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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Images by Svetlana Alyuk, banner by Imyril Welcome to Fantasy Friday! If you’re following us on Twitter and Instagram, you’ll have had your feed completely spammed noticed that we’re taking part in the Wyrd & Wonder photo challenge. We decided that we’d take the challenge a step further on Fridays, and post about the prompts in a little more detail. This week, the prompt is Off the Beaten Track – we’re focusing on independent or small press fantasy reads! Check the links below for more Fantasy Fridays: Fantasy from Around the World Fantasy Voices from Around the World Fantasy In Translation This will be our last Fantasy Friday! A huge thank you to all involved…
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This book is what happens when a Grimdark duo gets ahold of whiskey and unlimited access to Zoom. For fans of the subgenre, Norylska Groans reframes classic motifs in an industrial-era world unlike any other I’ve read thus far. Worldbuilding-wise, the closest I can compare it to is Joe Abercrombie’s new trilogy, but that fails to include the Russian influences (something I haven’t seen since Bradley Beaulieu’s Winds of Khalakovo). I really enjoyed how each author brought their own skills to the table. Longtime readers of Fletcher and Snyder will get to see how each builds off the other’s strengths. Do you enjoy unique magic systems? Fans of Manifest Delusions can expect…
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Please note this review will contain spoilers for Priest of Bones and Priest of Lies. “We walked in like gangsters, like we own the fucking place, all swagger and weapons and attitude. In business as well as in battle, an approach always has to be tailored to the terrain, to the place and the time, the job or the mission at hand. This was the right approach for the right time.” Priest of Gallows by Peter McLean is the penultimate instalment in the War for the Rose Throne quartet. It is another enthralling tale where the seedy underworld of gangsters and deceptive politics go hand in hand, and our narrator, Tomas Piety, must learn to adapt to new roles or face fi…
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And in case you prefer written reviews, here it is: Series: Empires of Dust (#1) Published by: Harper Voyager Genre: Dark fantasy, literary fantasy Pages: 470 I have long meant to read through Anna Smith Spark’s Empires of Dust trilogy. The ways it’s spoken about make it out to seem custom-made for me: one of the darker series out there, it aims for a more literary tone, its language can be staggeringly beautiful, and its characters are finely crafted, clawing for even the smallest fragment of light in a world whose darkness overwhelms all. Reading it, I found all these purported qualities to be well in line with my own impressions, even as one sensation eclipsed all…
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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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My name is Lauren, and I’m a fantasy author of character-driven stories and epic adventure. My books usually contain dragons, rarely feature romance, and are typically fun and hopeful. I live in a tiny village in the UK, have a degree in Psychology, and was a professional copywriter before going full-time as an author—swapping corporate copy for magic and dragons! I’ve previously published under the name L.L. McNeil. Welcome to the Hive, Lauren! Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? DRAGONS! MAGIC! CURSES! VENGEFUL SPIRITS! Honestly no idea if shouting random things will help or not, but hopefu…
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After revealing the spectacular cover for Ashley Stokes’ upcoming Gigantic, we’re thrilled to be back at Fantasy Hive to reveal another 2021 release, this time with cover design by long-time Unsung collaborator Vince Haig: a new collection from Malcolm Devlin called Unexpected Places to Fall From, Unexpected Places to Land. Who better to introduce the cover and the book than author Malcolm Devlin? “Dodos have always struck me as rather jovial looking birds. Plump, wide-eyed, their long hooked beaks curved in a slightly bashful grin. The images you see of them are almost invariably based on Roelant Savery’s seventeenth century painting, donated to the Natural Histo…
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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! All this m…
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“Like time, hope is something that does not stay but comes and goes.” We’ve all reacted to the pandemic differently. Whilst some people have found watching Contagion to be a cathartic experience during lockdown, I have studiously been avoiding any kind of pandemic-based fiction since reading Mary Shelley’s The Last Man (1826) in early 2020 just before the UK went into lockdown. I have broken this streak with Choi Jin-young’s To The Warm Horizon (2021). Choi’s novel is a post-apocalyptic story in which the world is devastated by a global pandemic. These novels inevitably hit differently in a post-pandemic world, despite the fact that when Choi’s novel was published in th…
