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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Now, if you are like me, and have been reading the Green Rider series at least since the publication of First Rider’s Call, then you are going to be happy. Ms. Britain does take many years to write her novels, causing fans to cry in the interim and read fan-fiction, but boy howdy, this book was worth the wait. Mirror Sight (book 5) threw me for a loop, so I was happy to get back to “normal” in Firebrand (book 6). But my happiness about book 6 was far surpassed by Winterlight, the upcoming book 7. It was as if Ms. Britain heard all of our cries, and was just patiently waiting to release this book. We meet up with Karigan on the road, returning from meeting with the Ph’ed…
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“That’s what ghosts really are, Aint Melusine had said, the past refusing to be forgot. She’d been helping Aster scrub down X deck with ammonia and bleach, a failed attempt to rub out the stink of what had happened there. Ghosts is smells, stains, scars. Everything is ruins. Everything is a clue. It wants you to know its story. Ancestors are everywhere if you are looking.” Rivers Solomon’s An Unkindness Of Ghosts (2017) is an incredible, powerful and unforgettable debut novel, immediately establishing Solomon as a key new voice in the genre. The novel takes on the tried and tested science fiction trope of the generation ship, but Solomon’s approach encompasses a metaphor…
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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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What are you supposed to do when you have lost the war and every possibility of victory has been absolutely, thoroughly annihilated? Tasha Suri’s debut novel is a rich, heady dive into a Mughal-inspired world of magic, tradition, divinity, and power plays. Mehr is the cherished older daughter of a governor losing the games set by her step-mother, which see her beloved younger sister used as a harness with which to control Mehr’s impetuous ways. Her mother’s heritage, the magic which courses through her blood, is heretical; a link to the gods of the past who attempt to manifest through sand storms. She escapes this net to be ensnared in a much more dangerous one, when…
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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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“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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Welcome to our Women In SFF Read-along! For this year’s Women In SFF, the Hive have been 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’ve (somehow??) reached the final week of our read-along, and it has been epic! Thank you so much, all of you, who have joined in and made our first ever read along such a great success. Also, a huge thank you to my partner in crime Nils – this has been SO much fun <3 If you want to join in with the conversation, or if you’ve missed the read along so far, check the links below: You can…
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We’ve made it to the final week of Women in SFF 2021! It’s been an incredible month, packed full of content. 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! 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 here for really, right? Finding those books to add to our TBR! J L Brown @ the Hive: A Terrible Fall of Angels by…
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Note: This review includes mild spoilers for the prologue and first few chapters of The Maleficent Seven. A ruthless necromancer trapping souls to forge the ultimate weapon. A bloodthirsty shapeshifter who eats human hearts and tears people to shreds. A mass-murdering alchemist who has already poisoned and murdered hundreds of innocent men, women, and children. And finally, their demon-summoning leader, a woman who consigns hundreds of souls to endless demonic torment without any remorse. In any other story, any of these immoral horrors would be a sufficient threat for a brave party of heroes to face, but in this case of Cameron Johnston’s The Maleficent Seven, none of t…
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The plot to Naomi Novik’s debut is essentially that, following the capture of a French frigate Novik’s hero Captain Laurence finds himself in sudden possession of a dragon egg that is on the brink of hatching. This is a parallel world where dragons – while rare – are far from unknown and indeed form an important element of most nations’ armed forces. In order to be of use to its new British owners the dragon must be harnessed and partnered with a human immediately upon hatching and – by a slightly circuitous route – Laurence ends up harnessing and naming the newly hatched dragon. I have something of a love-hate relationship with the dragons of fantasy. I like powerful, i…
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The Fantasy Hive have collaborated with award winning publisher Angry Robot Books to bring you a Women In SFF: Behind the Scenes post. Today, for Women in SFF, we wanted to celebrate the women who work behind the scenes of our favourite SFF titles – the editors, publicists, and publishers who get these amazing stories on our shelves. Firstly, here’s a little bit about Angry Robot: They’re a global imprint dedicated to the best in modern adult science fiction, fantasy and everything in between. Our mission, quite simply, is to publish the best in brand new genre fiction – SF, F and WTF?! Traditional SF and fantasy has been ploughing an entertaining furrow for many dec…
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Hi, folks! Today’s splendiferous video review doesn’t have a script as such, but I’ll attempt to summarize the five point I bring up in the review above, in case you’d rather not watch through the video (but please do, it’s fun!): The Far Wild is a fantasy thriller, meaning that it borrows from the conventions of both genres. The worldbuilding, with its empires and kingdoms and airships, brings a number of delightfully fantastic elements to the table–a secondary world it was a joy to get lost in! The generic thriller elements, meanwhile, are evident in the struggle the novel’s characters face–first against the Far Wild itself, a world fill with dangers that make the ver…
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A new series by Laurell K Hamilton, featuring a male protagonist. Enter, Zaniel Havelock (Havoc), a police Detective, veteran, and former student at the cult – I mean College – of Angels. The College of Angels accepts students who have a gift of communicating with angels, but once accepted, it can be hard to leave. Havoc managed to leave the College only after some traumatic events that are hinted at, but not fully fleshed out in this first book (I’m looking forward to the full story later). In a world where most people are born with Guardian Angels they can’t see, and witches, familiars and spirit guides are common, the police are starting to actively recruit gifted co…
