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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Joe Abercrombie is the author of the FIRST LAW series and the SHATTERED SEA series. His novels have been shortlisted for the World Fantasy Awards, British Fantasy Awards, John W. Campbell Award and the David Gemmell Legend Awards. Joe formerly worked as a freelance film editor and is now a full-time writer who lives with his family in Bath. The world of the First Law collides with the industrial age in a new trilogy – The Age of Madness – which began in September 2019 with A Little Hatred, continued a year later with The Trouble With Peace and concludes in September 2021 with The Wisdom of Crowds. You can keep up with Joe by following him on twitter where he posts as …
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“You know it’s wonderful to see another world. It’s entirely unlike anything that has ever come to your thoughts. And everything in it fits. You couldn’t have dreamed it up yourself, but somehow it all seems to work, and each tiny part is related. Everything except me. If I had known I was only going to stay a short while, this would have been the most exciting thing I could imagine – a marvel in my life. But to know that it’s for ever, that I’ll always be here where I’m not able to belong, and that I’ll never be able to get back home, never…” Rachel Ingalls’ Mrs Caliban (1982) is a gloriously strange novella. A dark feminist fairy tale that marries the domestic with the…
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I’m back with my Cruising the Cosmere feature! Now that I’ve completed all the published Stormlight Archives novels until Brandon Sanderson releases book five, I’m moving on to The Mistborn saga. This is a series which is split into two different eras with the first era consisting of The Final Empire, The Well of Ascension, and The Hero of Ages, and the second era consisting of The Alloy of Law, Shadows of Self, The Bands of Mourning and an upcoming fourth novel, set to be released in 2022. My journey through the Mistborn novels therefore begins with The Final Empire which I’ll be reviewing here. I’ve decided to split this review into sections where I’ll discuss the plot…
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Piranesi, by award winning author Susanna Clarke, is a novel which left me awed by its charm and beauty. I had heard much praise for her previous novel Jonathan Strange and Mr Norell, but I hadn’t actually read it myself. However, with Piranesi being rather short, at around 245 pages, I thought this would be a perfect read to sample the author’s work, and I was not left disappointed. Clarke whisked me away on a surreal, magical and somewhat sinister journey, written with such grace. Piranesi begins with Clarke throwing us into the middle of the story. Our main protagonist, Piranesi, is a man who believes he is in his thirties, and we immediately see he’s confined insi…
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This is an occasional series of posts drawing on my excursion into the academic side of creative writing, as I pursue 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. Climate Change Fiction (or Cli-fi) is not a discrete genre so much as a broad spectrum of books in different styles and genres tackling a common theme. Arguably the theme of our age, Amitav Ghosh – in The Great Derangement – felt climate change had been negle…
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Alex Knight is filling good books with bad jokes one sentence at a time. As an author of LitRPG and Fantasy his work includes the Nova Online Trilogy, The Far Wild, and Rise to Glory. As an aspiring twin he’s not making much progress, but remains determined. In the past Alex has worked as everything from a dish washer at Busch Gardens to the Communications Coordinator at the Florida Attractions Association. After deciding he didn’t like stability or predictable paychecks he made the jump to being a freelance writer. Soon that turned into ghostwriting romance novellas, then ghostwriting full-blown science fiction novels, and finally, writing his own books. Alex grew up…
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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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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. Those of us writing and reading in the speculative fiction genre might be fo…
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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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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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Today, Matthew Ward returns to the Fantasy Hive for our stop on the Blog Tour for the spectacular conclusion to his Legacy trilogy, LEGACY OF LIGHT. Do be sure to check out the rest of the tour! Tragedy is the engine of a great story. It’s the promise that actions have consequences, and that triumph is fleeting. Inasmuch, tragedy is prevalent across storytelling, speculative or otherwise, and a cornerstone of Grimdark fiction, which proudly rejects happily ever afters. Tragedy’s also a big part of my Legacy Trilogy. So many of the characters are carting around the means of their own destruction … whether they realise it or not. Tragedy’s hardly a new weapon in the sto…
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On Wednesday, we announced our fourth trio of eliminations and revealed that this week’s two quarter-finalists from the “Kick Ass” batch are BLOOD BOUNTY by Liza Street and THE NAMELESS AND THE FALLEN by Scott Kaelen. Kicking ass is what many fantasy protagonists do best. Interestingly though, our two quarterfinalists both upped the ante a bit by giving their leading characters some pretty hard to kick antagonists. See the judges’ comments below, with the books – as before – listed in alphabetical order! Blood Bounty by Liza Street Theo: This is one of the first entries I sampled for this year’s competition. As in previous years I tend to get wordier in my …
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Wheenk! An Interview With Rudy Rucker 10 March 2021 Rudy Rucker is one of the key speculative fiction writers of the last forty years. He was one of the original cyberpunk writers, and his Ware Tetralogy – comprising Software (1982), Wetware (1988), Freeware (1997) and Realware (2000) – are essential texts of the genre. His post cyberpunk novels Postsingular (2007) and Hylozoic (2009) use nanotechnology and smart matter to imagine a future after the Singularity. He is also a pioneer of transreal fiction, in which elements of the author’s lived experience are combined with speculative fiction tropes, as demonstrated in his novels White Light (1980), Saucer Wisdom (19…