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The Seventh Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off (SPFBO/Spiffbo) is officially underway! We’re super excited here at the Hive; we’ve already lined up our judges and interviewed them, and now we can reveal to you our process for this year. It’s… it’s going to be a lot like our process for SPFBO 5 and SPFBO 6. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it – but we will probably tinker with it as we go along – must be the Gnomish nature that Laura M Hughes instilled in us all! You can learn about the origins of SPFBO HERE, and you can catch up with the SPFBO community on Facebook HERE. Our Process The 300 books have now been split between the ten blogs. And in round one – we have a bat…
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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 will be 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. Which makes our whatsapp chats quite difficult… We’ll be sticking to the following reaching schedule, and posting a weekly discussion of that week’s chapters every Sunday. Imyril will be doing the same on her blog, and everyone is welcome to join in! If you don’t have a blog, feel free to join in the conversation on Twitter, or you can check out the Goodreads …
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G. R. Matthews began reading in the cot. His mother, at her wits end with the constant noise and unceasing activity, would plop him down on the soft mattress with an encyclopaedia full of pictures then quietly slip from the room. Growing up, he spent Sunday afternoons on the sofa watching westerns and Bond movies after suffering the dual horror of the sounds of ABBA and the hoover (Vacuum cleaner) drifting up the stairs to wake him in the morning. When not watching the six-gun heroes or spies being out-acted by their own eyebrows he devoured books like a hungry wolf in the dead of winter. Beginning with Patrick Moore and Arthur C Clarke he soon moved on to Isaac Asimov. H…
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Images by Svetlana Alyuk, banner by Imyril Welcome to Fantasy Friday! If you’re following us on Twitter and Instagram, you’ll have had your feed completely spammed noticed that we’re taking part in the Wyrd & Wonder photo challenge. We decided that we’d take the challenge a step further on Fridays, and post about the prompts in a little more detail. This week, the prompt is fantasy in translation – we’re focusing on books that weren’t originally written in English! Check the links below for more Fantasy Fridays: Fantasy from Around the World Fantasy Voices from Around the World Underlined book titles in bold contain links to reviews on this site. — A HUGE th…
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Greetings to you, mistakes of the gods. I am here now to set your minds at ease. Do not fear, do not fret, Ulesorin has arrived and shall grant each and every one of you a steaming dollop of my indelible wisdom. You lucky, lucky creatures. It has been a long moon turn, and I can tell you that it has been difficult. I have had to mourn the loss of a great many serpentine children, and a substantial draconic lover. Though the latter was trying to murder me. Moreover, it has been absolute murder finding some minions to carry all the gold I’d pillaged from her corpse back to civilisation where I could spend it. Needless to say, I have a new tower under construction in a rat…
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SPFBO is back once again! Submissions have opened and have already been filled – and the Hive have been allocated their 30 books. That’s right, there’s no hanging about this year! I hear the faint grumbling from some of you – what’s a SPFBO? The Self-Published Fantasy Blog Off is a contest hosted by author Mark Lawrence, in which ten blogs whittle 300 self-published fantasy books down to one winner. Here are some important links for you: Rules and Submission Info SPFBO Facebook Group Now that we have our 30, we’ll be back soon with an introductory post and an insight into our process. For now though, as we wait for those entries to come in, let me introduce you…
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“Sometimes it seemed like there was a creature inside her, lurking, trying to bust through her bones, a demented birth. Mam would be a pile of skin and guts and skeleton, and the creature, clean and bright, would never know that she used to be a mam.” Rivers Solomon’s Sorrowland (2021) is a powerful and vital work of speculative fiction, one with its roots in the gothic past but with tendrils reaching out beyond the limits of the New Weird. Sorrowland explores the United States’ horrendous history of systematic racial oppression, using the modes of the gothic, the fairy tale and science fiction to show us the atrocities of history in a viscerally immediate light. Solomon…
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The first daughter is for the Throne. The second daughter is for the Wolf. For the Wolf is the debut novel of author Hannah Whitten, and it’s being released this June from Orbit Books. Nils and I (Beth) were both fortunate to receive advanced copies (thanks Orbit!), so we decided to buddy read it and review it together. After plenty of Whatsapps and an attempt at organising our thoughts via Google docs, we bring to you our review: For fans of Uprooted and The Bear and the Nightingale comes a dark fantasy novel about a young woman who must be sacrificed to the legendary Wolf of the Wood to save her kingdom. But not all legends are true, and the Wolf isn’t the only …
