
Cover Reveal: The Crossover by Andrew Gillsmith
Loppy plans a vacation aboard The Love Craft, but a detour to Fantasy Planet forces Gus to face his fears and battle Mr. Kratsch to save entertainment!
Review: The Wingspan of Treason by L.N. Bayen
A stunning slow-burn adventure with rich characters, beautiful prose, and masterful world-building. A captivating plot that will leave you eagerly craving more!
Review: The Soulburn Talisman by David Mcllroy
Three teens are thrust into a magical realm with monsters and magical creatures. To escape, they must race against time, face haunted forests and ruthless foes.
Review: The Night Lords Omnibus by Aaron Demski-Bowden
The Night Lords trilogy is Aaron Demski-Bowden's magnum opus, the epitome of grimdark fiction and a must read for all Warhammer fans. Ave Dominus Nox!
Review: Iron Gold by Pierce Brown
Iron Gold sinks its gorydamn claws into you, urging you forward until the dust doesn’t settle, but lingers in the air, enticing you to grab the next book.
Review: Coyote Run by Lilith Saintcrow
A short, anti-fascist, pulpy, urban sci-fi that is just good fun! I don’t fully know where I went or what was always going on but I enjoyed the entire ride.
Review: The Sound of Starfall by Scott Palmer
The Sound of Starfall was dark, gritty, and epic while shocking me with jaw-dropping revelations which made me want to immediately re-read A Memory of Song.
Review: Heavenly Tyrant by Xiran Jay Zhao
Heavenly Tyrant was Xiran coming back to say ‘Eat the rich, destroy the patriarchy and prepare for my THEY-triarchy’. My entire existence is here for all of it.
Review: The Daughters' War by Christopher Buehlman
The Daughters' War is a worthwhile supplement to The Blacktongue Thief, but that’s all I found it to be: supplementary reading, rather than required reading.
SPSFC4 Review: Mercy Rising by Bowen Greenwood
The writing in Mercy Rising was crisp, fast paced, pulled me right into the story, and was fraught with tension throughout, even with the hero/anti-hero trope.
Review: Dark Bloom by Molly Macabre
An apocalyptic zombie horror in the present, a twisted thriller in the past, and a touch-her-and-die romance to top it off. I present the best horror I’ve ever read.
Review: The Land Herself by Ainy Cormac
A dark fantasy tour de force. Cormac’s storytelling leaves me dying for more, and I can’t wait to see what’s in store both in this series, and beyond.
Review: Yumi and the Nightmare Painter by Brandon Sanderson
I loved his new brand of moodiness and the nods not only to eastern culture on page but also the style of storytelling I’ve come to love through anime and manga.
Review: A Song of Bones by Isaac Anderson
Mice being kidnapped by rats, forced to work in horrid conditions underground. That’s all the book promises but we get so much more. Care for more info?
Review: The New Patriots by Jake Theriault
For the terminally ill, death is patriotism, so we find ourselves in an alternate—and horrifyingly possible—USA rife with plague, disease, and immorality.
SPSFC4 Review: The Murder Algorithm by Wilson Kincaid
Framed for a murder, Roman Glass tries to clear his name, and he’s not alone, however things get out of control by those who wish to hide it. Care for more?
SPSFC4 Review: Ceres Station Calling by R.M. Bradley
If you’re looking for sci-fi with an abducted girl struggling with her humanness in a mining prison with hunky aliens making things complicated, this is your book.
SPSFC4 Review: The City That Disappeared by Cheryl Peña
Rebecca Vance, concerned about a settlement on an alien planet, goes to investigate with her friend, Mark Wu, however things start going wrong. Care for more?
Review: One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig
The ambiance takes you through the fog on a rather satisfying adventure with a very cool magic system set in mysterious lore that unravels quite beautifully.
Review: The Way Up is Death by Dan Hanks
A gripping story of survival in a tower where each floor reflects personal fears. Complex characters and deep themes make this a thought-provoking read.