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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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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 Pantheon is a world-wide game, funded by the wealthy elite and talked about in hushed whispers by the general population, a source of unending speculation and entertainment. For the players, however, it is life and death. In the streets of Edinburgh, the Titans rule the roofs, while the Horde of Valhalla make the tunnels and underground spaces of the city their own. At appointed times of the year, the two forces meet, and blood is spilled as they each battle for dominance. Tyler Maitland and Lana Cameron do not seem obvious candidates to join the ranks of the horde. Tyler has not fully recovered from a brutal beating that almost cost him the use of one arm and leg, …
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On Wednesday, we announced our first three eliminations and revealed that our two quarter-finalists are DOWNCAST by Cait Reynolds and IN THE JADED GROVE by Anela Deen. Having eliminated three books on Wednesday, the auspicious date of Friday 13th brings us to the Hive’s first quarter-final. Read on to find out (in alphabetical order) what our judges thought of these two contenders and which one made it to the coveted semi-finalist stage. Downcast by Cait Reynolds Theo: The epub-file came with a rather revealing/spoilerish subtitle that I’m glad I didn’t read before charging into the first 20% or so. This presents as a YA paranormal romance where the geeky prota…
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Welcome to our First Eliminations post for SPFBO 7. This week, we are looking at the “Our World” batch. You can find out more about this week’s posts in our Meet the Batch post. In the best traditions of Highlander (and Grandslam Tennis Tournaments like Wimbledon) there can be only one ultimate winner/champion and the whole SPFBO process is one of whittling down 300 bravely submitted books to just one SPFBO champion. The path to that final announcement is littered with elimination posts like this – The Hive’s first of SPFBO7. However, we hope that the judges comments will shine a bit of light on the entrants and maybe give others some reasons to pick up these books…
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Ray Star’s debut Earthlings is the opening volume in a planned trilogy examining the realities of speciesism. The theme is not so much cli-fi as eco-criticism, specifically around human’s treatment of animals and the books title reflects the inspiration drawn from the harrowing 2005 documentary film, of the same title. While anthropogenic climate change doesn’t feature as a driver of the plot, the book does share with many examples of cli-fi the idea of an abrupt and catastrophic change in the world’s circumstances that has brought about a new apocalyptic reality for humanity. In its key theme, Earthlings shares an approach with Malorie Blackman’s Noughts and Crosses ser…
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M. B. Castle is a Brazilian fantasy and sci-fi writer. Born in Rio de Janeiro in 1998, he began writing screenplays at the age of sixteen. At seventeen, he began working on his first book, THE NEW CROWNED, an epic fantasy novel, volume one of THE ETERNAL SAGA, published on August 1st, 2021. Instagram: @therealmbcastle Twitter: @therealmbcastle Synopsis of THE NEW CROWNED: “Three kingdoms. Three royal heirs. Two wars. Following ancient tradition, the Three Kingdoms have been experiencing new transitions of power, with the old handing over their crowns to the young. But for this new generation of rulers, a grave danger is emerging. After centuries confined to…
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I’ve already got lists up for favourite Self Published books, and favourite Women in SFF. Another question I get frequently is about books by authors of colour. This list isn’t nearly as long as it should be, and I have plenty more already waiting on my shelf. So please understand that this is in no way meant to be a list of all, or even most POC SFF authors out there. Nor is it meant to be a list of the best that exist. It is simply a list of those I have read so far, and really loved! I’ll attach my reviews for book one in each series, so you get an idea if they might be for you as well. So here we go, a list full of highly recommended titles! At the end I put som…
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Published by: ACE Genre: fantasy / science-fantasy Pages: 368 Format: hardback The Girl and the Mountain’s release somehow slipped past me. I was aware of it in the back of my head, saw some lovely reviews singing its praises, but university demanded its pound of blood and I had to make Yaz wait a while. Then, first thing after I submitted my thesis, I went to my local bookstore and purchased the living hell out of the second Book of the Ice (bought along with a copy of Shadow of the Gods, yay). I read it in three sittings, this 370-page book, across six hours or so. Like its predecessor, The Girl and the Mountain flows like silk between your fingers, the flow of its …
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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 A bit like the proverbial swan (serene to the point of inactivity on the surface, but paddling like crazy out of sight) the Hive SPFBO team have been silently busy over the last couple of months. The team of five, me (Theo), Belle, Peter, Scarlett and Calvin have been working our way through our 30 SPFBO books, making sure we have each read up to about 20% or so and made a decision about how keen we are to read on. With some books, some of the team have been so enth…
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“The small secrets are easy to keep hidden—easier, say, than the big secrets, the whoppers, the infidelities, and closet addictions that, like some underwater beastie that must ultimately ascend to the surface for a gasp of air, don’t remain secrets forever.” Come With Me by Ronald Malfi is one of the most addictive psychological thrillers I’ve read in such a long while. Strictly speaking it isn’t just a psychological thriller, it’s also part paranormal, with the narrative meandering it’s way through the belief in ghosts and urban legends. This blend is exactly what made me fall in love with this book. Malfi continually kept my mind abuzz with theories, I was kept suspic…
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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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