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Edition 10: Book Review: The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

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 Reviewed by Sophie Yorkston


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It can be hard to delve back into childhood; our youthful minds cannot always interpret events that have a significance and adult context. Artfully, Neil Gaiman has carefully fostered the voice of his inner child, crafting The Ocean at the End of the Lane into an adult fairy tale.

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Edition 11: Book Review: Throne of the Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed

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 Reviewed by Damien Smith


 

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I’m going to be old and grey by the time I make a dent in my ever-growing “To Read” pile, but occasionally I seek some distraction from my line up because I feel like reading something specific. At the start of the year I had a sudden yearning for some decent sword and sorcery, which had been missing from my line up since I finished rereading The Complete Conan (highly recommended, by the way, but not what this review is about). A friend mentioned a book Throne of the Crescent Something by someone I’d never heard of as a decent yarn, so I thanked them and then promptly forgot the name of both author and book.

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Edition 11: Book Review: Black Bottle Man by Craig Russell

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 Reviewed by Mysti Parker


 

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How do you beat the devil and live to tell about it?

Craig Russell explores this mythical question in Black Bottle Man. Though targeted to the teen/YA audience, this metaphorically rich fable is a pleasure for any word-a-holic to read.

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Edition 12: Book Review: All is Fair by Emma Newman

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 Reviewed by Sophie Yorkston


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If you find it hard to believe nothing touches our universe at the dark and murky edges, or that the old world allure of England is not solely maintained by the diligent people of our historical societies, the third instalment of the Split Worlds will appeal to those always questioning what more is out there.

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Edition 12: Book Review: Under The Empyrean Sky by Chuck Wendig

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 Reviewed by Damien Smith


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Those who are familiar with Chuck Wendig’s blog will know he likes to set some bizarre writing challenges from time to time. A little while back, the challenge was set to come up with a thoroughly bizarre something-punk genre, on the premise that the ‘something’ is what essentially runs that world. For example steampunk and dieselpunk worlds essentially run on steam and diesel respectively.

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Edition 13: Book Review: Unidentified Funny Objects 2 edited by Alex Schvartsman

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 Reviewed by Damien Smith


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For anyone carefully reading the heading up there it will come as no surprise that this is the second in a series of planned annual humorous speculative fiction anthologies. I would not normally review a subsequent anthology in a series; however, there is such a dearth of similar offerings around that I had to put it through its paces.

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Edition 13: Book Review: The Hazards of the Old Ones by Ren Garcia

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 Reviewed by Mysti Parker


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When I began reading the second book of my friend Ren Garcia’s Elder League series, I expected a good story with all the sci-fi/steampunk fun of the first one, but I didn’t expect the depth of feeling this book contained. If I hadn’t already been hooked by the first book, I would definitely have been hooked with this one.

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Edition 1: Book Review: The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

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 Reviewed by Mysti Parker


cover The Night Circus

The circus arrives without warning.

From this memorable opening line, Erin Morgenstern’s “The Night Circus”, is more than just a good book. It’s an experience.

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