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Art, Owlcrate, and Other Things

ILONA ANDREWS - Mon, 03/09/2026 - 16:30

Good morning. By now most of you probably have seen the Owlcrate edition announcement for the special edition of This Kingdom. For those of you who haven’t, here it is, I stole it for you from Instagram. If you are viewing this post through your email, here is a direct link.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by OwlCrate (@owlcrate)

Mod R has gathered your questions. I’m fortified with Rose Scented tea from Harney and Sons, so let’s get to it.

Owlcrate:

1.  Is the OwlCrate edition going to feature art by Luisa Preissler?

Owlcrate features a reversible dust jacket, meaning that there is a paper cover that fits over the actual hardcover, and it has two different images, so you can choose which image to display. One of them is by Luisa Preissler.

The edition features artwork from 5 artists, I think. Sorry, this was a little while ago, so I can’t recall if it’s 5 or more. To my knowledge, the reverse jacket is the only image Luisa Preissler has painted for that edition.

2. Will that artwork appear anywhere else, or is it OwlCrate-exclusive?

All content commissioned by OwlCrate is exclusive to OwlCrate for a period of several years.

3. Will Luisa be creating additional art for This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me outside this edition?

Yes.

4. Will the interior artwork be bright/high-contrast?

Eh. I don’t know because I don’t have the actual edition in my hands, but I saw endpapers and they were beautiful and in full color.

5. Is the OwlCrate edition the one that contains the bonus story, or is that tied to a different edition? Can that be announced earlier so we can actually get the book?

Everything that Owlcrate chose to announce is in that Instagram post. We can’t give you additional information at this time.

6. Do we know whether OwlCrate is likely to produce editions for books two and three of the trilogy?

We don’t.

7.  If someone manages to get this OwlCrate edition, will that give them priority access to the part 2 of This Kingdom, like Subterranean does?

You would have to check OwlCrate policies.

To clarify: we did not commission these editions. All of the special editions of this book have been negotiated through our publisher. If it was something we negotiated, we would have more information. Our role in these was to approve the art and sign or stamp the signing pages.

8. “Are they one of those businesses where people can just buy extras in general sales or buy after their subscribers have first dibs?”

Email OwlCrate.

9. “If I subscribe now, can I still get the April box? I looked online and I don’t understand their Horror book and Adult book boxes, I just want This Kingdom?” 

Email OwlCrate.

10. “Well damage is done now and I have no chance to get the subscription in time, how else can I get the book? Will it be resold anywhere, or on the Ilona Andrews store?”

Email OwlCrate. This is a separate business, and we will definitely link to any remainder sales, but we will not be reselling these copies through our site. We do not have the rights to do that.

11. Can we have a page with all of the special editions?

Yes. Added to Maggie’s page.

Extra art:

12. I’ve missed the special editions. Are there going to be any art prints or stuff?

Yes.

Commissioned Art

We commissioned art from four artists, in alphabetical order, Candice Slater, Helena Elias, Leesha Hannigan, and Luisa Preissler.

Examples.

Click to enlarge.

Candice Slater.

Helena Elias

Leesha Hannigan

And, for the first time, art reveal, drum roll please…

Luisa Preissler

So very gorgeous.

You will be able to purchase character card packs, art prints, custom dust jackets, merchandise (we bought the mug rights), stickers, and hopefully vellum inserts. We will be releasing things through our store and the individual artists will be releasing products through their stores, including card packs, calendars, art prints, etc.

Placeholder Mug mockup Placeholder Mug mockup

For those of you missing out on the special editions, vellum inserts might be of particular interest because you can slide them into your hardcover and they will stay, so you basically make your own illustrated edition. About vellum – we are having difficulty finding a good printer, but we are working on it.

We are commissioning fully illustrated maps in color. Anchored Designs, who coded the theme on this website, is designing an entire different website just for the Maggie the Undying, which will have lore, art, and freebies.

Bookmark Packs.

Everyone coming to see us during our book tour is going to get a bookmark.

These are being printed by a local printer today and will be shipped to the stores on Wednesday. Additional bookmarks are being designed and will be available in packs on our site.

Companion Book

For those of you who read in ebook but still want the art – we are planning on releasing a companion book of deleted and bonus scenes and all of this art will be in there. That volume will be self-published and you will be able to grab it from our store and all the usual retailers.

Themed Boxes

We are looking into this. I am running into a language barrier with trying to select a plushie manufacturer, but we will likely do some kind of themed box, with the printed copy of the companion book, bookmarks, stickers, merch packs, etc. This will be expensive but we will stuff it well. The target for the box is sometime this summer.

To reiterate, there will be many opportunities for you to throw money at us get pretty art. No worries. There will be plenty of extras.

Boring Conclusion to This Post

There are 40,000 words between us and the end of this book and it must be done by the tour. The book is 140,000 words long already, so it will be another brick unless it gets trimmed in the editorial process.

So I’m going to vanish again for a week. You are the best. Don’t worry, we will make sure that you have all the fun extras.

The post Art, Owlcrate, and Other Things first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Categories: Authors

Spotlight on “Year of the Mer” by L. D. Lewis

http://litstack.com/ - Mon, 03/09/2026 - 14:00
Year of the Mer by L. D. Lewis book cover

Other LitStack Spots We’ve also spotted a few other books that we’re adding to our…

The post Spotlight on “Year of the Mer” by L. D. Lewis appeared first on LitStack.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Monday Meows

Kelly McCullough - Mon, 03/09/2026 - 13:00

When shall we three meet again?

I vote for when hell freezes over.

Oooh, yeah, seconded!

I can work with that.

I have never in my whole life been happier not to be invited to a party.

INORITE?!

Categories: Authors

What I’ve Been Listening To, February 2026

https://www.blackgate.com/ - Mon, 03/09/2026 - 11:00

I’ve read 24 books so far this year, and 17 were audiobooks (we’ve already established I’m not going to say ‘books consumed.’ Listening and physically reading are distinctive, but they’re interchangeable here).

Of the 17 audiobooks, 15 were new. I re-read more than I read new books, but I’ve been using audiobooks to tackle things for the first time. 7 books were Clive Cusslers.

CLIVE CUSSLER

I first talked about Clive Cussler back in 2019. He would die a half-year later, at age 88. He had created an empire, with other authors carrying on his five sometimes-intertwined series’. I revisited his works last Summer. I’ve listened to 7 of his books so far this year, as I am well behind on my Cussler.

Isaac Bell is a turn-of-the 20th Century private eye for the Van Dorn Detective Agency. Justin Scott co-wrote the first 10. Jack Du Brul (who had been co-writing The Oregon Files), took over for the next 5. Though I liked it, for some reason the series hadn’t resonated with me in paperback. They were slow reads through the first 5. But Scott Brick reading them aloud worked for me, and I’ve listened to books 6 through 9: The Striker, The Bootlegger, The Assassin, and The Gangster. I like listening to Bell. So, audiobooks have me invested in a series that I wasn’t into in print. I will continue on. This series has run from 2007 through 2025.

The Oregon Files are the only techno-thrillers I’ve ever gotten into. I’ve not read a single Tom Clancy book. Craig Dirgio ‘co-wrote’ the first 2, succeeded by Jack Du Brul for the next 7. Boyd Morrison took over for 7 books, with Mike Maden having written the last 4 in this 19-book series. I’m still in the Morrison phase, listening to books 12 (Typhoon Fury) and 13 (Shadow Tyrants). These are different from any other series I read, and I like them. I’ll continue on. This series has run from 2003 through 2025.

The Fargo Adventures feature married treasure hunters named Sam and Remi Fargo. These feel a little less intense than the other series’. As with Isaac Bell, listening to the books works better for me than actually reading them. Grant Blackwood wrote the first 4. Thomas Perry took over for the next 2. Russell Blake then wrote 2, and Robin Burcell has written the last 6 in the 13 book series. I listened to book 5 (The Mayan Secrets). This is my fourth-favorite series, just below Isaac Bell. But it’s WELL above Dirk Pitt. I’ll check out Russell Blake here soon. This series has run from 2009 through 2023.

