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S for Solidarity: Revolutionary Poetics in NO GODS, NO MONSTERS

April 19, 2021 Theodore McCombs

Cadwell Turnbull's new novel — the first in a trilogy — imagines the hard, uncertain work of a fantastical justice.

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In Reviews Tags Cadwell Turnbull, No Gods, No Monsters, No Gods No Monsters, Black Lives Matter, African-American speculative fiction, The Lesson
1 Comment

The Empire of Gold - Djinn Kingdom of Daevabad Falls then Rises

November 6, 2020 Lisa Mahoney

In this final novel of The Daevabad Trilogy, Ali, Nahri, and Dara are morally challenged beyond endurance by the rise of death magic in their beloved kingdom. How they respond changes everything.

Read more
In Reviews Tags non-Western fantasies, S.A. Chakraborty, Lisa Mahoney
Comment

A Spectral Revhue: Review of Craig Laurance Gidney’s Novel

October 23, 2020 Theodore McCombs

Craig Laurance Gidney’s Marsh-bell Queen is half muse, half greedy ghost, and all fascinating.

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In Reviews Tags A Spectral Hue, Craig Laurance Gidney, African-American speculative fiction, Black Speculative Fiction, Art, Theodore McCombs, Queer Literature
Comment

The Interrogation of Reality: Aimee Bender’s "The Butterfly Lampshade"

October 10, 2020 Guest Contributor
Butterfly Lampshade cover.jpeg

Butterfly Lampshade is Aimee Bender’s first novel in a decade and the follow-up book to her incredible short story collection The Color Master (2013). A book about memory and isolation that we didn’t know we needed.

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In Reviews Tags M. Shaw, Amiee Bender, Literary Fantasy
Comment

“Architects of Memory” by Karen Osborne: Don’t Let the Corporations Grind You Down

August 28, 2020 Mark Springer

Karen Osborne’s debut is part sci-fi adventure, part love story, and 100% critical of unfettered corporate capitalism.

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In Reviews Tags Science Fiction, aliens, Capitalism, Karen Osborne, Mark Springer
Comment

"Every Bone a Prayer" by Ashley Blooms: A Review

August 7, 2020 Sean Cassity
EveryBone.jpg

Every Bone a Prayer, the impressive debut novel by Ashley Blooms, is an expressionistic To Kill a Mockingbird of personal trauma.

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In Reviews Tags Ashley Blooms
Comment

"The Glass Hotel" by Emily St. John Mandel: A Review

July 17, 2020 Corey Dahl

The new novel from the author of Station Eleven is eerily relevant, and it’s not even about a pandemic this time.

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In Reviews Tags Emily St. John Mandel, Corey Dahl
Comment

The Book of Dragons: Dragons of all Creeds, Temperaments and Worlds

July 3, 2020 The Unbound Writers
the anthology compiled by Jonathan Strahan for Harper-Voyager, available beginning July 7, 2020.

the anthology compiled by Jonathan Strahan for Harper-Voyager, available beginning July 7, 2020.

A diverse collection of sci fi and fantasy stories and poems about Western and Eastern dragons and their relationships with families and humans, blood and gold.

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In Reviews Tags JY Yang, Gemma Webster, Lisa Mahoney, Garth Nix, Brooke Bolander, Anne Leckie, The Expanse, Daniel Abraham, R. F. Kuang, Aliette de Bodard, Dark
Comment

"Engines Beneath Us" by Malcom Devlin: A Review

June 19, 2020 Gemma Webster
Cover Art for Engines Beneath Us by Malcom Devlin. Art by Richard Wagner. Description: Close-up of a boy’s face. His eyes are bright blue and pierce the dark shadow over half of his face. He is foregrounded by a chain-link fence that dissolves in th…

Cover Art for Engines Beneath Us by Malcom Devlin. Art by Richard Wagner. Description: Close-up of a boy’s face. His eyes are bright blue and pierce the dark shadow over half of his face. He is foregrounded by a chain-link fence that dissolves in the shadow on his face. Behind him is complicated machinery that looks like a scene of boilers and exhaust pipes with an industrial walkway.

Looking for your next read? Check out Malcom Devlin’s Engines Beneath Us available now from TTA Press.

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In Reviews Tags Malcom Devlin, TTA Press, Gemma Webster, Novella
Comment

“Network Effect”: Self-Determination Is a Pain in the Ass

May 8, 2020 Mark Springer

Volume five of The Murderbot Diaries, reviewed.

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In Reviews Tags The Murderbot Diaries, Martha Wells, Science Fiction, Rogue AI, Mark Springer, Dark
Comment

"Thin Places" by Kay Chronister: A Review

April 26, 2020 Gemma Webster
Cover art for Thin Places by Kay Chronister. Image description: A veiled woman stands alone in a darkening room. Cover art by Stephen Mackey. Cover design by Vince Haig.

