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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The Fantasy Hive is saddened to report the passing of Storm Constantine after a long illness. Storm Constantine was a writer of rare skill and passion, well known for her support and encouragement of younger writers, and a familiar friendly face on the UK convention scene. She will be missed by all who were lucky enough to have known her. Constantine began writing from an early age, her interest in Roman and Greek mythology, the Tarot, and the punk and goth subculture feeding into her work. She remains most widely known for the Wraeththu books. Beginning with The Enchantments of Flesh and Spirit (1987), and continuing with the sequels The Bewitchments of Love and Hate (…
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“Intellectually he had always known it was possible. A robot, or a person, has two parts: hardware and software. The hardware is the actual physical material involved, and the software is the pattern in which the material is arranged. Your brain is hardware, but the information in the brain is software. The mind … memories, habits, opinions, skills … is all software.” Software is the first book in Rudy Rucker’s Ware tetralogy, a pioneering work of cyberpunk fiction, and the winner of the first ever Philip K. Dick award. Almost forty years later, it remains as deliriously inventive and delightfully bonkers as it was when it was released. The novel is an early exploration …
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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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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. There is a variety of approach and style to climate change fiction. Amitav …
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The Fantasy Hive is excited to announce the launch of a new Kickstarter by Unsung Stories, one of the leading independent publishers of SF and Fantasy in the UK. The Kickstarter for Out Of The Darkness, a new anthology of horror and dark fantasy stories exploring the theme of mental health, goes online today. Unsung have previously successfully funded two excellent anthologies on Kickstarter, 2084 edited by George Sandison (2017), in which speculative fiction writers imagine futures inspired by George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty Four, and This Dreaming Isle edited by Dan Coxon (2018), which collected horror stories inspired by British folklore and landscape. Both antholog…
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The Fantasy Hive are so excited to bring you all the cover reveal for Edward Cox’s upcoming novel The Wood Bee Queen, which will be released on 10th June by Gollancz. It’s currently available to pre-order from all the usual places! Without any further ado, here’s the cover: Cover artist is Sue Gent. https://www.suegent.com/ We absolutely love how striking the simplistic colour palette is, and how gorgeously intricate the bee is! Ed also stopped by to have a quick chat with us so to find out more about The Wood Bee Queen please check out our interview below: Welcome back to the Hive, Ed. It’s so good to have you here! Hello, you fabulous folk! It’s nice to be bac…
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Greetings feeble whatever-you-are, tis I, Ulesorin the Green returned to you once more with wisdom beyond your mortal ken. You shall all be happy to hear that remedial construction work upon my new tower is now underway, and I find myself unwelcome there for the time being. As such, I have elected to take some rest and relaxation at the local hot-springs. While the initial temperature on offer as a result of the volcanic activity beneath the surface of this blighted land was rather tame to the tastes of a dragon rider, a few well placed fireballs have resulted in a far more pleasant temperature, with the added bonus that I now have the whole resort to myself. Anyway, b…
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‘“What, you mean they aren’t human?” “No, I mean they aren’t people. Not like you and me. Well, not like me, anyway. They look like us, when they want to, but they don’t breed like us and they’re – it’s like their clothes. You see them in all this designer-type stuff, cloth of gold and velvet and that, but when you look out of the side of your eye they’re dressed in rags. They’re like that themselves. They’re all scraps and patches, bits of greed and lust and envy and spite. And some good things too, sometimes. But not often. They’re not supposed to have souls in the old folklore and I think that’s actually right. They’re hollow and they know it. They’re shells and they’…
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A.J. Rettger lives on a farm near the small town of Aberdeen Saskatchewan with his dog, Zeke. He has a bachelor’s of education degree, as well as a certificate from a private vocational college. His hobbies include playing Dungeons and Dragons, listening to heavy metal, and reading and writing fantasy books. Oathbreaker is his first book. Welcome to the Hive, A.J. Rettger. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? If you love dark and gritty fantasy with lots of gore, you’ll love Oathbreaker! It starts off as a classic fantasy tale where a young knight sets off to live up to his father’s legacy, but…