My favorite series of them all feature Kurt Austin and the NUMA Files. There are 21 books, and I’ve read somewhat over half. I haven’t listened to any this year, but I should try to get caught up some on those, as well. I enjoy reading Austin in book form and will likely do that again. This series has run from 1999 through 2024.

As I’ve said before, I don’t read Cussler’s foundational series, featuring Dirk Pitt. There have been two movies from it, with Matthew McConaughey’s Sahara a big screen action flick. There have been 27 novels.

Starting with book 18, his son, Dirk Cussler, began writing them. He’s not as bad as Anne Hillerman (whose last name is the only qualification she has for continuing father Tony’s Navajo Tribal Police series. She is SO bad I quit mid-book and abandoned the series. She’s a disgrace), but I read the first two Dirk Cussler books, and gave up. I might try the next one after I’m 100% caught up on the other series’, but I doubt it. I didn’t enjoy them, and there’s too much good stuff out there to read and re-read. Including the earlier Dirk Pitt books. This series has run from 1973 through 2023.

Scott Brick narrates the books from all four series,’ which is unfortunate. There are multiple characters in each one, including a large team for The Oregon Files. Having the same person reading all the books kind of runs together. Brick is okay in each, but some variety would be nice.

JAMES LEE BURKE

Back in 2022, I talked about my favorite audiobook narrators, and Will Patton was one of them. He was the perfect choice to read James Lee Burke’s Cajun Noir featuring Dave Robicheaux. I am well behind, and I just read 20210’s The Glass Rainbow in hardback. Burke is a superb writer. One of the best of my lifetime. I’ve got 6 to go to get current, with the latest just having come out last month. I wrote about Tommy Lee Jones’ labor of love to bring Robicheaux to the screen.

Unfortunately, most of the Patton audiobooks still available are abridged. I’m not an abridged fan. Most of the books are now read by Mark Hammer. I don’t like his recordings at all. I re-listened to book 1 (The Neon Rain) -which I had by Patton – while I read The Glass Rainbow. Then I tried to listen to Hammer reading book 2 (Heaven’s Prisoners) and I simply quit, moving on to a Firefly audiobook. He just sounds like a boring old man. I won’t be listening to any more Hammer readings. It was disappointing. Wish I still had some of my Will Patton cassettes.

NIKKI HEAT

I talked about Castle, and Nikki Heat, back in January. I listened to books 7 (Driving Heat), 8 (High Heat), 9 (Heat Storm), and 10 (Crashing Heat). 8 and 9 were definitely the low points of the entire series, but it recovered in book 10 to close things out well enough. Overall, worth reading. As I said in the prior post, a female narrator would have made a lot more sense.

CASTLE PERILOUS

And back in February, I talked about revisiting this whimsical eighties fantasy series by John DeChancie. I listened to books 4 (Castle War!) and 5 (Castle Murder), then dove into Clive Cussler. I’ve got the rest of the series, from the 2025 Audible Big Sale, so I’ll listen to more.

MISC

I listened to some Douglas Adams (Life, the Universe, and Everything), and the two ‘radio play readings’ of Red Dwarf, by Chris Barrie. He does a really good job, and they’re as good as the audiobooks of the novel. Sadly, co-creator Rob Grant died on February 25.

I listened to the ten Firefly audiobooks a few years ago. They’re a mixed bag: some are good, some not-so-much. One of my favorites is book two, The Magnificent Nine, which is a Jayne story. And essentially a Firefly version of The Magnificent Seven. This was written by Sherlock Holmes – and Conan – author, James Lovegrove. James Anderson Foster sounds kinda like Nathan Fillion, and I think he was a good choice. I’d start your Firefly listen with this one. Lovegrove had to use a ‘story concept’ by someone else for book one, and it’s a weaker entry. Four of the first five are among the best in the series. I’m not as keen on the succeeding authors.

Prior Audio Posts:
What I’ve Been Listening To: November (II) 2025 (Dictator, Don’t Panic, Mistletoe Murders, Sword of Shannara)
What I’ve Been Listening To: November, 2025 (Conspirata, Stacy Keach, Gideon Lowry)
What I’ve Been Listening To: August, 2025 (Middlebridge Mysteries, Unlicensed, The Big Lie, 64th Man)
What I’ve Been Listening To: June, 2025 (Eve Ronin, Thieves World, SPQR, Egil & Nix, the annual sale)
What I’ve Been Listening To: February, 2025 (Isaac Steele, Sharpe & Walker, SPQR, Steven Saylor, The Trojan War)
What I’ve Been Listening To: November, 2024 (Mistletoe Murders, The Caine Mutiny, Mr. Rickey Calls a Meeting)
What I’ve Been Listening To: September, 2025 Desert of Souls)
What I’ve Been Listening To: August, 2024 (Part II) (Leaphorn and Chee, Tony Hillerman, Eve Ronin)
What I’ve Been Listening To: August, 2024 (Egil & Nix, Caleb York Westerns, Malazan)
What I’ve Been Listening To: July, 2024 (The Black Company, SPQR, Charles Willeford, Thieves World)
What I’ve Been Listening To: September 2022 (Robert R. McCammon, Ian C. Esslemont, Dirk Gently)
May I Read You This Book? – (My favorite audiobook narrators)

Bob Byrne’s ‘A (Black) Gat in the Hand’ made its Black Gate debut in 2018 and has returned every summer since.

His ‘The Public Life of Sherlock Holmes’ column ran every Monday morning at Black Gate from March, 2014 through March, 2017. And he irregularly posts on Rex Stout’s gargantuan detective in ‘Nero Wolfe’s Brownstone.’ He is a member of the Praed Street Irregulars, and founded www.SolarPons.com (the only website dedicated to the ‘Sherlock Holmes of Praed Street’).

He organized Black Gate’s award-nominated ‘Discovering Robert E. Howard’ series, as well as the award-winning ‘Hither Came Conan’ series. Which is now part of THE Definitive guide to Conan. He also organized 2023’s ‘Talking Tolkien.’

He has contributed stories to The MX Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories — Parts III, IV, V, VI, XXI, and XXXIII.

He has written introductions for Steeger Books, and appeared in several magazines, including Black Mask, Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine, The Strand Magazine, and Sherlock Magazine.

You can definitely ‘experience the Bobness’ at Jason Waltz’s ’24? in 42′ podcast.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Review: The Book of Fallen Leaves by A.S. Tamaki

http://fantasybookcritic.blogspot.com - Mon, 03/09/2026 - 08:00


 

FORMAT/INFO: The Book of Fallen Leaves was published by Orbit Books on March 17th, 2026. It is available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats.

OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: Nearly two decades ago, the Gensei clan was nearly wiped out after their failed attempt at rebellion. Prince Sen, one of the only survivors, managed to barely escape due to the help of Rui and her peasant family. Now new tensions are stirring in the imperial court as two factions try to usurp power from the weak hold of the current emperor. Sen is soon forced to choose between remaining neutral with his adopted clan or joining an army intent on war and avenging the Gensei household. But the most pivotal person in the coming conflict may be the peasant Rui, who is slowly realizing that the gods are using her to enact schemes of their own.

The Book of Fallen Leaves makes a valiant attempt to be the next great dark political fantasy, but is just too slow and muddled to succeed. I usually avoid comparisons to Game of Thrones at all costs, as it is a highly overused comp, but you can definitely see the touchstones here. There's a huge cast of characters, multiple clans and vassal clans forming alliances and plotting betrayals, and a splash of mystical elements in the background. And when the story finally gets going in the back half of the book, a lot of those elements really clicked and came together.

Unfortunately, it takes a very long time to get there. The first half of the story spends a significant amount of time with Sen and Rui, two characters who I ultimately did not really care about. We spend a lot of time getting to know them as they go through a year of events, watching lots of angst as they grapple with their futures. We don't spend nearly enough time in the first half of the book with characters who are actually influencing the diplomacy and politics of the empire.

