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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Today, we welcome back Timandra Whitecastle to the Hive to discuss story structures. Before we launch into Tim’s post about the Heroine’s Journey, check out Tim’s latest novel, our SPFBO 6 Semi-Finalist Queens of the Wyrd: Raise your shield. Defend your sisters. Prepare for battle Half-giant Lovis and her Shieldmaiden warband were once among the fiercest warriors in Midgard. But those days are long past and now Lovis just wants to provide a safe home for herself and her daughter – that is, until her former shield-sister Solveig shows up on her doorstep with shattering news. Solveig’s warrior daughter is trapped on the Plains of Vigrid in a siege gone ugly. Desperate to…
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Lord of Secrets manages to pull off a great adventure, some awesome worldbuilding, and some brilliant character work, all in a lighthearted romp that is exciting and joyous to read. It’s The Mummy of fantasy – and that’s high praise coming from me. This kind of fantasy is so rare: it’s not ‘funny’, per se (not in a Terry Pratchett/Piers Anthony/Terry Brooks sort of way, anyway), but it’s unapologetically fun. It feels like playing Dragon Age or even a D&D game where you’re all a bit drunk and someone fails a roll and accidentally kisses an orc… The core of the story is a fairly simple series of quests: Gray wants to rescue his grandfather, so he needs a magical gizzi…
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Grady Hendrix is the author of the novels Horrorstör, about a haunted IKEA, and My Best Friend’s Exorcism, which is like Beaches meets The Exorcist, only it’s set in the Eighties. He’s also the author of We Sold Our Souls, The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires, and the upcoming (July 13!) Final Girl Support Group! He’s also the jerk behind the Stoker award-winning Paperbacks from Hell, a history of the 70’s and 80’s horror paperback boom, which contains more information about Nazi leprechauns, killer babies, and evil cats than you probably need. And he’s the screenwriter behind Mohawk, which is probably the only horror movie about the War of 1812 and Satani…
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Rachel has a PhD in neuroscience and delights in using the limitless realms of fantasy to explore the nature of life. Her first published novels were Last Memoria, a finalist in SPFBO 6 (2020-21), and Scars of Cereba. The two books together form the Memoria duology, which uses memory to explore what makes us who we are. Alongside her writing and publishing, Rachel also works as a science communicator for a UK charity, runs a London-based writing group and has more plants than can be considered normal. Welcome to the Hive, Rachel! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? Because how else will you k…
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“I wasn’t surprised this time. My body wanted him. My body sought to please him. What would happen to me when I had two or more mates? Would I be like the sky, constantly changing, clouded, clear, clouded, clear? Would I have to be hateful to one partner in order to please the other? Nikanj looked the same all the time and yet all four of my other parents treasured it. How well would my looks please anyone when I had four arms instead of two?” Imago (1989) is the final book in Octavia E. Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy. If Adulthood Rites (1988) recontextualises our understanding of the Oankali and Human relationship introduced in Dawn (1987), then Imago goes even further. …
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This is an (increasingly) occasional series of posts drawing on my excursion into the academic side of creative writing doing a PhD project at Queen’s University Belfast 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. R.W.W.Greene’s Twenty-Five to Life follows Julie, a young woman in America around the end of this century. (Date clues sprinkled through the narrative such as the 100th anniversary of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, or a near-recent outbreak of Covid-90, …
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Today we’re thrilled to share with you a guest post from self-published author M. L. Wang. Wang is perhaps best known for her Theonite series of novels, with Sword of Kaigen winning SPFBO 5. Currently, Wang is serialising Sazuma on her Patreon (free sample chapter here). There’s also another serial available free through her newsletter, and there will be more Altima books coming out in 2022. To keep up to date on all Wang’s news, please check out her website: mlwangbooks.com Magic is so ubiquitous in fantasy that it’s easy for an author to throw it into a story without thinking hard about what she wants to do with it—or perhaps not thinking past “this would be co…
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Stark Holborn is the author of Nunslinger – the first ever digital serial published by Hodder & Stoughton – as well as the novella series Triggernometry and the SF-western, Ten Low. As well as writing about westerns for Pornokitsch and Screen Queens, Stark works as a games writer for clients like the BBC, Cartoon Network and Adult Swim. Stark is currently a lead writer on the SF-noir detective game Shadows of Doubt. Welcome back to the Hive, Stark. Thanks for having me back! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? Do you like Mad Max? Dune? Firefly? Halo Jones? Cowboy Bebop? Philip K. D…