Cover art for Thin Places by Kay Chronister. Image description: A veiled woman stands alone in a darkening room. Cover art by Stephen Mackey. Cover design by Vince Haig.

You won’t want to miss this haunting debut collection. Thin Places by Kay Chronister available now from Undertow Publications.

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In Reviews Tags Kay Chronister, Undertow Publications, Gemma Webster, Horror, Feminism, Weird Fiction, Dark
1 Comment

The Author of “Cat Person”: Kristen Roupenian’s First Collection

April 18, 2020 Guest Contributor
you-know-you-want-this-9781982101633_lg.jpg

Guest contributor M. Shaw reviews Roupenian’s studies in feminist horror.

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In Reviews Tags M. Shaw, Kristen Roupenian, Cat Person, Horror, Feminism, female protagonist
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"The Word Want Is So Embarrassing": Georgina Bruce's “Honeybones," Reviewed

March 20, 2020 Gemma Webster
Cover art for Honeybones by Georgina Bruce. Cover design by Vince Haig. Image description: baby doll face reflected in a broken mirror with one eye filled with a light blaze, a flower of decayed leaves halo the mirror and there is a suggestion of so…

Cover art for Honeybones by Georgina Bruce. Cover design by Vince Haig. Image description: baby doll face reflected in a broken mirror with one eye filled with a light blaze, a flower of decayed leaves halo the mirror and there is a suggestion of something with black wings deep in the background.

Reading something dark and fantastic is great for enduring a pandemic.

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In Reviews Tags Georgina Bruce
Comment

William Gibson’s “Agency”: Cooperate or Die

March 13, 2020 Mark Springer
agency-cover.jpg

What does it mean to have agency when we find ourselves at the mercy of events utterly beyond our control?

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In Reviews Tags William Gibson, Science Fiction, Time Travel, Mark Springer
1 Comment

Many Världs Theory: A Multiverse Romp through Consumer Retail

February 21, 2020 Theodore McCombs
FINNA by Nino Cipri.jpg

Nino Cipri’s novella FINNA, reviewed.

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In Reviews Tags Nino Cipri, FINNA, Multiverse, Capitalism, Queer Literature
Comment

Avian Horror in Clare Beams's "The Illness Lesson"

February 7, 2020 Amanda Baldeneaux
illness lesson.jpg

Flocks of red birds haunt a school where girls are shaped by the desires of others. Clare Beams examines the creeping horror of growing up female.

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In Reviews Tags The Illness Lesson, Clare Beams, Historical Fiction, Amanda Baldeneaux
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The Power of Place in Leigh Bardugo's "Ninth House"

January 31, 2020 CH Lips
Cover art for Ninth House (Flatiron Books 2019)

Cover art for Ninth House (Flatiron Books 2019)

In Leigh Bardugo’s Ninth House the unlikely place of New Haven, Connecticut is one of the world’s centers of magical power.

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In Reviews Tags Leigh Bardugo, Fantasy, CH Lips, Dark
Comment

For Those Who Dream of Fire: “Riot Baby” by Tochi Onyebuchi, Reviewed

January 17, 2020 Gemma Webster
Riot Baby by Tochi Onybuchi cover art features a close-up photo of the face of a young black woman with the title jumbled across it. Cover design by Jaya Micele. Cover photo © Getty Images.

Riot Baby by Tochi Onybuchi cover art features a close-up photo of the face of a young black woman with the title jumbled across it. Cover design by Jaya Micele. Cover photo © Getty Images.

Reader be warned: Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi, coming out from Tor.com, is not for the faint of heart. That said, you should definitely read it. This book is violent because the lives of the children of Compton in the ‘90s were violent. Whenever a book opens with violence told nonchalantly, you have to know you are in for a lot of it. If you liked HBO’s Watchmen, you will also enjoy Riot Baby. The book opens with a scene on a school bus with the kids inside throwing Crip signs at the Bloods on the street. When a Blood boards the bus and holds a gun to a kid’s head, we see that our narrator, Ella, is an astute observer of her world.  

“Ella can see in the gangbanger’s eyes that he’s got no compunctions about it, the guy would meet disrespect with murder.”
— Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi

This is the reality of Ella’s world. Ella’s not only a keen observer; her powers are supernatural and continually unfold throughout the book. When we first meet her, we see that she can perceive the future for herself and for others. This ability comes at a cost—she not only experiences the emotional trauma of seeing people dying around her but also feels it physically. Coming from a neighborhood where violence is quotidian, this is a heavy burden for Ella to bear.  

Onyebuchi’s language is spare but there is poetry in the beauty of his observations and in the way he renders relationships. 