The writing style itself was very flowery. On the one hand, there were definitely some beautifully written sequences that painted the scene of the dawn on the day of a big battle or as a character is making a pivotal choice. On the other hand the prose tended to refer to characters indirectly, using titles or descriptions, or by having a character obliquely talk about them in reference to some past event. This all made it hard initially to understand the faction alliances, even with a hand character list at the front of the book.

I'm all for authors making me piece together a fantasy world through context, but understanding alliances and factions in a political fantasy is key to enjoying the story. If I can't track who is working with who (or supposed to be working with who) then the impact of the political maneuvering fails to land. Once I had untangled those threads, the story worked a lot better for me, but it took far too long to get there.

Lastly, the magical fantasy elements of the story were a bit haphazardly used. No one uses magic in this world; instead, there are gods and supernatural creatures that roam and have their own agendas. But after an initial intriguing opening chapter with such a creature, the supernatural elements vanish from most of the story. When they finally re-enter the scene, they talk in riddles and never give a direct answer, to the point that for some of these beings, I never figured out what their agenda was. At least one god had a use for Rui, but I honestly can't tell you if Rui fulfilled her destiny in this book, or if it's a reveal in the sequel.

At the end of the day, The Book of Fallen Leaves had a lot of potential, but just couldn't suck me in. I will say that the back half of the book was significantly more engaging than the beginning. By that point, however, my overall frustration couldn't be surmounted. I wish this was a story I wanted to recommend to people, but ultimately I can not.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Review – Silver and Lead (October Daye, Book 19) by Seanan McGuire (3.5/5 stars)

http://hiddeninpages.com/ - Mon, 03/09/2026 - 07:51

Reading Level: Adult
Genre: Urban Fantasy
Length: 393 pages
Publisher: Tor Books
Release Date: September 30, 2025
ASIN: B0DQJ76DMG
Stand Alone or Series: 19th book in the October Daye series
Source: eGalley from NetGalley
Rating: 3.5/5 stars

“Something is rotten in Faerie. In the aftermath of Titania’s reality-warping enchantment, things are returning to what passes for normal in the Kingdom in the Mists—until it’s discovered that the royal vaults have been looted, and several powerful magical artifacts are missing. None are things that can be safely left unsecured, and some have the potential to do almost as much damage as Titania did, and having them in the wrong hands could prove just as disastrous.

At least the theft means that Sir October “Toby” Daye, Knight errant and Hero of the Realm, finally has an excuse to get out of the house. Sure, she’s eight and a half months pregnant, but that doesn’t mean she can’t take care of herself. But with the sea witch offering to stand godmother to Toby’s child, maybe there are greater dangers ahead for Toby and her family than it appears….

Old enemies will resurface, new enemies will disguise themselves as friends, and Queen Windermere must try to keep her Hero on the case without getting herself gutted by the increasingly irritated local King of Cats. Sometimes, what’s been lost can be the most dangerous threat of all.”

Series Info/Source: This is the 19th book in the October Daye series. I got this on ebook through NetGalley for review.

Thoughts: I liked this book better than the last couple books in the series, which isn’t saying much. The previous couple of books have felt like filler. While it still feels like McGuire isn’t quite sure where this series is going, this book does progress the story some. I ended up finishing it even though I skimmed some of the exposition.

Toby is back at home and much more pregnant than she expected to be because of everything that happened in the previous book. Tybalt is driving her a bit crazy with his protectiveness, especially since she still has a couple weeks before her due date. Tybalt and Toby are called to court to testify against Titania. While there, Arden pulls Toby aside to ask for her help; some very dangerous items from the royal vaults are missing…including a Hope Chest. Arden would like Toby to investigate.

I continue to love the world and the characters here. I enjoyed watching our characters find happiness and family amidst all the craziness going on.

However, there was a lot I struggled with here as well. Over half this book is exposition; McGuire spends way too much time recapping and too much time rehashing thoughts in the characters’ heads. While reading this, there were huge sections that I noticed myself skimming through so I could get back to dialogue and characters actually doing things. I felt like this book needed some serious editing; it would have been a better story at half the length.

I also struggled with both everyone’s over-protectiveness of pregnant Toby and with Toby’s irrational decisions. The characters seemed to be making decisions that were very…well…out of character. Even Arden asking Toby to do this investigation this late in Toby’s pregnancy felt weird to me; it was explained away as Toby being the only knight in the realm who could do it. However, given the size of the realm, that makes no sense. It didn’t feel like something Arden would normally do as a character either.

For many, many years, McGuire was a go-to author for me. The last five or so years that has tapered off. I am not sure what changed, me or her as a writer. I feel like no one edits these books and makes sure they are tight and well paced. McGuire’s writing has gotten slower, the pacing more drawn out, and she spends way too much page space on both exposition and re-running thoughts through her characters’ head. Readers are smart; they don’t need this much over-explaining.

There is a nice novella at the end that dives into Simon’s return to the Undersea. It was nice to get some insight into Simon’s thoughts and feelings and get a look at how his new home is treating him.

My Summary (3.5/5): Overall I was happy that this was a bit faster in pace than the last few previous books but still frustrated by how wordy and over-explained things were. For the last four of five books, I have felt like this series is getting tired and needs to be wrapped up. I hope this book is on the way to doing that. I almost didn’t picked this up to read at all, but I have been reading this series forever so decided to give it a chance. I am even more on the fence now about whether I will pick up future books in this series.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Cover Art

Kristine Kathryn Rusch - Sun, 03/08/2026 - 17:17

On my Patreon page, I’ve been putting up free posts about the new and improved cover art that we’re doing at WMG. You can find a number of posts, but I thought I’d share this one with you here. (I’ll be sharing the occasional Patreon post throughout 2026 and maybe beyond.) You can sign up there for free and get the free posts only. On the weekends, I also write a new business post, but you’ll have to go through a paywall for those. Here’s a long(ish) one on the history of the Alien Influences cover.

Alien Influences

We have a plethora of covers to choose from here, and I even missed one, because mine is in storage, and I can’t find a good example of it online.

So…Alien Influences. I wrote the novel as interconnected short stories originally because at that time I did not realize I wrote out of order. The stories were published in various places, got nominated for awards, and (I knew) needed to be threaded into a full novel.

At the time, I was being published first in England, through Orion Books’ imprint Millennium. There’s a lot of backstory here, some of which I was never privy to. I do know that the company was co-founded by Anthony Cheethem, who had been in British publishing since the mid-1960s. This company, which was founded in 1991, was the third company he had founded. The first two were acquired by major publishers in the UK for sums of money that I can’t find on a quick search.

Everyone I worked with at Millennium was enthusiastic. They all had a chip on their shoulder and something to prove. That they could build bestsellers? I have no idea. That they could publish good books that sold well? Possibly.

I do know this: I was never treated as well in traditional publishing as Millennium treated me.

They published my early fantasy novels and then they took a flyer with Alien Influences. I love the cover on the British hardcover, and they did a different version (which I can’t find easily) for the mass market paperback. There was also a trade edition.

The book hit number one on the bestseller list for the Times of London, got extremely well-reviewed, and became a Topic of Conversation, at least in UK fandom.

It had also sold to Bantam in the United States as part of a bigger deal. Then in the U.S., I lost my editor at least five times. (I have blocked the exact number.) Meaning I had five different editors before my first novel from Bantam came out. Someone—and god knows who—moved Alien Influences away from the Fey publications and then buried it.

It was the only non-romance book that I know of that has the 1990s hunk (blech) Fabio on the cover. This cover often gets featured in retrospectives on Fabio covers…and then ignored.

It is a truly, truly, truly awful cover.

I got the rights back to the book because it went out of print very quickly, despite the excellent overseas sales and the good reviews—including one in The New York Times.

When we started WMG, we published it as soon as we could. We had one ugly-ass cover on it for a nanosecond because at the time, there weren’t yet art sites. I’m not even showing you that one, which was designed in PowerPoint, using historical (pre-20th century) artwork.