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Aparna Verma was born in India and immigrated to the United States when she was two-years-old. She graduated from Stanford University with Honors in the Arts and a B.A. in English. The Boy with Fire is her first novel. When she is not writing, Aparna likes to ride horses, dance to Bollywood music, and find old cafes to read myths about forgotten worlds. You can connect with Aparna on Twitter and Instagram at @spirited_gal. Welcome to the Hive, Aparna. Let’s start with the basics: tell us about The Boy With Fire! Why should readers check out your work? The Boy with Fire is about a world teetering on the edge of war, and the people who push it over. It has …
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Heather Child has returned to the Hive for Women in SFF with a guest post on the concept of time and how, as a theme, it crops up in fantasy literature – well, time and time again. Heather herself played with the notion of time in her novel The Undoing of Arlo Knott: What if your life had an ‘undo’ button? Arlo Knott develops the mysterious ability to reverse his last action. It makes him able to experience anything, to charm any woman and impress any friend. His is a life free of mistakes, a life without regret. But second chances aren’t all they’re cracked up to be. As wonderful as his new life is, a mistake in Arlo’s traumatic childhood still haunts him and the tem…
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Today, we welcome sci-fi author Ginger Smith back to the Hive. Before we get into her guest post about her Women in SFF influences, check out the blurb for novel The Rush’s Edge, available now from Angry Robot Books: With the help of his commanding officer, a genetically engineered ex-soldier fights back against the government that created him and others like him to be expendable slaves. Halvor Cullen, a genetically-engineered and technology implanted ex-solider, doesn’t see himself as a hero. After getting out of the service, all he’s interested in is chasing the adrenaline rush that his body was designed to crave. Hal knows he won’t live long anyway; vat soldiers like …
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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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We’ve reached the end of our first full-week for this year’s Women In SFF, and what an incredible start to the feature it’s been! We’ve been completely floored by the incredible response from the community; we can’t tell you how much we love seeing all your responses to our photo challenge prompts, or how properly excited we get to see blog posts inspired by them! Each week, we’ll try and round up all this wonderful content into one summary-wrap-up post – if we’ve missed you, please comment and link below! We’d love to see the ways you’re taking part. So, what have you all been up to…? Reviews We’re going to kick the wrap-up off with reviews, as that’s what we’re all…
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When I first heard that there was going to be a magical Robin Hood story that picked up years after the heyday of the Merry Men, and focused on Maid Marian as a hedgewitch, I was pretty much in shock, because you could not find a more perfect concept for me. I’m pleased to say that Brightfall was actually even better than I imagined, and has become a firm favourite I think I’ll return to many times over the years. Brightfall is written in a lyrical, but never overblown, style that perfectly evokes the landscape and world of medieval England, and layers magic in so seamlessly that you feel like anything could happen. It reads like a fairy tale, which I think is helped …
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Here at the Hive we absolutely love seeing a wide range of cover art and designs! We wanted to highlight all the wonderful female artists and designers who work relentlessly to make so many fantasy covers look gorgeous and entice us readers into wanting to buy them immediately! A little thank you to Petrik Leo and Eon from Novel Notions who gave us many artists to add to our list. Thank you also to everyone on Twitter who responded and also gave us many more artists to highlight. This is by far not a complete list, and please let us know if we have left anyone out and we’ll happily add them. Magali Villeneuve is a French cover artist who has worked on the covers …
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We have a treat for you today from the lovely androids at Angry Robot – an excerpt of Ada Hoffmann’s The Fallen, the much anticipated sequel to The Outside. The laws of physics acting on the planet of Jai have been forever upended; its surface completely altered, and its inhabitants permanently changed, causing chaos. Fearing heresy, the artificially intelligent Gods that once ruled the galaxy became the planet’s jailers. Tiv Hunt, who once trusted these Gods completely, spends her days helping the last remaining survivors of Jai. Everyone is fighting for their freedom and they call out for drastic action from their saviour, Tiv’s girlfriend Yasira. But Yasira has becom…