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Today, we’re thrilled to welcome back sci-fi author Amanda Bridgeman to the Hive. Amanda’s most recent novel, The Sensation, is the much-anticipated sequel to the sci-fi murder-mystery The Subjugate. Both are currently available from Angry Robot Books: A series of brutal murders has the homicide division of San Francisco’s Hub 9 working overtime. But as the bodies mount, they begin to question whether the attacks are random or somehow connected. When one of their own falls victim, Detective Salvi Brentt and the Hub 9 homicide team join forces with the narcotics and cyber divisions to track down those responsible. They soon discover a volatile new drug-tech experience, …
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Another week down, and we’re three weeks in to this year’s Women In SFF, so let’s see what’s been happening in the feature this week! Firstly, Robin Hobb (Megan Lindholm) received the Lifetime Achievement World Fantasy Award – and we’d like to offer her a HUGE congratulations from all of us here at the Hive. 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 an…
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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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We’re very excited today to bring you a guest post from authors Hadeer Elsbai, E. J. Beaton, Kritika H. Rao, Rowenna Miller, and Sam Hawke. A big thank you to E. J. for arranging this Q&A! Fantasy novels offer us opportunities to imagine the word differently, and not only in respect to magic and warfare. When it comes to the structure of society, authors can take a different approach to social norms and storytelling priorities. This includes fresh approaches to gender, whether that means focusing more on women’s struggles, valuing women’s work differently, or creating a world with gender equality. In this Q&A, five authors – Hadeer Elsbai, E. J. Beaton, Kritik…
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Today, we’re thrilled to bring an excerpt of Susie Williamson’s The Warder, her exciting sequel to Return of the Mantra. Blood Gift Chronicles is character-driven, epic fantasy encompassing themes of wildlife and the environment, social justice and exploitation, animism, magic, dragons and being true to one’s self. Return of the Mantra (Blood Gift Chronicles #1) What if everything you’re taught to hope for depends on you? In a land ravaged by drought and greed, where the gifts are forbidden and the old ways outlawed, Suni, a young woman, searches for justice and her own identity. The Warder (Blood Gift Chronicles #2) is the sequel and also works as a standalone. The s…
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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! It’s Women…
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On Wednesday, we announced our second three eliminations and revealed that our two quarter-finalists are ILLBORN by Daniel T. Jackson and LEGACY OF FLAME by Rebecca Bapaye. Of course epic encompasses a range of styles and contexts and our two quarter-finalists certainly made for a sharply contrasting pair, listed below in alphabetical order! Illborn by Daniel T Jackson Theo: I’ve read up to 20%, I like the diverse cast of characters, the engaging prologue with a twist, the sense of a theme drawing the characters together. The world religion has so much of a Christian feel to it, with their key prophet having been nailed to a tree, that I wonder if the parallels …
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“The lantern light mocked him, a taunting reminder of the light of the world. He shut his eyes so that he would not have to watch the light of the candle recede, and counted slowly to one hundred. When he opened his eyes, he looked around at the cool darkness, this well of silence, the weight of rock and loneliness, and thought, this is what it is to be emperor” The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison follows our main protagonist Maia Drazhar, youngest son of the Emperor of the Elflands, who, because of a purely political marriage between the Emperor and a goblin princess, is born half-goblin. Scorned by the Emperor himself and the royal court, at just eight years of age…
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When sixteen-year-old Ekata wakes up to find that her entire backstabbing royal family has been cursed into unconsciousness, she’s forced into the role of Grand Duke of Kylma Above, a tiny, icy duchy set above the magical underwater world of Kylma Below. She grew up in constant fear for her life, with her twelve siblings plotting to murder each other and shorten the path to the throne, but she never wanted to rule, and was looking forward to escaping to university to study medicine. Now she has to avoid being forced to marry the boorish other potential heir, try to solve the curse on her family, and keep Kylma Above from falling apart. It’s part mystery, part coming of ag…
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Francis Deer and Mika Hunter have been friends for over 30 years, at one point deciding to join forces and become co-authors. They both live in Munich with their respective families: two husbands, two girls, two boys, two cats and the occasional nest of hornets. Francis Deer holds diplomas in theology and adult educational science. Currently, she works as a software tester for an IT company. In addition, Francis trained as a baby-wearing consultant and runs her own small business. Over the years, she acted in various theatre groups, always striving for the romance part, yet ultimately ending with the comedy role. Francis is an avid collector of tarot cards as they offer…
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Hearken mere mortals to the words of one so much greater, and infinitely more humble. Tis I, returned to thee once more. Ulesorin the Green, restored to my verdant finery, restored to a mighty tower overlooking the free kingdoms and restored to a state of moderate peace. For when all the great evils that plague this world have been slain and all that remains are minor impediments that plebs like you can tackle, then wherefore goeth the mightiest wizard in all the realms? What use is a puissant archmage when there is no more villainy to smite? I shall tell you now what purpose I still serve, while you look upon me with doubt and derision simply because I take a momentary …
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It’s a Women in SFF Five Words! To celebrate Women in SFF, we thought it would be a great idea to bring you another 5-Star Books in Five Words feature – this time focusing on books by BAME female authors. Whether you want to celebrate with us, or you want to diversify your reading, we highly recommend the following! We’d love to add to our list, so if you have any recommendations for us, please let us know! GD Pristine Very regency lesbian fantasy Cinderella of fantasy manners retelling Deconstructing Love One colonialism your intense in starfish story, spaaaa- alien but aaace invaders fractured Fallen Vampires angels…
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