I think it only showed up on Amazon for that nanosecond because there were no other markets at the time.

Then we hired locally in Lincoln City, and brought in someone who eventually proved to be a mistake.

We hurried to rebrand Alien Influences. The first cover, co-designed by Dean, has pretty good art and adequate branding.

For some unknown reason, the cover got redesigned around the time Dean and I moved to Las Vegas. I remember seeing the redesign after it was uploaded to all the sites. I do not remember being consulted on any of the redesign.

The most charitable thing I can say about the artwork itself is that it looks like a Richard Powers imitation. I loathe most of Powers’ work, so this is not a compliment.

Still, the name is more-or-less properly branded and the pull quote is good. Maybe if I liked the art, we might have made it pass muster.

But why would we do that? It doesn’t look like modern science fiction at all. I see nothing here that would get a reader in 2026 to buy it and, in fact, I see two different things that would turn the reader off.

The first is that art. Blech, yuck, icky.

The second is the award I was nominated for. Back in the 1990s, the U.K.’s Arthur C. Clarke award was prestigious as hell. Maybe it still is, because it exists. But, the man was credibly accused of pedophilia, and there is a lot that I know about him because I was close to people who ran sf conventions. After the year 2000 or so, he was never invited to a U.S. sf convention again. (That I know of.)

I don’t want the association. We took that off my book cover this time. We put the best quote on the book, the one from The New York Times, not one from PW that sounds literary. (Yes, I find it ironic that the Times was the least literary review.)

I was the one to suggest rebranding and redesigning Alien Influences right away in our quest to brand everything properly. Now we have a cover I like. I believe this cover will entice readers to take a look, much more than the previous cover.

This book has had an interesting and weird history. I’m pleased it’s getting the kind of design it hasn’t had since it was introduced in the U.K. decades ago.

And right now, remember, we’re doing a Kickstarter on this and two other books. Broken Windchimes, which is also rebranded (and which I blogged about last week), and a short story collection that I will blog about on my Patreon page on Monday or so.

Categories: Authors

Half A Century of Reading Tolkien: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, translated by JRR Tolkien

https://www.blackgate.com/ - Sun, 03/08/2026 - 17:00

From beside the queen Gawain
to the king did then incline:
‘I implore with prayer plain
that this match should now be mine.’

Somehow, I’ve never read Prof. Tolkien’s, let alone anyone’s, translation of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (late 14th cent.), an English poem written by an unknown poet. Thinking on it, I  know there’s a cheesy looking movie, Sword of the Valiant, from the eighties starring Miles O’Keeffe and Sean Connery, but it was only David Lowery’s 2021 The Green Knight and its critical acclaim that made me think it was maybe time to read the poem. Now I have. Additionally, and most valuable to me wrestling with my understanding of the poem, I’ve also read the professor’s 1953 WP Ker lecture on work.

The poem recounts the temptations of Sir Gawain, youngest member of King Arthur’s Round Table, as he attempts to meet the suicidal obligation he accepted when he entered a contest with a mysterious green knight. More precisely, as told, it’s about the conflict between chivalrous virtues  of honor and courtesy and, specifically religious, morality.

Gawain was written in Middle English, the evolution of the language used between the Conquest in 1066 and the late 15th century. Gawain, son of Morgause, one of King Arthur’s half-sisters, is a major figure in many of the assorted Arthur tales. His roots descend back into older Welsh tales, where he was known as Gwalchmei. Pre-Christian elements, including the Beheading Game and the Wild Hunt, are integral parts of the story, despite the tale’s overt Christianity. The Beheading Game is a recurrent motif that tracks back to at least the Irish tale Fled Bricrenn featuring the hero Cú Chulainn and the Wild Hunt occurs across various Northern European myth cycles.

The poem begins with a recounting of Britain’s founding by Brutus of Troy. Noble as he was, young King Arthur of Camelot was nobler still. One Christmas season, as Arthur’s knights were celebrating with a games and contests, a strange figure entered the hall.

For hardly had the music but a moment ended,
and the first course in the court as was custom been served,
when there passed through the portals a perilous horseman,
the mightiest on middle-earth in measure of height,
from his gorge to his girdle so great and so square,
and his loins and his limbs so long and so huge,
that half a troll upon earth I trow that he was,
but the largest man alive at least I declare him;
and yet the seemliest for his size that could sit on a horse,
for though in back and in breast his body was grim,
both his paunch and his waist were properly slight,
and all his features followed his fashion so gay
in mode;
for at the hue men gaped aghast
in his face and form that showed;
as a fay-man fell he passed,
and green all over glowed.

Even his stallion is green. He has arrived at Camelot, he declares, to see how brave the knights of the Round Table really are. Not in combat, though, as they are “but beard less children.” No, what the Green Knight wants is to strike blow for blow with his great axe anyone brave enough to accept his challenge.  For playing along, he will let that person keep the axe.

When no one steps forward, King Arthur, himself, raises his voice to take on the Green Knight, himself. At once, Gawain steps in to put himself between the king and any harm that might befall him. In a sharp bit of commentary, Gawain calls out his own weaknesses even while upbraiding his fellow knights for their apparent cowardice.

For I find it unfitting, as in fact it is held,
when a challenge in your chamber makes choices so exalted,
though you yourself be desirous to accept it in person,
while many bold men about you on bench are seated:
on earth there are, I hold, none more honest of purpose,
no figures fairer on field where fighting is waged.
I am the weakest, I am aware, and in wit feeblest,
and the least loss, if I live not, if one would learn the truth.

If his the knight’s green cast hadn’t hinted that strange things were at hand, it’s made abundantly clear once Gawain delivers his blow and lops the challenger’s head from his shoulders. Just because he’s headless, it doesn’t mean Arthur’s champion is off the hook. Never faltering, the Green Knight reaches for his head and holds it aloft to the king and his household.

For the head in his hand he held it up straight,
towards the fairest at the table he twisted his face,
and it lifted its eyelids and looked at them broadly,
and made such words with its mouth as may be recounted.
‘See thou get ready, Gawain, to go as thou vowedst,
and as faithfully seek till thou find me, good sir
as thou hast promised in this place in the presence of
these knights.
To the Green Chapel go thou, and get thee, I charge thee,
such a dint as thou has dealt — indeed thou has earned
a nimble knock in return on New Year’s morning!

One might think Gawain would set forth as soon as able, but he doesn’t, instead remaining with Arthur until All Hallows. As he prepares to leave, the poet provides a detailed description of the young knight’s livery. On both his baldric and his shield is a pentangle, a five pointed star.

First faultless was he found in his five sense,
and next in his five fingers he failed at no time,
and firmly on the Five Wounds all his faith was set
that Christ received on the cross, as the Creed tells us,
and wherever the brave man into battle come,
on this beyond all things was his earnest thought:
that ever from the Five Joys all his valour he gained
that to Heaven’s courteous Queen once came from her
Child.

Tolkien describes this as instrumental to understanding the poem’s Christian context, as it represents the highest Christian ideals, the things Gawain aspires to embody and uphold:

For the significance that the pentangle is to bear in this poem is made plain — plain enough , that is, in general purport: it is to betoken ‘perfection’ indeed, but perfection in religion (the Christian faith), in piety and morality, and the ‘courtesy’ that flows therefrom into human relations; perfection in details of each, and a perfect and unbroken bond between the higher and lower planes.

For nearly two months, Gawain roams the land in search of the Green Chapel and its lord. Traveling across the wild countryside in search of the Green Chapel, his adventures, while extensive by any hero’s standard, are described in only a few sentences. They are merely something Gawain endures prior to the real struggle he must face in fulfilling his obligation to the Green Knight.

At every wading or water on the way that he passed
he found a foe before him, save at few for a wonder;
and so foul were they and fell that fight he must needs.
So many a marvel in the mountains he met in those lands
that ‘twould be tedious the tenth part to tell you thereof.
At whiles with worms he wars, and with wolves also,
at whiles with wood-trolls that wandered in the crags,
and with bulls and with bears and boars, too, at times;
and with ogres that hounded him from the heights of the fells.

