of pages long, their very presence on your shelves as daunting as the localized quakes made by an oncoming Tyrannosaurus Rex in a children’s amusement park. Good news: With Impossible Times, Mark Lawrence has you covered. All three books in the series are very short indeed, between 190 and 220 pages, the plot of each one tight enough One Word Kill introduces us to Nick Hayes, the protagonist and first-person n…
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A GREAT DIVE INTO FANTASY The Licanius Trilogy by James Islington is an adventure fantasy trilogy published by Orbit Books. Book One, The Shadow of What was Lost, introduces our lead protagonist, Davian who discovers he is an Auger in a prejudicial world, twenty years after the war that overthrew the Augurs and their followers. This simple premise sets into motion a series of events that feel wholly familiar to fantasy readers whilst delivering on twists and turns throughout the story. Islington’s story begins its pacing with the classic adventure archetype seen in many fantasy novels throughout the years. Whilst it would be easy to say this is another work inspired…
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We have a brand new cover to reveal to you all today! The World is at War, Again is a futuristic yet retro fantasy by Simon Lowe. Available in digital format from the 2nd of April, and in print from 7th of June, from Elsewhen Press. You can sign up for our InFlight Newsletter HERE. Blurring the boundaries between genres, check out the blurb: The World is at War, again. New technology has been abandoned, a period of Great Regression is under way. In suburbia, low level Agent Assassins Maria and Marco Fandanelli are given a surprise promotion as “Things Aren’t Going Too Well With The War”. Leaving their son Peter behind, they set sail on the luxury cruise-liner Water Li…
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Welcome to our Sixth Eliminations post for SPFBO 7. This week, we have grouped our five brave entrants together into a “Different” 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 sixth batch of eliminations, listed in alphabetical order. Faye in the City by K.E.Willis Theo: The fantasy element is quite light – in the first 20% we get to see that the main protagonist Faye has some kind of skill of precognition, influence and awareness of moods/emotions – which could be quite cool. The main thrust of the story though is young woman making friends in a very recognisable contempo…
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