It’s a nearish-future world in Adam Roberts’ latest novel The Real-Town Murders, wherein a large proportion of people spend a large proportion of their time in the Shine, an immersive Internet/virtual reality world where everything is better and more convenient than the Real-Town.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Gareth D Jones: Unofficially the second most widely translated science fiction short story author in the world
Friday, August 25, 2017
Sunday, August 20, 2017
Book Review: Killing Is My Business by Adam Christopher
It was a quiet afternoon in my office when the parcel landed on my desk with a thud. Brown cardboard, clear sticky tape and address handwritten in black ink. I knew exactly what it was and where it came from. A review copy of Killing Is My Business by Adam Christopher.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Monday, August 14, 2017
Classic Book Stats
In several previous posts I've mentioned some of the 'classic' SF books that I've read over the past few years. I decided to quantify how many of the 'best' or 'classic' books I've read, with the aid of Goodreads. This is what I came up with:
The 'Best' list at the top is the Best Science Fiction top 100 on Goodreads, which is probably as valid as any other 'Best of' list. The others obviously refer to the major Science Fiction awards, and I've also included the SF Masterworks imprint.
These various lists give me some idea of books to add to my to-read list and I've decided to start with some that appear on more than one list.
List | Number | Read | % |
Best | 100 | 55 | 55% |
Hugo | 71 | 30 | 42% |
Locus | 47 | 18 | 38% |
Nebula | 54 | 20 | 37% |
SF Masterworks | 170 | 53 | 31% |
BSFA | 48 | 12 | 25% |
Campbell | 45 | 8 | 18% |
Clarke | 29 | 3 | 10% |
The 'Best' list at the top is the Best Science Fiction top 100 on Goodreads, which is probably as valid as any other 'Best of' list. The others obviously refer to the major Science Fiction awards, and I've also included the SF Masterworks imprint.
These various lists give me some idea of books to add to my to-read list and I've decided to start with some that appear on more than one list.
Friday, July 28, 2017
Book Review: Our Memory Like Dust by Gavin Chait
In the middle of the twenty-first century, war and drought still ravage Africa and millions of people are displaced and heading towards an unwelcoming Europe. Giant energy corporations battle over profits and governments struggle to provide answers to any of mankind’s problems while Jihadis run rampage over much of Northern Africa. Despite all of these all-too-familiar problems forming the background of Our Memory Like Dust, Gavin Chait has not written a gritty tale of gloom and disaster but a surprisingly uplifting novel of determination and innovation.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Wednesday, June 21, 2017
Putting the Science in Fiction
Tuesday, June 20, 2017
Book Review: The Guns Above by Robyn Bennis
It’s airships and rifles in a kind of Napoleonic-era war in the steampunkish debut novel The Guns Above by Robyn Bennis. Other than the steam engines mounted on the airships and the mention of trains, there’s little of the traditional Victorian steampunk ethos in this book. But there’s plenty of adventure, grittiness and sarcastic comments.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Wednesday, June 07, 2017
Book Review: The Wandering Earth by Cixin Liu
After reading Cixin Liu’s Three-Body trilogy last year and subsequently meeting him in person for an interview, I have been looking forward to reading his first translated short fiction collection, The Wandering Earth. Three of his short stories were published in English in the Ken Liu edited volume Invisible Planets, but only one of those appears among the ten stories in this volume, half of which have won the prestigious Galaxy Award in China.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Tuesday, May 30, 2017
Book Review: Dark Run by Mike Brooks
Dark Run is the debut novel by Mike Brooks with a book full of dodgy space bars, roguishly heroic smuggler captains and assorted crewmembers with dubious pasts, mechanically augmented humans and seedy underground dwellings.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Tuesday, May 23, 2017
Family Flash Fiction Challenge
Alex, Haydn and I have all written stories for this month;s flash fiction challenge. You can read all the entries here, and even comment and vote if you like.
Friday, May 19, 2017
Book Review: The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi
‘The Collapsing Empire’ is the first book in a new series by award-winning author John Scalzi and the first of his books that I’ve read. The setting is a far-flung interstellar empire know as the Interdependency, over a thousand years in the future, where planets are connected via poorly-understood faster-than-light conduits known as the Flow.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Read the rest of my review at SF Crowsnest.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)