Only a few days before New Year’s Day, Gawain comes across a castle, “the castle most comely that ever a king possessed,” deep in the wild forest. He is welcomed there by the lord and his wife. Aside from the lord and lady and their servants, there is a mysterious ugly old woman in the castle, whom everyone treats with great respect.  They are honored and pleased to welcome such a notable as Arthur’s knight. On hearing of his quest, the lord tells him nearby is a path that lead to the chapel which is only two miles away. He also suggests that Gawain rest and recover until New Year’s Day, an offer the knight readily accepts. The lord also proposes a bargain; he will go hunting while the knight rests. At day’s end, the lord will give him whatever he catches in return for whatever gift the knight might receive during the day. Again, Gawain accepts the offer.

The poem continues the next morning with a detailed accounting of the lord’s hunt for deer in the forest. Tolkien points out that this is a realistic portrayal of a lord’s necessary activity during the winter as well as a providing a realistic reason for him to be away from the castle. That is important for the next part of the Gawain’s story.

It is on the very next morning that the real nature of Gawain’s struggle is revealed. What follows are three days of escalating temptation for Gawain. He is awoken by the castle’s lady with clearly lascivious intent. Her servants and maids are still asleep, and she’s “the door closed and caught with a clasp that is strong.”

To my body will you welcome be
of delight to take your fill;
for need constraineth me
to serve you, and I will.’

He is able to hold her off, though he finds doing so without being discourteous difficult. Nonetheless, he resists her persistent ardor and she retreats after giving him a single kiss. He dresses at once and proceeds to Mass.

She was an urgent wooer,
that lady fair of face;
the knight with speeches pure
replied in every case.

‘Madam,’ said he merrily, ‘Mary reward you
For I have enjoyed, i n good faith, your generous favour,
and much honour have had else from others’ kind deeds ;
but as for the courtesy they accord me, since my claim is not  equal,
the honour is your own, who are ever well-meaning.’

The lord returns from his hunt with supply of venison which he gives to Gawain. When the knight gives him a kiss in return, he asks him “where you won this same wealth by the wits you posses.” Gawain responds ‘That was not the covenant,’ quoth he. ‘Do not question me more.”

This is the template for the remaining two days, but in each, the risk for Gawain increases. The lady becomes more forward and direct with each new morning. The young knight finds it increasingly difficult to hold off her advances, again, remaining courteous, faithful to the lord’s hospitality, and true to Christian values.

This, Tolkien explains, is the real heart of the poem and Gawain’s challenge: “The author is chiefly interested in the competition between ‘courtesy’ and virtue (purity and loyalty); he shows us their increasing divergence, and shows us Gawain at crisis of the temptation recognizing this and choosing virtue rather than courtesy, yet preserving a graciousness of manner and a gentleness of speech belonging to the true spirit of courtesy.” He fins this made clear in the following lines.

for she, queenly and peerless, pressed him so closely,
led him so near the line, that at last he must needs
either refuse her with offence or her favours there take.
He cared for his courtesy, lest a caitiff he proved,
yet more for his sad case, if he should sin commit
and to the owner of the house, to his host, be a traitor.
‘God help me l ‘ said he. ‘Happen that shall not !’

On the second day she is more forceful and he ends up receiving two kisses. On the third, it’s three kisses, but he doesn’t escape with quite intact. The lady presses on Gawain a green girdle she wove that will prevent any who wear it to be killed “by any cunning of hand.” Prompted as much by courtesy as fear, he accepts it. More important, he does not present it to the lord as one of the gifts he received that day, instead only giving him three kisses.

As I reach the poem’s climax, I’ve realized I haven’t said anything about my own reactions to it. I guess I’d have to say I’m swayed by Prof. Tolkien’s interpretation. In the poem’s final stanzas, it’s made clear that not only was the Green Knight’s challenge a game, but everything in the tale is a game. That is, the lady’s attempted seduction of Gawain is never real, only an effort to force him to fail to uphold his professes virtues, broken on the contradictions between his obligations to the lord, the lady, and Christian morality. It was all planned as an attack on Arthur, Guinevere, and the Round Tables and its knights. I didn’t have to be swayed very much, as the poet’s intent seems fairly clear, nonetheless, I appreciate his explication.

There’s real power in the poem, as I think is clear from lines I’ve included. The moments of weirdness serve as a connection to the deeper stories that run back to very roots of myths and legends. But there’s also a real, psychological depth to Gawain that’s often lacking in characters from fairytales and the like. There’s real anguish in his struggle to simultaneously maintain his honor and his virtue. It isn’t a simple morality play, but possessed of real human complexity. It’s not without value studying Gawain’s efforts in this parlous age.

Confessing his sins the night before, on New Year’s Day, Gawain sets out. Instead of the expected chapel, the Green Knight’s abode is a cave set in an earthen mound, with more hint of Devil than Christ to it. What follows is the direst test of the young knight as he braves the “Danish axe newly dressed the dint to return, with cruel cutting-edge curved along the handlefiled on a whetstone, and four feet in width” of his challenger.

When the Green Knight swings his axe, Gawain flinches. Reproached for cowardice, a second strike is delivered, though this stops short of touching Gawain’s neck. When Gawain demands a third, true blow, he is rewarded with a slight wound to his neck. At this point, all is revealed.

The Green Knight is none other than the lord of the castle and the whole thing was planned by the old woman at the castle. She is, in fact, Morgan le Fay, Arthur’s half-sister and Gawain’s aunt. She hoped the sight of the Green Knight’s talking severed head would scare Guinevere to death and that one of Arthur’s knights would fail to maintain his virtue. He only wounded Gawain at all because he hid his receipt of the girdle.

This last breaks Gawain. He believes he has failed, giving into cowardice and not remaining true to his promise to the lord, condemning himself: ‘Cursed be ye, Coveting, and Cowardice also I In you is vileness, and vice that virtue destroyeth.’ No one else, though, agrees. The lord laughs and rejects this as Gawain, save for valuing his life a little too much, has met the other challenges perfectly and extends an invitation to his New Year’s celebrations. On returning to Arthur, the king and his knights also reject Gawain’s self-denouncement, instead, choosing the green girdle as a reminder of Gawain’s adventure and virtue.

I need to think about Sir Gawain and the Green Knight some more and reread it a few more times before I come to anymore conclusions on in it. As with Tolkien’s translation of Beowulf, I enjoyed reading this and found it flowed and moves with a nice rhythm. There are two other poems in the collection I have, Pearl and Sir Orfeo, which I haven’t read yet, but will the next time around.

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part One

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Two – The Fellowship of the Ring by JRR Tolkien

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Three — The Two Towers by JRR Tolkien

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Four — The Return of the King by JRR Tolkien

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Five — From the Beginning: The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Six — Bored of the Rings by Henry N. Beard & Douglas C. Kenney

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Seven — The Sword of Shannara by Terry Brooks

Half a Century of Reading Tolkien: Part Eight — The Silmarillion by JRR Tolkien

Grimmer Than Grim: The Children of Húrin by J.R.R. Tolkien

Talking Tolkien: Of Such a Sort Should a Man Be – Beowulf: A Translation and Commentary by J.R.R. Tolkien

Fletcher Vredenburgh writes a column each first Sunday of the month at Black Gate, mostly about older books he hasn’t read before. He also posts at his own site, Stuff I Like when his muse hits him

Categories: Fantasy Books

Exploring the Dark Side of Life: Remains, edited by Andrew Cox

https://www.blackgate.com/ - Sat, 03/07/2026 - 21:04


Remains, issues 4 and 4. Cover art by Richard Wagner

There are readers who, like me, prefer dark fiction in short form, because their suspension of disbelief is too brief to sustain — with a few exceptions — a full novel.

For people like us here’s a real treat: the new magazine/anthology Remains, edited by Andy Cox and illustrated by Richard Wagner, both well known for their previous work with the mythical Black Static magazine.

