Blade of Dream (Kithamar Trilogy, 2)
Orbit, 20 July 2023
Available as: HB, 464pp, audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(HB): 9780356515465
I like talking about books, reading books, buying books, dusting books... er, just being with books.
31 August 2023
#Review - Blade of Dream by Daniel Abraham
29 August 2023
#Review - The Mystery at Dunvegan Castle by TL Huchu
Pan Macmillan, 27 July 2023
Available as: HB, 400pp, audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(HB): 9781529097726
24 August 2023
#Review - House of Odysseus by Claire North
Claire North
Orbit, 24 August 2023
Available as: HB, 420pp, audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(HB): 9780356516073
23 August 2023
Cover Reveal - Alien Clay by Adrian Tchaikovsky
I'm excited today to be able to share the cover of one of the most exciting books coving next year - Alien Clay, a thrilling, far-future adventure by acclaimed author Adrian Tchaikovsky, winner of the British Science Fiction Award, British Fantasy Award, Golden Dragon Award, and Arthur C. Clarke Award.
About the book
The planet of Kiln is where the tyrannical Mandate keeps its prison colony, and for inmates the journey there is always a one-way trip. One such prisoner is Professor Arton Daghdev, xeno-ecologist and political dissident. Soon after arrival he discovers that Kiln has a secret. Humanity is not the first intelligent life to set foot there.
In the midst a ravenous, chaotic ecosystem are the ruins of a civilization, but who were the vanished builders and where did they go? If he can survive both the harsh rule of the camp commandant and the alien horrors of the world around him, then Arton has a chance at making a discovery that might just transform not only Kiln but distant Earth as well.
Alien Clay is published on 28 March 2024 by @UKTor in HB (560pp - ISBN 9781035013746), audio and e. For more information, and to preorder your copy, see the publisher's website here.
About the author
The cover
So, having said all that, here is the cover in its full glory...22 August 2023
#Review - Boys in the Valley by Philip Fracassi
Philip Fracassi
Orbit, 13 July 2023
Available as: PB 335pp, audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(PB): 9780356520551
18 August 2023
#Blogtour #Review - Someone Like Her by Awais Khan
Awais Khan
Orenda Books, 17 August 2023
Available as: PB, 320pp audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(PB): 9781914585784PB)
17 August 2023
Review - Bridge by Lauren Beukes
Lauren Beukes
Penguin, 17 August 2023
Available as: HB, PB, 432pp, audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(HB): 9780718182823 (PB): 9781405923750
15 August 2023
#Review - Grave Suspicions by Alice James
Alice James
Solaris, 15 August 2023
Available as: PB, 336pp, e, audio
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(PB): 9781786188434
I'm grateful to Alice James herself for sending me an e-copy of Grave Suspicions to consider for review.
If you've read Alice's previous two books, Grave Secrets and Grave Danger, you'll have some idea what to expect. Crime. Necromancy. Estate agenting. Vampires. Shagging. And poor Toni having yet another new outfit ruined by a would-be murderer or the irate undead.
And indeed, Grave Suspicions delivers on all three.
There is, though, a lot more to it than that.
Yes, Toni's romantic life remains as tangled and hopeless as ever - her heart lost to Peter who's showing no sign of returning from Germany, while she takes solace as she can. And yes, she does her best to avoid abusive ex, vampire Oscar, while trying to help her policeman brother Will with yet another hard-to-crack case by raising the victim in the morgue. But she's also finding out more about her own past, and that of her family; about the parents who turned away from her; about her connection to the vampires.
And some part of that past comes reaching out to her, in the form of a pair of thugs who seem to think she's got something of theirs.
The county coroner is also trying to corner Toni - she has no idea what that's about.
And she's as short of money as ever...
It was, simply, sheer joy to return to this world of modern rural fantasy featuring my favourite down-to-earth heroine, as Alice James creates perhaps the most deadly combination of threats for her yet. Being Toni Windsor always meant living with multiply interlocking mysteries and complications, but I think this third book takes things to a new level as seeds planted in the earlier books begin to spout. There's there's a new richness to the story. It is both more complex and at the same time more focussed than the earlier stories, if that makes sense.
Also, Toni is gaining in power and confidence, which is great to see, but she is also being matched against trickier and more lethal opponents. If this were a role playing game, I'd say Alice James is the ideal dungeon mistress, and I very much look forward to seeing what new monsters lurk in future instalments (I think I can guess at one of them, quietly growing in plain sight). But more than that, it's how fascinating how Alice and her team are also meshing and working together
So - in Grave Suspicions we have Peril, we have Revelations and of course, we have the ruin of a series of outfits (it's no wonder Toni is always short of money). But there's more still! This book also features a classic locked room mystery, which provided a genuine puzzle and brought the crime aspect of this story rather to the fore. As ever, the writing sparkles, Toni's observations of life, love and rural society always spot on. In short, the book is a bewildering mix, but in a very good way, and I'd strongly recommend it (and its predecessors if you haven't got to them yet).