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This is an occasional series of posts drawing on my excursion into the academic side of creative writing. I’ve recently started a PhD project at Queen’s University Belfast with the catchy title “Navigating the Mystery of Future Geographies in Climate Change Fiction.” 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. My reading (and there is a lot of reading involved in a PhD – woo hoo!) has included a lot of climate fiction, literary criticism about climate fiction, mystery fiction and non-fiction accounts of anthropogenic climate change and humanity’s response to …
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“Silvina wrote that even through the poisoned landscape, we must love it. We must love what has been damaged, because everything has been damaged. And to love the damage is to know you care about that world. That you’re still alive. That the world is alive. How did I not see the damage for so long?” “When you find the world you live in unfamiliar, alien, it’s nothing to slip into another.” Hummingbird Salamander (2021) is Jeff VanderMeer’s latest work, a continuation of his project to use the Weird to interrogate the Anthropocene and explore the nonhuman perspectives under threat from humanity’s destruction of the environment. In contrast to the radical formal experime…
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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 will be 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. Which makes our whatsapp chats quite difficult… We’ll be sticking to the following reaching schedule, and posting a weekly discussion of that week’s chapters every Sunday. Imyril will be doing the same on her blog, and everyone is welcome to join in! If you don’t have a blog, feel free to join in the conversation on Twitter, or you can check out the Goodreads …
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Images by Svetlana Alyuk, banner by Imyril Welcome to Fantasy Friday! If you’re following us on Twitter and Instagram, you’ll have had your feed completely spammed noticed that we’re taking part in the Wyrd & Wonder photo challenge. We decided that we’d take the challenge a step further on Fridays, and post about the prompts in a little more detail. This week, the prompt is fantasy voices from around the world – we’re focusing on authors rather than setting (see last week’s post) Underlined book titles in bold contain links to reviews on this site. Nils I’m going to pick two titles from my to-be-read because I’m thoroughly looking forward to both. My first choi…
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‘I know who they’ve accused of White’s murder,’ she whispered. Her voice sounded unfamiliar, even to herself. Thin and worn, like her nerves. Marion Lane and the Midnight Murder is the debut novel of T. A. Willberg; it’s a wonderfully imaginative mystery set in a subterranean world beneath the streets of London. Marion has been recruited as an apprentice into a detective agency which operates in utmost secrecy; beneath their book-store front, Nancy Brickett has converted a former World War II series of shelters designed for the wealthy into a sprawling organisation. Using gadgets designed and created on site, they work alongside and outside the law to assist the people …
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“I’ll watch you while you sleep. Sleep while you watch. I’ll lie to you, but I’ll also lie for you. If you let me do the talking, I’ll make sure you miss the pennycock with the pizzle-itch and get the best wine in the merchant’s barrel. You’ll never again meet a door you can’t get through, nor a wall you can’t get eyes over. I need your arms, yes, but you need my nose. If you do the worst of the fighting, I’ll make sure you know where your foes are coming from and cull the weak ones. I won’t be your dog but, if you’re half the wolf I think you are, you’ve found a fox to run with.” The Blacktongue Thief by Christopher Buehlman is a book I’ve had my eye on since early l…
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“And it’s not just Murdoch and immigrants and implied promises about what might be done to save the NHS by the very people dismantling it. It’s not just memories of busy shipyards and Grandad’s self-respect. No, it’s an almost mythical yearning, as though, if only we can create the right conditions, a stranger might come out of the mist, thrust a sword into a stone and say, “Whosoever draws forth this blade…” And now here he was, having returned from another world, with a much better understanding of the depth of his ignorance concerning what might be yearned for, and not be mythical.” Elizabeth Knox’s The Absolute Book came out in New Zealand last year, and I have been…
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The eponymous protagonist of Stark Holborn’s far future set sci-fi novel is an ex-convict with a past she is trying to make amends for, but chance has dealt her a harsh hand and continues to torment her with half glimpsed possibilities along a path to redemption. The world, or rather universe, of Holborn’s imagination sprawls across several systems, planets and moons, with a civilisation recovering from a civil war with the rebel “Free Limits” brutally supressed by the governing “Accord.” However, the novel’s action focuses on the desolate moon Factus. For all the emphatic nature of their victory, the Accord’s grip on its outer possessions is tenuous. Government is in nam…
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