The first two issues are already sold out, but volume 3 ( published in late 2025) and the brand new volume 4 are available to entertain and disquiet.

Art for “Hiroshima Was Another Word For Love Then” by Andrew Hoo, from Issue 3, by Richard Wagner

My favorite stories from vol 3 are the following:

“Atrophy Wife” by Gary McMahon, a superb, deeply unsettling tale where two boys discover the headless body of a murdered girl

“Hiroshima Was Another Word for Love Then” by Andrew Hook, an insightful, slightly sad piece depicting the fleeting encounter between a man and a woman whose lives will be separated forever

“Gehenna” by Steve Rasnic Tem, an engrossing, moving story featuring a cancer patient riding the bus to his chemo infusions

The list of contributors includes Allison Littlewood, Danny Rhodes, James Sallis and Stephen Hargadon.

Art for “Loon” by Danny Rhodes, from Issue 3, by Robert Wagner

From volume 4 my personal choices are

“Station to Station” by Stephen Bacon, a fascinating, life-long trip in the network of London Underground in search of a friend lost forever

“Development Conversation” by Stephen Hargadon, a very unusual, fascinating piece of weird fiction set in an office where unexpected changes are going to take place

Other contributors are: Sean Padraic Byrne, Kay Vandail, James Sallis, Annie Neugebauer, Craig Bernardini, Steve Toase and John Possidente.

Copies are $10 each in the US, and a 4-issue subscription is $33. Order directly from the Remains website.

Mario Guslandi was born in Milan, Italy, where he currently lives. He became addicted to horror and supernatural fiction (too) many years ago, after accidentally reading a reprint anthology of stories by MR James, JS Le Fanu, Arthur Machen etc. Most likely the only Italian who regularly reads (and reviews) dark fiction in English, he has contributed over the years to various genre websites such as Horrorworld, Hellnotes, The British Fantasy Society, The Agony Column and many more. See all his recent reviews for us here.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Join Jim this month at Penguicon!

Jim Butcher - Sat, 03/07/2026 - 19:41
 Penguicon 2026
Last Minute Con Appearance!
March 27-29, Detroit MI
Join the auction to bid on special editions!

Visit Penguicon’s website for more information about the event and tickets.

A special leather-bound edition of Storm Front and a special hardcover edition of Brief Cases will be featured in their auction! Please come to support and be a part of this wonderful opportunity. Thank you Penguicon!

Categories: Authors

JITTERBUG by Gareth L Powell

ssfworld - Sat, 03/07/2026 - 00:00
“On Earth, they depicted justice as blindfolded and impartial, but out here on the frontier, she was red in tooth and claw.” It’s not every book that begins with the unanticipated dismantling of a planet. But that is what happens here, when people in South London watch through a telescope the disassembling of the planet…
Categories: Fantasy Books

SPFBO XI - The Third Update (Mihir's Batch)

http://fantasybookcritic.blogspot.com - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 21:00

 


Read FBC's SPFBO11 First Update (Lukasz's batch)
Read FBC's SPFBO11 Second Update (Jack's batch)



Aah SPFBO, we are back in a new time period for the start. I got my batch of six titles and I was off. With all six books, I read 20% of them before deciding whether to read each title in its entirety. For me, this time all six titles were very cool looking. Mine is the third batch to be read and you can read what Lukasz and Jack thought of their batches in the links above.

My thanks to all six authors for their submission and being brave to submit their babies for being reviewed by unknown people. It takes a special kind of mental fortitude to toil away in creating these stories and then setting them free into the world for being read and judged. I applaud you all.

So here are my thoughts on all of them:

Chalmach Chronicles by Torbjørn Øverland Amundsen – I started my SPFBO read with this book because I found the blurb to be very intriguing. In my previous years in SPFBO, I read a book like this, and I had enjoyed it immensely. The Chalmach Chronicles follows on in this manner, and I very much enjoyed it. Each story was a different one and highlighted the magic present within the world as well as the different aspects of the city. I really enjoyed how the author showcased the city’s geographical aspects within each story as it added to the story’s depth. The stories also reference characters from the other stories, and this adds to the plot depth.

Overall I would really recommend this book as I very much enjoyed it for its ingenuity, and I will be buying the sequel as well.

 

Night of The Illumination by Jacob MontanezNight Of The Illumination is an epic fantasy that has dark edges and great prose. I enjoyed reading this book but had to DNF it around the 50% mark as the book’s pace had slowed down significantly. This book had a lot of epic feel to the main plot, it was also very dark. The world settings are constantly hinted at but never properly revealed

I think I wasn’t the right reader for this story. The writing style is very in-depth and while it isn’t the purple kind, it has beauty to it. Overall, this would be great for those who are looking for something different. Think along the lines of Mark Lawrence, Michael R. Fletcher and Brian Staveley, Jacob Montanez is a writer with a unique voice and style.

 

The Golden Scarab of Balihar by Michael Grayford The Golden Scarab was a fun and fast read set in a world that’s reminiscent of South-West Asia. The writing was very succinct, and the pace of the story was smooth. Overall I enjoyed this story wherein the female MC uses her wits  and the world has a very Arabian nights feel. This story flowed quickly and was a bit predictable but that’s not a knock on the book or the author. The humour quotient especially with the Jinn is a solid factor for the enjoyment of the story and alongside the brilliant and plucky protagonist is a plus for the story. 

This is a good effort, and it's a fun twist on the Aladdin fable but it’s also geared for newer fantasy readers and older/experienced fantasy readers might not find anything new within bar the settings. I would easily see this story be in much demand for younger (tween and teenage) readers and would make a great animated show or movie. This 

 


The Dragon of the Dread Deep by C.D. McKenna – This was a book which I was most excited for as it featured nautical fantasy and pirates. I finished this book as quickly as I could as it featured dragon riders, action and magic. For me however, this book had a very slow start but the characters, especially the main protagonist Cassian was enticing enough for me to continue. As I read on, I realized this book while a standalone is set in the world of the Vorelian Saga books. There might have been nods to the main events but because I haven’t read those works, I couldn’t tell.

The story kicks into proper gear by the middle and from there it’s all about battles, treachery, dragon magic and being decent in a cutthroat world. I wouldn’t call this world grimdark but it occupies the space nicely between dark and grimdark fantasy. There’s not a lot of good people, just folks with various plans and agendas and some who are trying to do the decent thing. The world introduced within is a complicated one and for fans of high fantasy, will be very pleased.

The Dragon of the Dread Deep is a dark fantasy that explores how doing the right thing can lead to more problems. Full of magic, action, betrayals, TDOTDD is a book for those looking to get lost in a complex world.

 


The Sins of Steel and Shadow by Steve PannettThe Sins of Steel & Shadow was another title which beguiled me with its blurb. This is a world wherein humans and vampires co-exist with simmering tensions and navigating these landmines is out protagonist Bail Neren. He is deemed a Turned, not entirely Vampyr but far away from a human. Hated by one and deemed lowly by other, Bail often stays in the shadows for his safety.

TSOSAS is a dark, gritty story with strong focus on characters.  For me, I enjoyed the slow reveal of the world, Bail’s cautious wanderings in the world and his alliances within the city. There’s a proper mystery afoot within the main plot and this book is very much for fans of Daniel Polansky and RJ Barker.

I had read the previous book by this author and while that was a western fantasy, this book was another different one. The mystery plot was nicely unveiled and the ending was a complete shocker for me. For readers who enjoy  character-driven stories, mixed in moral ambiguity, socio-political intrigue, and low fantasy settings, this book will be for you.

 


Throne of Darkness by Spencer Russell Smith – I’m going to say this right upfront this is one of the wildest fantasy books I’ve read since I started reading fantasy in 1999-2000. The prologue is like Wheel Of Time epic but juiced up with BSG SF richness.