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Hi! My name is Mark Cushen, and I’m a 33-year-old soon-to-be self-published writer from Scotland. I’ve been writing in some capacity since I was I was ten-years-old, when I wrote my very own Goosebumps stories, which I was obsessed with as a child. Nowadays, though, I write my own original tales. I have loved the fantasy genre in particular since I accidentally stumbled onto Ray Harryhausen’s stop-motion masterpiece, “Jason and the Argonauts”, while channel-hopping one Christmas-time Saturday afternoon, somewhere between the ages of 5 and 8. Ever since then I’ve been obsessed with stories of sword-wielding heroes battling monsters in fantastical lands, and I’m now att…
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Please note this review may contain mild spoilers for Blood of an Exile and Sorcery of a Queen. The power has shifted and as Empress Kira lay comatosed, closely watched over by Osyrus Ward, and Queen Ashlyn is believed dead, Ward seizes the opportunity to place his soldiers throughout Almira and rule over all or annihilate those who oppose him. The lands of Terra are now inhabited with skyships, acolytes and other monstrosities cooked up by the madman himself. Yet Ashlyn is far from dead, and neither is our beloved Dragonslayer, Bershad. Deep in the Dainwood forest, Bershad, Simeon, Oromir and the remnants of the Jaguar Army lead the resistance against Ward’s soldiers …
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Context for the short story While the story is NOT necessary to THE GODLESS, it introduces the TOLFAH, a race of subhumans who become a major threat in a future volume, and shows the differences between the Sa’ba Taalor and the people of Fellein. It is a straightforward sword and sorcery tale, with a heavy twist of Grimdark! Though I have written about all of the Fellein Empire, the eastern coast has barely been touched in stories, until now. This is the story of one young woman caught in the wrong place and one young warrior trying to prove himself worthy of his gods. Revan of the Sa’ba Taalor finds himself facing an army of cannibalistic subhumans as they attack a ca…
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“’What I want to say is that I hope Siss is telling the truth. And even six or seven of you could be a problem, frankly. If you start changing things, it could ruin our ecology. Your technology might overwhelm our civilisation.’ ‘Indeed it will,’ said Peg. ‘But is your way of life so fine? Dare to dream of more than grubbing in the mud. Yoke, we bring you the power to alter matter with a touch of mind. This is a power our god Om bestows upon us – a power she now sees fit to grant to you. You’re lucky. Thanks to Shimmer’s having been decrypted here, Om has noticed you. Your race will live as sorcerers.’” Realware (2000) is the final volume in Rudy Rucker’s Ware tetralogy…
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Ava Reid was born in Manhattan and raised right across the Hudson River in Hoboken, New Jersey, but currently lives in Palo Alto. She has a degree in political science from Barnard College, focusing on religion and ethnonationalism. She has worked for a refugee resettlement organization, for a U.S. senator, and, most recently, for an AI robotics startup. The Wolf and the Woodsman is her first novel. Welcome to the Hive, Ava. Congratulations on your debut The Wolf and the Woodsman! Can you tell us a little bit about it? What can readers expect? The Wolf and the Woodsman is an epic but literary-leaning standalone fantasy primarily focusing on religious issues in medie…
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K.W. Jeter is one of genre fiction’s pioneers, whose work crosses the boundaries of SF, Fantasy and horror. He coined the term ‘steampunk’ in 1987 to describe the novel he, Tim Powers and James P. Blaylock were writing, and his novels Morlock Night (1979), a sequel to H. G. Wells’ classic The Time Machine (1895), and Infernal Devices (1987) are early classics of the genre. He also wrote Dr Adder, written in 1972 but unpublished until 1984, which with its fascination with body modification and body technology and its use of transgressive sex and violence can be read as a precursor to the cyberpunk genre. Among his other novels are Farewell Horizontal (1989), a deeply origi…
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J.D.L. Rosell is the bestselling author of the series Legend of Tal, Ranger of the Titan Wilds, The Runewar Saga, The Famine Cycle, and Godslayer Rising. He has earned an MA in creative writing and has previously written as a ghostwriter. Always drawn to the outdoors, he ventures out into nature whenever he can to indulge in his hobbies of hiking and photography. Most of the time, he can be found curled up with a delightful book at home with his wife and two cats, Zelda and Abenthy. To check out his writing for free, you can pick up a series starter story bundle at www.jdlrosell.com. Welcome to the Hive, J.D.L. Rosell. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with …