For more information about Grave Suspicions, see the publisher's website here.
10 August 2023
#Review - The Oleander Sword by Tasha Suri
Tasha Suri
Orbit, 18 August 2022
Available as: PB, 480pp audio, e
Source: Advance copy
ISBN(PB): 978-0356515656
8 August 2023
#Review - Expectant by Vanda Symon
Vanda Simon
Orenda Books, 16 February 2023
Available as: PB, 246pp, audio, e
Source: Purchased/ audio subscription
ISBN(PB): 9781914585579
3 August 2023
#Review - Winter's Gifts by Ben Aaronovitch
Ben Aaronovitch
Gollancz, 8 June 2023
Available as: HB, 224pp audio, e
Source: Purchased
ISBN(HB): 9781473224377
1 August 2023
#Review - Dragonfall by LR Lam
LR Lam
Hodderscape, 2 May 2023
Available as: HB, 429pp, audio, e
Source: Advance copy and audio subscription
ISBN(HB): 9781399715485
I'm grateful to the publisher for an advance e-copy of Dragonfall via Netgalley to consider for review.
Dragonfall is a hard one to sum up, as there is so much going on with this book. Just to name a few things, while it's got a fairly audacious plot in itself it's also establishing a bigger, wider story than just this volume (yes, it's part of a series), it introduces us to Arcady and Everen, two fascinating and deep characters (but to some others as well) and it gives a glimpse of an intricate and convincing world (well, two worlds actually).
Central to all this is I think the Arcady-Everen relationship.
Arcady is a familiar kind of fantasy chancer - a thief and a con artist living by wits, an enemy of the authorities in the city of Vatra but also of its underworld, and necessarily half a dozen steps ahead of both (or it would be a short book). He also has secrets, including kinship to the Plaguebringer, the most reviled magician of recent times, a relationship for which Arcady would be proscribed and shunned were it known. Arcady is determined to vindicate his grandfather, and will do whatever it takes - theft, dark magic, betrayal - to achieve that.
Or at least he believes so...
The first step he takes on this road - a forbidden spell worked late one night - sets events in motion.
Everen is a dragon, exiled with his kind to a bleak, dying world and believing that he is born to save his people. Caught up in the backdraft of Arcady's magic, he falls into Vatra in human guise. His relationship with Arcady is based on a magical entanglement that remains mysterious through much of the book. That entanglement is variously a source to both of strength, of weakness, of knowledge, and of great peril.
The balance between Everen and Arcady, underpinned by equal parts of fascination, dread, longing and hostility, is a kind of barometer of this book, the main event (apart from some episodes of showy magic and a heist that brings Arcady unwillingly back into the fold of his former criminal associates). It's a complex, fascinating affair, one that certainly has romantic overtones but which is also deeply, richly explored in terms of their backgrounds and motivations, of the evolving power difference between then - all of which makes any kind of Happy Ever After rather problematic. Indeed, the relationship has complications that would make Romeo and Juliet seem one dimensional, as both Everen and Arcady have personal and immediate, rather than just familial, reasons for fearing the other. The drive to betrayal, as well as a powerful urge not to, is strong and I was genuinely uncertain how things would turn out.
The relationship between the two is only made more tricky by the fact that others on the periphery of the story may be aware of events and manipulating them: or they may themselves be deceived, manipulated. It's not clear. There's a lot hinted at that doesn't exactly come to fruition here, rather the story closely follows the two central characters as they come to terms with who and what they are (or may be - there are no certainties!) But what is clear is that Arcady and Everen lack complete, or even much, knowledge of what's going on, being, rather, fed scraps by others: and not all these others are actually in plain sight. (I'm being a bit vague here to avoid spoilers).
It all makes for a powerful, involving, even if at times frustrating, novel which shows signs of growing into something rich, strange and fascinating.
I read this book partly in print and partly by listening to the audio. The audio presented a bit of a problem for me in that the sections as told by Arcady and Everen are read in their entirety by different actors - but as at times each is recounting things the other says and does, there is a fair bit of reported speech in the other's voice. While the actors do try to convey this by varying accents, this does mean that it can be difficult to follow the point of view. I think both actors are brilliant, but things might be clearer if the book had simply used one voice, or matched actor to character.
For more information about Dragonfall see the publisher's website here.