There’s no way for me to describe it but to implore readers to just read and decide for themselves. This book is for lovers of Tolkien, Sanderson and Christopher Ruocchio, those worldbuilding gods whose skills leave us readers wowed. Spencer Russell Smith can easily labelled in their level as one can easily see in this book. Besides the worldbuilding, this book has a lot of characters and it is action-packed to its gills. The story while straightforward, does require a lot of attention as the author drops us into the world of Efruumani and handholds us while giving us all the details and intricacies of the system within (I very much was reminded of my first read of R. Scott Bakker’s The Darkness That Came Before)

For me, this was such a wild read, that I had no comparison for it. The writing does take a while to adjust to and the prose is kept steady because of the way the main story unfolds. I had to go with the flow a lot as I was trying to take in all the world info and story details. This wasn’t the most enjoyable way, but this story demanded as the main story occurs over the space of 4 days and some hours and it ends with an explosive resolution that’s buttressed with two epilogues. 

All I will say about Throne Of Darkness is that this book is unlike any that you have read before, and while it does have its shortcomings (prose, information overload), the story pace, worldbuilding and magic system (gem, metal based, and light enhanced) simply overpowers those flaws. This is one of those titles which will have its fans and detractors in equal order but it is a hidden gem and Spencer Russell Smith can be proud of what a unique story he has envisioned. Throne Of Darkness is a unique science-apocalpytic epic fantasy in a league of its own. Read it and find out where you stand in its wake.

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So after finishing my lot, I had a very heavy choice to make. There were four obvious titles which I read and while they challenged me, each of them was enjoyable in their own special way. So I would like to highlight these four titles and implore SPFBO readers to check them out as it’s only due to the nature of the competition that I must select one among these four:




1) Chalmach Chronicles

2) Throne of Darkness

3) The Dragon of the Dread Deep

4) The Sins of Steel and Shadow

 

For choosing my SPFBO semifinalist, it came down to my personal enjoyment as to which book provided a full story and had the least flaws. I must apologize to all the authors as I don’t mean to imply that there was anything wrong with their stories. In choosing one among these four, the remaining three aren’t unworthy. They would have been my top choice in any previous edition, and I hope readers do check them out irrespective of my choice below….

So, without any further waiting, my SPFBO semifinalist is

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The Sins of Steel and Shadow by Steve Pannett was the one book which I enjoyed the most and will be putting forward for my FBC co-judges to read in our quest to select a finalist. Many congratulations to Steve Pannett and my commiserations to all the authors in my lot of six. I want to thank you for allowing me to read your books and giving me an opportunity to provide my thoughts on them. 


Categories: Fantasy Books

Comment on One-Third by Rich W

Benedict Jacka - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 17:04

Thank you forbthe update!

Categories: Authors

Comment on One-Third by Bill

Benedict Jacka - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 16:42

So pleased to hear that a regular annual release of IoM looks feasible again! Congratulations for keeping on with book#5 rather than waiting for the Book#4 edits before proceeding – it looks a winning strategy!

Thanks for keeping us informed and fingers crossed that “Early March” Edits are minor and don’t impact your new writing now that its going so well! (any idea why the edits were so long in coming this time?)

Categories: Authors

The Devouring Oscars

ILONA ANDREWS - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 16:13

Since the Oscars are just around the corner, it seems only fair that the Book Devouring Horde hold their own awards ceremony.

Andrea donated some extra-long purple shag carpet and Steve said any machine is a smoke machine if he operates it, so the ceremony part is clearly handled.

We just need you to pick the most beloved winners. Polls will stay open until next Friday and I’ve tried (operative word) to enable multiple options. You should be able to choose two answers in these, the most impossible of choices. Mwahaha!

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

Everything happened so much this week, why not pour your favourite drink and relax by thinking about your favourite among these capable, fierce men:

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post's poll.

But Mod R, there’s only one leading man from the Edge! So much squandered hunkiness! Yes, he’s my favourite, I love him the best, and this is my poll *phhhrrrrbttt*.

Now it’s your turn to nominate:

Suppose you wake up in an Ilona Andrews world* the way Maggie does in This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me: cold, confused, and very much alone. The protagonists are busy saving the day, so they’re not available to help you. Which supporting character do you go looking for first?

*Because the Innkeeper world is our world, we’ll mix it up and have you waking up in Baha-char, with nothing on you, not even a sneaker to trade the muckrats.

And if you can’t wait to find out how Maggie handled the world of her favourite series, reminder that the first chapters of This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me are currently running as a serial over at Reactor Magazine and are available as an extended preview for readers served by the US edition.

Take care out there, BDH!

The post The Devouring Oscars first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Categories: Authors

Comment on One-Third by Sean

Benedict Jacka - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 12:08

“I’ll be able to keep up my one-a-year target after all” You were CONCERNED about nothing.

Categories: Authors

Forgotten Authors: Theodora Du Bois

https://www.blackgate.com/ - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 12:00
Theodora Du Bois

Theodora McCormick was born on September 14, 1890 in Brooklyn, New York. Her father died when she was a year old and she was raised by her mother and stepfather. She attended the Barnard School for Girls in Manhattan and the Halsted School in Yonkers. Although she wanted to attend Vassar College and was accepted in 1909, her parents did not support her attending the school. Her plans to go anyway were dashed when she was diagnosed with tuberculosis and she found herself in a TB sanitarium instead. Eventually, in 1916, she enrolled in the Dartmouth Summer School for Drama.

While in the sanitarium, McCormick began writing poetry, although most of her poetry was written during this time and after she was healthy she focused on various forms of prose writing. In 1918, she married Delafield Du Bois and took the name Theodora Du Bois. Theodora gave birth to a daughter, also named Theodora, in 1919 and in 1922 had a son, Eliot.

The Devil’s Spoon

Perhaps best known as a playwright and mystery author, she wrote historical romances using the name Theodora McCormick, and other works of fiction and plays as by Theodora Du Bois. Her first published play, The Sleeping Beauty: A Play With or Without Pageantry, was first published in 1919 and, as the name implies, is a fantasy. Her first book, Amateur and Educational Dramatics was written with coauthors Evelyne Hilliard and Kate Oglebay and was published in 1917.

She began publishing fiction in 1920 with the short story “Thursday and the King and Queen,” which appeared in Woman’s Home Companion. She branched out to novels in 1930 with The Devil’s Spoon about a devil who possesses a human in order to fight against Satan’s plans to dominate the world (originally published as a novel, it would be reprinted in the June 1948 issue of Famous Fantastic Mysteries). Du Bois would return to the theme of possession in 1948 with The Devil and Destiny.

Later works, such as Murder Strikes and Atomic Unit and High Tension fell into the science fiction/thriller genre and other works during the 1940s and 50s also tackled the cold war, with Du Bois being dropped by her publisher in 1954 after her novel Seeing Red took on the issue of McCarthyism.

In addition to her dramas, mystery novels, historical romances, and science fiction works, Du Bois also wrote numerous juvenile works, beginning with Rocks and Rills: A Cartoon in Three Dimensions in 1932 through The High King’s Daughter in 1966.

When Delafield Du Bois worked on the Manhattan Project during World War II, the couple formed a committee at Yale University to help academics from Oxford and Cambridge who found themselves in the United States  during the war. Delafield died in 1965.

Titles published using the McCormick name included the medieval novel The Emerald Crown, the American Revolution novel Freedom’s Way, and the Irish novel The Love of Fingin O’Lea.

Du Bois died on February 1, 1986 in New York. She is buried in Moravian Cemetery in New Dorp, New York.

Steven H Silver-largeSteven H Silver is a twenty-one-time Hugo Award nominee and was the publisher of the Hugo-nominated fanzine Argentus as well as the editor and publisher of ISFiC Press for eight years. He has also edited books for DAW, NESFA Press, and ZNB. His most recent anthology is Alternate Peace and his novel After Hastings was published in 2020. Steven has chaired the first Midwest Construction, Windycon three times, and the SFWA Nebula Conference numerous times. He was programming chair for Chicon 2000 and Vice Chair of Chicon 7.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Book Review: House of Splinters by Laura Purcell

http://Bibliosanctum - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 07:26

I received a review copy from the publisher. This does not affect the contents of my review and all opinions are my own.