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Mothers get a pretty bad time of it in fantasy – we’re notorious for being missing, absent, dead, or dying. How else is our hero to get the emotional trauma needed to spur him on? That boy needs some backstory! Character depth! Fridge the mother et voilà! Tortured soul we can empathise with. Frankly, us mums are fed up of this. I live in constant fear that my son will stumble across a mysterious sword, or he’ll hatch a dragon egg, or he’ll catch the eye of some meddling old bastard wizard. It seems ironic, then, that we have a Mother’s Day (which, here in the UK, is today, because we like being different ok) to celebrate how much we love and appreciate our mothers (tho…
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A Gothic Walk on the Wild Side In the eighteenth century, Edinburgh was home to the Scottish Enlightenment – the rule of reason, humanism, progress – but two hundred years later matters have gone into serious reverse. By 1910, in Jenni Fagan’s Luckenbooth, it provides the nesting ground for a grievous aspect of civilization: the unenlightened male id, nurtured on capitalist avarice. This might be unfair to Edinburgh; it is not the city per se that is responsible but what happens inside the nine-storey house at 10 Luckenbooth. Jessie arrives at a first-floor flat there, having journeyed across the sea in a coffin that her devilish father had carpentered as her bed. He has…
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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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Hey, I’m Stark Holborn, author of Nunslinger and Ten Low and it’s great to be back at the Hive to reveal the cover for the second instalment of my Triggernometry series: Advanced Triggernometry. Triggernometry is an alt-history western, taking place in a world where mathematicians are dangerous outlaws. It mixes the grit of the west with a cast of mathematicians from across history to create a truly unique and unforgettable adventure. Thanks to readers, the first Triggernometry had a great outing last year despite the pandemic, and was featured in The Washington Post and on Tor.com as well as on some of my favourite blogs (including right here)… Check out the sy…
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“A little bit of civilization and barbarism go hand in hand in any society. When the power of the civilized world drives an individual to desperation, they resist by resorting to barbaric violence more often than you might expect.” Bae Myung-hoon is a South Korean science fiction writer, and Tower (written in 2009 but translated into English by Sung Ryu and published by Honford Star in 2021) is his first novel to be translated into English. Bae is hugely popular in South Korea, where he has won both literary and science fiction awards, and on the basis of Tower I very much hope we see more of his work published in English soon. Tower is a mosaic novel set in Beanstalk, a…
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While the SPFBO dust briefly settles let’s take a moment to look back (but not in anger of course) For those who say “What’s SPFBO?” (or even how do you pronounce it?) The TL:DR is it’s a competition featuring 300 self published fantasy books, 10 blogger judging teams and one winner. More info can be found here Rules and Submission Info SPFBO Facebook Group SPFBO 6 Introduction Like the apocryphal painting of the Forth Road Bridge – SPFBO is a near continuous process as the competition cycle settles into a 5 month first phase, a 6 month second phase and a one month turn around in the month of May. Which does not mean that May is in any way a quiet hiatus. We will …
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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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The novella/short novel format seems to have a natural affinity for tales of the wild west from my early school experience reading Shane (38,000 words) by Jack Shaefer to True Grit (55,000 words) by Charles Portis. In combination Stark Holborn’s two Triggernometry stories of mad Malago Browne the renegade frontier mathematician might still fall short of Shaefer’s word count, but that doesn’t in anyway stop them from packing a very satisfying double-barrelled narrative punch. The fact that each one could be consumed in just a couple of hours is a positive advantage in a world where time is in perennially short supply. The Wild West of late nineteenth century America has…
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Trigger Warnings: Abuse, rape, domestic abuse. I’m old enough to remember when the Jordaches arrived in Brookside Close, including Anna Friel in her first TV role as eldest daughter Beth. Brookside – the innovative pub-less soap opera that gave us the first gay kiss and the first lesbian kiss also gave us the first domestic violence story line in a UK Soap. The reality of coercive and controlling men has been replayed in other soaps since, most recently with the largely psychological abuse and gaslighting that Jeff levelled at Yasmeen in Coronation Street. However, the grim reality of men victimising women sadly pervades societies of the past, present – and in Sammy H…
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