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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“Ideas changed the world. Thoughts changed the world – and thoughts could be written down. I had forgotten that writing could have such urgency, that writing could matter to history, that literature might have consequence. Strangely, tragically, I’d forgotten that such things were even possible.” “Turin, the Esoteric City, was saturated with magic both black and white. Every brick and baroque cornice in the city was shot through with the supernatural.” Bruce Sterling’s new short story collection Robot Artists & Black Swans (2021), collects stories written as by Bruno Argento, Bruce Sterling’s alter ego who is an Italian writer of fantascienza stories living in Turin…
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Photo: Matt Gush Tim Powers is a unique voice in Fantasy. He specialises in rigorously researched secret histories, in which gaps in the historical record are explained by the fantastical or the supernatural. But this description hardly does justice to his incredible novels, which are among the most inventive and joyous I have ever read. His Philip K. Dick Award winning novel The Anubis Gates (1983) is a delirious time travel tale involving body-hopping werewolves and Egyptian mythology. The Drawing Of The Dark (1979) imagines the Siege of Vienna as a magical battleground involving the reincarnated King Arthur, and The Stress Of Her Regard (1989) imagines Keats, Byron an…
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Fallible Justice is, at its core, a detective novel. Yannia Wilde is a PI who must prove a man’s innocence before he is sentenced to death for a high-profile murder. But Yannia’s London is one where magical beings co-exist with humans, and justice is meted out by the all-knowing, infallible beings called Heralds. They’re never wrong. So how can they be wrong in this case? I loved Yannia. She’s a smart woman who is struggling to come to terms with her past, and she seems utterly realistic in her thoughts and feelings. She was raised in a commune of Wild Folk, which was idyllic in some ways but barbaric in others, and she’s learning to cope with having left them for city l…
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Phase 2 of the Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off is drawing to a close at the end of this month! Keep track of the finalists’ scoreboard here. If you’re following SPFBO 6, let us know about any entries that have caught your fancy! Join the discussion on social media (there’s a Facebook group here) and weigh in on Twitter using the hashtag #SPFBO. Introduction to Round 1 | Meet the Judges As you will see from the discussions within our Hive reads reviews, and indeed by comparing what the different blogs have said, reviewing books can generate a vibrant diversity of opinion. But SPFBO is, I think, a particularly gruelling process for authors – the more so as you reach t…
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We’re delighted to be back at Fantasy Hive to reveal the fantastic cover for our upcoming novel Gigantic, by Ashley Stokes. “I wasn’t sure you would get this far, so thanks a million already. You opened the mystery bag… Inside the bag, along with this letter, is a dossier that describes the whole story.” Kevin Stubbs is a Knower. He knows life hasn’t always treated him fairly. He knows he wants to be allowed access to his son again. But most of all, he knows that the London Borough of Sutton is being stalked by a nine-foot-tall, red-eyed, hairy relict hominid – the North Surrey Gigantopithecus. Armed with a thermal imaging camera (aka the Heat Ray), a Trifeld 100XE …
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Today, we’re bringing you something a little different. We’re thrilled to host the cover reveal for SPFBO 6 author Stas Borodin’s graphic novel NUMA THE HUNTER. Here’s the blurb: Under the shuttered moon, on an alien world populated by giant insects and bizarre beasts, a young hunter embarks on a perilous journey to find his lost kin and save his race from extinction. In vein of Edgar Rice Burroughs and Robert Howard, inspired by Frank Frazetta and Moebius we present you a vast new world to explore and a set of unique characters to love and hate. Sound intriguing? Check out the cover! That’s quite the giant bug, right? Here’s what Stas had to say about the pr…
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“You haven’t been here that long. Just wait. I don’t go for it either, but who’s in charge of Stormland, really? The perpetual storm system is! We crawl around under it hoping it doesn’t stomp us. These people feel like they’ve got to appease it. Easy to get superstitious in all that. Desperate people can go for magical thinking pretty easily, Webb… A lot of folks around here believe that one day the storms will pass. From what I’ve heard, it might take a century for the cycle to finally stop. The storm system is – it’s like the red spot on Jupiter, with what we’ve done to the planet. The big storm has to settle somewhere.” John Shirley’s new novel Stormland (2021) is an…
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Phase 2 of the Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off is drawing to a close at the end of this month! Keep track of the finalists’ scoreboard here. If you’re following SPFBO 6, let us know about any entries that have caught your fancy! Join the discussion on social media (there’s a Facebook group here) and weigh in on Twitter using the hashtag #SPFBO. Introduction to Round 1 | Meet the Judges Before we plunge into the review proper, a quick thank you to SPFBO contestants and and spectators for your forbearance as the Fantasy Hive has gone through its finalist process. Part of our approach for each stage has always been to get all the team to form an opinion on all the books…
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Oliver K. Langmead is an author and poet based in Glasgow. His long-form poem, Dark Star, featured in the Guardian’s Best Books of 2015. Oliver is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Glasgow, where he is researching terraforming and ecological philosophy, and in late 2018 he undertook a writing residency at the European Space Agency’s Astronaut Centre in Cologne, writing about astronauts and people who work with astronauts. He tweets @oliverklangmead. Welcome to the Hive, Oliver. Let’s start with the basics: dazzle us with an elevator pitch! Why should readers check out your work? What if the first man was still alive today? What if, after he was e…