House of Splinters by Laura Purcell

Mogsy’s Rating: 4 of 5 stars

Genre: Horror, Historical Fiction

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: Blackstone Publishing (February 10, 2026)

Length: 346 pages

Author Information: Website | Twitter

My queen of gothic horror is at it again! Laura Purcell returns to the haunting concept she first introduced in The Silent Companions, bringing back those creepy wooden figures in House of Splinters. As a long-time fan of the author, stepping back into that eeriness and uncanny atmosphere felt like coming home, though as it turns out, home might not be the best choice of word.

The story follows Belinda Bainbridge, who has spent most of her life under the thumb of her anxious, overbearing mother. So when her father-in-law dies, prompting her husband Wilfred to relocate his family to take over management of his ancestral estate, Belinda quietly hopes the change will give her the chance to build a life of her own. With her young son Freddie approaching his breeching and another child on the way, the move feels like a turning point. However, the one tie from her past that she insists on bringing with her is her lady’s maid, a steady source of familiarity and reassurance as she prepares to leave her old life behind.

But when they arrive at the estate, known as the Bridge, Belinda quickly realizes it is nothing like the future she imagined. The place had never seemed particularly cheerful during her earlier visits, but now it’s practically falling apart. The house is in disrepair, the gardens neglected and lifeless. The villagers, long under the Bainbridges’ care, are resentful and wary of the family, whispering that they are cursed. Indeed, the Bridge has had its share of dark history, including an ancestor rumored to have been executed as a witch, the mysterious death of Wilfred’s sister when they were children, and the accidental death of a servant. Then there are the wooden figures known as silent companions, flat wooden cutouts once popular as household decorations during the Dutch Golden Age. Those that once belonged to Wilfred’s mother are found locked away in a room Belinda hopes to turn into a nursery, but once they are uncovered, strange things begin to happen. Freddie becomes oddly fascinated with them, talking to them and treating them like real people. And with the birth of her second child drawing closer, Belinda begins to fear that something is deeply wrong with the house and that something is haunting her family.

Considering The Silent Companions was the novel that first made me fall in love with the author’s work, one of the most exciting aspects of House of Splinters is how it reconnects with the world of the earlier book. While this novel tells a completely new story with completely new characters, Purcell cleverly revisits some familiar ground by returning to the Bainbridge family and the Bridge. Fans will recognize certain elements echoed in this one, like a pregnant protagonist, the rundown estate, the unwelcoming villagers, and of course, the stars of this horror show which are the silent wooden figures themselves. At the same time, this isn’t a rehash of the original plot with just a few things tweaked. Rather, it feels more like another chapter in the wider legacy of the unfortunate Bainbridges, exploring how multiple generations continue to become haunted by the house and the companions.

One of the things Purcell always does so well is atmosphere, and House of Splinters certainly delivers on that front. The Bridge is practically a character in its own right, and it serves as the perfect gothic setting with its isolation and decaying front, full of secrets that quite literally refuse to stay buried. You never know what might emerge from its overgrown grounds or from the shadows within the house, because the entire place carries an air of unease and the sense that something isn’t right. I’ve also always felt the companions concept had far more potential to explore, and they are again put to excellent use.

Beyond the paranormal elements, the novel also heartily embraces all the classic gothic themes. We have Belinda, a particularly sympathetic protagonist who wants so badly for her new life in her new home to work out, but feels increasingly trapped by the family secrets, societal pressures, and the guilt brought on by unrealistic expectations. And whenever children are involved, the horror becomes even more disturbing. Let’s just say there’s a reason why the “creepy child” trope has become so embedded in the genre, and Purcell taps into it big time here through Freddie’s increasingly strange behavior. The idea that something evil could be influencing a child or threatening a baby makes the implications especially chilling and difficult to shake.

If there’s any downside, it’s that the story takes some time to get going. But then again, it’s a gothic novel. Slow-building tension is par for the course. But once those threads start coming together, particularly with the arrival of Wilfred’s estranged brother Nathan, and the opening of the floodgates with regard to the Bainbridge secrets, things start gaining serious momentum. Is there something supernatural at work at the Bridge? Or is superstition and paranoia getting the better of our characters’ perceptions?

In the end, this ws another strong addition to Laura Purcell’s growing catalogue of spectacular gothic horror. If you enjoy slow-burning tales filled with atmosphere and uneasy mysteries, do yourself a favor and pick one up now. Dark and unsettling, House of Splinters is full of the creeping sense of dread that she does so well, and fans of her work will find plenty to enjoy here, along with the return of the eerie silent companions.

Categories: Fantasy Books

Early Review – So Far Away by Kat Mellon (4/5 stars)

http://hiddeninpages.com/ - Fri, 03/06/2026 - 07:08

Reading Level: Adult
Genre: Contemporary Fantasy/Science Fiction
Length: 324 pages
Publisher: Tarsier Publishing
Release Date: March 27, 2026
ASIN: B0GFQ82RXW
Stand Alone or Series: Stand Alone
Source: eGalley from NetGalley
Rating: 4/5 stars

“After two months of intensive group therapy, six individuals embark on a Thera Quest Inc. session—a simulated fantasy adventure guaranteed to incite lasting behavioral change in the real world. For thirty-year-old Elizatine, this means overcoming her beastly shopping addiction alongside five strangers with their own problems: Tanner and Lana, two middle-aged alcoholics; Amara, a young ambulatory wheelchair user with POTS mourning her loss of agency; Rowan, a thirty-something wracked by guilt from the death of his younger brother, and Felix; a charming and depressed entertainer. Within the simulation, the six must work alongside each other to deliver a cursed book while encountering whimsical hybrid creatures, unsettling personal trials, and hulking manifestations of their inner demons.”

Series Info/Source: This is a stand alone book. I got this on ebook through NetGalley for review.

Thoughts: I picked this book on a bit of a whim from NetGalley for review and was surprised how quickly I was engaged in the story. This is a fast-paced easy read that has an interesting premise. I think the only downside to this was that the world, the characters, and the plot were a bit simpler than I expected.

Six individuals are embarking on a fantasy quest through Thera Quest Inc. Their personal quest is to confront their issues using a new type of immersive therapy. Their fantasy quest is to deliver a cursed book to a frog person. We hear from each person individually, but the story really focuses on Elizatine (who has a shopping addiction) and Tanner (who is a recovering alcoholic).

This was a super quick and easy read that was fast-paced and engaging. In general, I liked all of the characters. They all (obviously) have some pretty big issues from their pasts that they are trying to work through. The premise of doing that through an immersive fantasy game is a fun one. The characters are all fairly likable, if a bit simpler than expected. There is a bit of a romance in here as well.

My biggest complaint about this is that everything is just a bit too straight-forward and simple. The characters working through their issues seem to do so easily and without many complications. The characters themselves are also somewhat two dimensional; they have easily explained issues they are working through from well defined past traumatic events. People are rarely that straight-forward. The plot itself is also fairly simple and straight-forward.

I do think maybe the simplicity of this story might be part of its charm. It is a fun concept, a quick read, the characters are likable, and the ending leaves you feeling hopeful. I guess I was just left feeling like there should have been a bit more to these characters and their stories. While I read this quickly and vaguely enjoyed it, I don’t think it is one of those books that I will ever think back on. This was more of a quick read that you are like “huh that was fun” and then you move on.

My Summary (4/5): Overall I liked this. This was a fun and fast-pasted read that has an interesting premise and likable characters. I did struggle with how easily these characters’ issues were solved and with how simple both the characters and the plot were. However, that may have been part of the charm to this story. It is simple, straight-forward, fun, and easy. While I don’t think this story left a lasting impact on me (it’s not the type of story I will probably even think about again after writing this review), it was a fun diversion. I would recommend if you think the premise sounds interesting and if you don’t mind more simplistic and straight-forward stories.

Categories: Fantasy Books

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