“Brother Harvey says a prayer for all of them; then he sends them back out to their parents or grandparents or people who act like their parents because they need to.”
— Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi

The absence of family stability is clear but so too is the way the community comes together to take care of each other. There is love in this hard place. Ella’s family is no exception: her biggest source of stability is a woman she calls grandmother, though they are not related, and the love between them is big. She has an unreliable extremely religious pregnant mother. She does not have a father. She has some friends and connections, but she is a lonely character because of her powers, which her family demands she keep secret, and the foreknowledge that she will always be leaving. 

The story is set against the backdrop of violence perpetrated against black communities in America. The first time marker is the police beating of Rodney King in 1991, which set off the L.A. Riots. Ella’s brother, Kev, a.k.a. Riot Baby, is born as the chaos begins. When the family emerges from the hospital, they see their city burned to the ground. Other markers include the police murder of Sean Bell, Oscar Grant III, Walter Scott and the Charleston Church shooting. He also seems to allude to the shooting of Tyrone Harris Jr. at the Michael Brown anniversary protest, though I wasn’t sure. (I’d be interested to hear from anyone more well versed in the topic as not all events are given names.) Riot Baby moves through Compton, Harlem, Rikers and Watts, and the violent incidents carry us from 1991 to 2015 through the terrifying America we know and then moves into a speculative future of the America we might get. 

This book touches on a theme I have been curious about for a long time and that is the notion of freedom. How much do we actually have? What makes a person feel free? Something that I love about genre literature is the capacity it has for tackling big questions and for dealing with villainy at the systemic level. This book does both beautifully. 

“Prison’s weird like that. All types of absurd shit happens here, and you just need the patience to step back and watch it happen. Maybe that comes with time. Maybe not. Maybe you spend your entire sentence here getting the shit kicked outta you. Maybe they kill you in here. But maybe you make it out. Not from behind bars, but out of wherever it is they try to put you when they put you behind bars.”
— Riot Baby by Tochi Onyebuchi

This book is great for readers who are looking to learn about the modern oppression of Black Americans while reading an entertaining story about siblings, power and freedom and whether the right course of action is just to burn it all down. 

Riot Baby is available now for pre-order. Get it from your local bookstore in person or online. Or, if you must, the evil empire will certainly have it too. 


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S for Solidarity: Revolutionary Poetics in NO GODS, NO MONSTERS
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Cadwell Turnbull's new novel — the first in a trilogy — imagines the hard, uncertain work of a fantastical justice.

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Happy New Year from Fiction Unbound
Happy New Year from Fiction Unbound

Happy New Year - Welcome 2021

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Victorians liked to tell ghost stories around the hearth at Christmas. Here’s an old-but-timely one you can share around yours, even if it involves Zoom and/or the Yule Log channel.

2020 Speculative Holiday Gift Guide from Fiction Unbound
2020 Speculative Holiday Gift Guide from Fiction Unbound

We’re almost done with this, um, interesting year. That in itself is cause to celebrate. (photo credit:Patrick A. Mackie)

The Empire of Gold - Djinn Kingdom of Daevabad Falls then Rises
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A Spectral Revhue: Review of Craig Laurance Gidney’s Novel
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Craig Laurance Gidney’s Marsh-bell Queen is half muse, half greedy ghost, and all fascinating.

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A Survey Course In Fear and Wonder
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There is so much out there to read, and until you get your turn in a time loop, you don’t have time to read it all to find the highlights.

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The Interrogation of Reality: Aimee Bender’s "The Butterfly Lampshade"
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Butterfly Lampshade is Aimee Bender’s first novel in a decade and the follow-up book to her incredible short story collection The Color Master (2013). A book about memory and isolation that we didn’t know we needed.

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In Reviews Tags Riot Baby, Tochi Onyebuchi, Tor.com, Gemma Webster, Black Lives Matter, Dystopia, Freedom, Prison, African-American speculative fiction
Comment

"The Gods of Jade and Shadow": A Heroine's Journey into the Mayan Underworld of Xibalba

January 10, 2020 Lisa Mahoney
https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/577066/gods-of-jade-and-shadow-by-silvia-moreno-garcia/

A welcome entry into the non-Western fantasy field set in the ancient Mayan underworld, Xibalba, and the Mexican Jazz Age.

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In Reviews Tags non-Western fantasies, Lisa Mahoney, Sylvia Moreno-Garcia
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A Good Discussion: Fiction Unbound Editors Talk Connections Between "The Good Place" and "Good Omens"

December 13, 2019 The Unbound Writers
Good Omens - Good Place.jpg

The Fiction Unbound editors discuss connections and similarities between The Good Place and Good Omens. Meta observations about storytelling and what makes us human ensue.

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In Reviews Tags Terry Pratchett, Neil Gaiman, Danyelle C. Overbo, Lisa Mahoney, CS Peterson, The Good Place, Good Omens, Nietzsche, Beetlejuice, CS Lewis
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