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“Human beings fear difference,” Lilith had told him once. “Oankali crave difference. Humans persecute their different ones, yet they need them to give themselves definition and status. Oankali seek difference and collect it. They need it to keep themselves from stagnation and overspecialization. If you don’t understand this, you will. You’ll probably find both tendencies surfacing in your own behavior.” And she had put her hand on his hair. “When you feel a conflict, try to go the Oankali way. Embrace difference.” Adulthood Rites (1988) is the second book in Octavia E. Butler’s Xenogenesis trilogy. Set some years after the end of Dawn (1987) when Lilith and the other Hum…
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“I hate useless, creepy old shit.” So says a friend of mine on the subject of ancient relics in fantasy novels. Coming in for particular censure are mysterious old buildings, old roads, old statues, and “that stupid Logoth place where everything is a scary little alleyway.” For my part, I found the stupid Logoth place (Shadar Logoth of Robert Jordan’s first book) both interesting and terrifying, so this remark set me pondering about the creation of fantasy cities. Partway through The Empire’s Ruin, for instance, a group of sailors and soldiers discovers an abandoned city on the far side of the globe, a totally vacant metropolis with a huge ziggurat at the center. Yes,…
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When S. M. Boyce graduated with a degree in creative writing, she realized that made her well-qualified for serving French fries. It would take years of writing hundreds of thousands of words of all kinds before she became the fantasy and horror novelist she is today. Boyce is known for action-packed epic fantasy, powerful heroes, and riveting magical stories filled with twists and intrigue. And, of course, a bit of humor sprinkled through it all. Prepare to get lost in the journey. Welcome to the Hive, S. M. Boyce. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? I’m known for writing action-packed epic…
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Today on the Hive, Leo Valiquette is here to share with us the cover for his debut novel THE BANE OF ALL THINGS “Dragon’s Claw Abbey … A fortress on the edge of nowhere that might have been older than the Kingdoms themselves. A massive grave marker for all consigned to it—the living, the dead, and those whom despair had trapped in between. Weather had blunted the profile of the merlons that cut the top of the wall and ringed the roof of the keep. The moss-eaten teeth of some decrepit grin that mocked any thought of hope or reprieve.” So begins Chapter 3 of Bane of All Things (Book 1 of A Silence of Worlds). But let me take a step back and give some context. Here is th…
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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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Today, we’re delighted to host the cover reveal for Rachel Emma Shaw’s upcoming novel, Sacaran Nights. Set in a different world from her SPFBO 6 finalist Last Memoria, Sacaran Nights promises to be a ‘new take’ on dark fantasy and built from the legacies of the dead! Intrigued yet? Let’s check out the official blurb: “Sacara is decaying. The dead walk the streets, fungi light the night, and Dagner must fight to keep the rot at bay.” Legacy is everything in Sacara. Those few who inherit live only to keep theirs alive, protecting the ghosts of their ancestors from the corruption seeping into every corner of the city. Dagner longs to leave – to create a legacy for himsel…
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“This is how humans function. This is precisely how humans function. You know what lies behind the horizon, but you have to carry on in the same direction because that’s what you’ve been doing, that’s what you’ve decided, and changing direction or turning back would be a sign of giving in, of letting go of everything you’ve achieved so far. You keep going, fast, although you know only too well what lies ahead.” Birdbrain (2010) is the second of Johanna Sinisalo’s books to be translated into English, following her remarkable debut novel Not Before Sundown (2003), although Sinisalo had published two novels and a short story collection in her native Finnish in between. Bir…
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Today, we welcome authors Gabriela Houston and Caroline Hardaker to the Hive to discuss Women in speculative fiction. Before we launch into their discussion, check out the synopses of their latest novels, both available from Angry Robot Books: In a world which believes her to be a monster, a young striga fights to harness the power of her second heart, while her mother sacrifices everything to stop her… In an isolated mountain community, sometimes a child is born with two hearts. This child is called a striga and is considered a demon who must be abandoned on the edge of the forest. The child’s mother must then decide to leave with her infant, or stay and try to forget.…
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This was my holiday book and boy did it not disappoint. Everything I loved about the first book plus more, in some cases way more. We pick up straight where we left off but this time we get a range of POV’s to experience the story from. Annev is desperate to get rid of the Hand of Keos. His ex-girlfriend Myjun wants to kill him for lying to her and causing the death of her father. Kenton wants to kill him for stealing Myjun and leaving him to die buried in the Vault of Artifacts. Fyn is keen to start living his life and using his skills but more so to improve his station than to halt or hurry any grand prophecy, plus we have a few random moments shown from one character …
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