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This review contains spoilers. Cara is based on Earth Zero but travels to other worlds in the multiverse to gather information about planetary resources that might be exploitable by the company she works for. Her boss is Adam Bosch – think Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos mixed into one – director of the Eldridge Institute and the developer of the technology for travel across the multiverse. As the method only works with worlds similar to Earth Zero, most people there have living doppelgängers (dops) on other worlds and this poses a problem –if a pair encounter one another it is usually fatal. The neoliberal solution is to only use people of colour who are po…
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Hey, everyone! One of the upcoming games I’m most excited about in 2021 is Baldur’s Gate 3 by Larian Studios, the long-awaited entry in one of the most influential fantasy RPG series out there. Baldur’s Gate might also be a familiar name to those of you who have spent time in the Forgotten Realms, either through the books of R. A. Salvatore or through countless hours spent playing Dungeons and Dragons with friends and enemies. BG3 is currently in Early Access, meaning that the game’s first act is playable but actively being worked on. As a result, it’s got bugs, lots and lots of bugs – funny ones and weird ones, even downright bizarre ones – and I’m going to highlight se…
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One goal of Worldbuilding for Fantasy Fans and Authors was compiling and synthesizing all the varying worldbuilding theories and best practices gleaned from fantasy authors and the worldbuilding communities. And along the way, I realized that, outside of the gaming and RPG community, very few worldbuilders take the audience’s experience into account, which was why I included several surveys in my book. Unlike authors, who have to sometimes wait years for feedback of their worlds in the form of reviews, gamers get instant feedback from the players, which helps shape the world in turn. So with that audience-focused approach in mind, welcome to Worldbuilding by the Numbers: …
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Content warnings: Gore/blood/eating of human body parts (not overly graphic); some violence; coming to terms with new disability; recovery from trauma. When I first took a look at this book, I was prepared for a swashbuckling tale full of adventure on the high seas, and while there is plenty of piratical action and bloodthirsty merpeople, I was happily surprised to find that at its heart, this book is super soft and sweet. We follow Perle, a siren who has been captured by a pirate, Kian; when Kian’s ship is boarded by another pirate crew, Perle is rescued by the new captain, Dejean, who seems completely different from the cruel Kian. Though Perle tries to escape and retu…
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On the face of it, Andrea Stewart’s debut novel The Bone Shard Daughter is an escapist’s dream. We’re transported to an Earthsea-like archipelago of shifting islands, where an Empire demands a tithe of children’s bones for the Emperor’s magic which, supposedly, in turn protects the people. There are secrets and mysteries galore in this South-East Asian-inspired world. And quite possibly the cutest animal companion ever. I’m sure everyone’s heard of Mephi by now, right? But beneath all the epic-fantasy fun run themes of colonialism and control; “Who controls the past controls the future: who controls the present controls the past” echoed in my mind with this Orwellian E…
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“The books are a perfect example, Adam thinks, of reading to confirm one’s own beliefs: they are all theological in nature, and of a very particular slant. They speak to the superiority of man, and his God-given right to possess and exploit the world for his betterment. They give the reader permission to plunder all that is not man, interpreting ancient words for profit. Adam pulls books from shelves, spilling sheaves of notes, flicking through them and discarding them into the waters. Let the floods wash away those words, he thinks. Let those books become pulp. Let them remember that they were once trees, alive and thriving and heavy with leaves.” Oliver K. Langmead’s p…
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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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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 pursue 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 are those who would argue that climate fiction is a newly emerging genre or sub-genre. Howev…
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“The Elantrians represented the ultimate flaw of human arrogance. They had set themselves up as gods. Their hubris had earned them their fate.” Elantris by Brandon Sanderson is the author’s debut novel, one that I was slightly apprehensive to read considering how much I love the Stormlight Archives series and feared this would be a huge disappointment in comparison. Whilst Elantris is clearly not as epic, fast paced, nor as intricate as Stormlight Archives, I was nevertheless amazed by how wonderful and compelling this story was. This is a novel that intimately explores the relationships between piety and righteousness, humanity and savagery, pain and peace. Once …
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John Shirley is one of the original cyberpunk authors, and his Eclipse trilogy, comprised of Eclipse (1985), Eclipse Penumbra (1988) and Eclipse Corona (1990), is one of the genre’s foundational texts. His horror novels Dracula In Love (1979), Cellars (1982) and Wetbones (1991) were hugely influential on the splatterpunk genre. His short story collections Heatseaker (1989) and Really, Really, Really, Really Weird Stories (1999) have become cult classics, and the collection Black Butterflies: A Flock on the Dark Side (1998) won the Bram Stoker Award. A passionate musician, Shirley has fronted numerous punk bands, and has contributed lyrics to albums by Blue Oyster Cult. He…
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