Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Time Loop Books to Make You Glad Tomorrow’s Coming

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with your first round of new releases for March! We’ve got a strong start for fantasy this month, that’s for sure. I write to you from the tail end of my glorious staycation, during which I ate many cookies and played many hours of video games while listening to audiobooks, and honestly? I’m feeling refreshed. I hope you have an opportunity soon to relax and do fun things, too. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


New Releases

Cover of A Thousand Steps into Night by Traci Chee

A Thousand Steps into Night by Traci Chee

Miuko is the ordinary, very human daughter of an innkeeper in the realm of Awara, where gods and monsters walk. When a curse is laid on her, she begins to transform into a demon, one who can kill with a single touch. She must embark on a dangerous quest to find a cure for this condition… except as she travels, she finds a freedom she never thought possible.

Stars and Bones by Gareth L. Powell

Seventy-five years from now, humanity flees a dying planet on a fleet of massive arks, each ship developing its own unique culture. One ship receives an alien distress call, and the crew sent to respond to it disappears. One of the missing is Eryn’s sister, and she joins the crew to search for them… but what they find is a terrifying and deadly threat that will follow them back home.

cover of Gallant by Victoria schwab

Gallant by V.E. Schwab

Olivia has spent what feels like all her life at the Merilance School for Girls, with her only memento of home her mother’s journal, a book that unravels into madness. Then she is invited back home to Gallant by a mysterious letter that no one at the house will admit to having known about. Even with no welcome from her family, Olivia feels more at home at Gallant than she ever has anywhere else, even after seeing ghouls in the hallways. There are secrets in the old house, and she will unravel them all.

Tell Me an Ending by Jo Harkin

Noor is psychologist who works at a memory removal clinic in London; while she spends her days helping people forget their worst moments, she has difficult connecting emotionally with others. Worse, she begins to suspect her boss, Louise, is engaged in some very shady business. Her life touches upon a series of customers, each of them wanting to forget a terrible moment in their lives… but then they must grapple with its absence afterward.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

News and Views

Cora Buhlert’s roundup of indie speculative fiction for February 2022

Here are the candidates for the 2022 Rhysling Award

SFF Author Michael Swanwick has resigned as the Honorary President of the International Union of Writers due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Reading Sword-and-Sorcery to Make the Present Less Real

Unseen JRR Tolkien paintings, photographs, and video clips released

Black History Month: How Octavia Butler’s legacy was born out of a bad science fiction movie

What I Learned from Breaking Up With D&D

On Book Riot

Morally Grey Heroines in Fantasy

Get Me Out of This Day! 10 Time Loop Books to Make You Glad Tomorrow’s Coming

The Best Books You’ve Never Heard of (Winter 2022)

7 of the Most Anticipated Middle Grade Fantasy Retellings

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Morally Grey Heroines in Fantasy

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’m writing to you from the depths of my couch, where I’ve been playing Destiny 2 non-stop for a week straight. I’m okay, I swear. (I am not emotionally all right after this expansion, but that’s just video game things.) But hey, it’s time to try to get my video-game-mazed brain to think about books, so let’s give it a shot! Stay safe (and warm) out there space pirates, and I will see you at the bright new dawn of March!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


News and Views

Announcing the Winners of the LeVar Burton Reads “Origins and Encounters” Writing Contest

Camestros Felapton made a little venn diagram about the role of rockets as a theme

Why can’t Hollywood sci-fi and fantasy imagine alternative to capitalism or feudalism?

The Ramen Connection: Books, Noodles, and Living the Pandemic Life

They Did the Thing

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about foodie SFF.

15 Funny SFF Romance Books That Put the ‘Punch’ in Punchline

8 Stellar Sci-Fi Books With Living Spaceships

23 of the Most Influential Fantasy Books of All Time

The Books I Think Shaped Me vs. the Books That Actually Shaped Me

Lies Librarians Tell

This month you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!

Free Association Friday: Morally Gray Heroines

Since I have The Witch Queen (my video game expansion) on the brain, I’ve been thinking a lot about morally grey characters. Destiny 2 is actually really great in that it’s got multiple female characters who are wonderfully written, very questionably moral people–Mara Sov, the Awoken queen, is one, and Savathûn, the Hive queen, whose story I just got to play through, is another. So how about some more morally gray heroines! Love ’em or hate ’em, you can’t look away from ’em.

The Jasmine Throne cover

The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri

Malini is, to all appearances, a completely powerless princess, exiled to die in the out provinces by her misogynist brother. But she is ruthless, and she is patient, and she will do anything to see him thrown from power and subjected to the vengeance he deserves. And then she meets Priya, a priestess of a culture subjugated by the empire, one that was ruthless and murderous in its own right… and the remaining adherents of that religion will stop at nothing to take their home back.

The Unbroken cover

The Unbroken by C.L. Clark

Luca is a princess in an empire, one with the good intention of getting her horrible uncle off the throne and replacing him. But in order to dethrone a bad emperor, she needs to bring magic back to her people… and one way to do that is to take it from the client state she’s been put in charge of. And it’s not the first questionable decision she’ll make in pursuit of her goals, nor the last.

The Queens of Innis Lear

The Queens of Innis Lear by Tessa Gratton

Between this book and its sort-of-sequel, sort-of-companion, Lady Hotspur, Tess Gratton has basically cornered the market on complicated, frustrating, and morally fraught female characters, most of whom are queens in the middle of power struggles that ask them to make terrible choices.

Cover of The Wolf of Oren-Yar by K.S. Villoso

The Wolf of Oren-Yaro by K.S. Villoso

Talyien became a queen in an arranged marriage because she wanted to protect her clan after the bloody War of Wolves. But then her husband mysteriously disappears before their joint reign even starts, leaving her to pick up the pieces in a fractured kingdom. She is another one who will do whatever it takes to protect her people, and she doesn’t care what anyone has to say about it.

the cover of traitor baru cormorant, showing an Asian woman's face rendered as a mask, in the process of shattering into pieces

The Traitor Baru Cormorant by Seth Dickinson

Baru Cormorant is the child of a people colonized by the Empire of Masks; she watched one of her fathers be murdered and her culture be slowly subsumed and overwritten. And she hatched a plan: she would destroy the Empire of Masks from within and free her people. The first step on that journey is joining the civil service and working her way higher in the ranks. But having a goal she will achieve no matter what the costs means that she is willing to sacrifice anything and anyone along the way.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

A World Where Nothing Needs to Make Sense

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with your last selection of new releases for February in this year, 2022. I am still honestly blown away by how gorgeous the cover is for The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea. We’re having another February cold snap in Colorado, so I’m curling up with a cat on either side of me and a book in my hands. Stay safe–and warm–out there space pirates, and I will see you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!


New Releases

Cover of The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea by Axie Oh

The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea by Axie Oh

Mina’s homeland has been torn by war and washed with brutal floods for generations. In an attempt to appease the Sea God, her people throw a beautiful maiden into the sea once a year to be his bride. The most beautiful girl in Mina’s village, Shim Cheong, is chosen to be this year’s sacrifice… but that’s the beloved of Mina’s brother. In order to save them both, Minna throws herself into the sea in Cheong’s place. The water sweeps her to the Spirit Realm, and there her adventure has only just begun.

cover image for Tripping Arcadia

Tripping Arcadia by Kit Mayquist

Lena is a med school dropout desperate for any job she can find to help her family out of dire financial straits. When she’s offered a position by one of Boston’s most elite families, she can’t possibly say no, even if the description of the position is vague and frankly bizarre. She’s to be the assistant to the family doctor and the sickly, drunken heir that he cares for by day. At night, she quickly discovers there is something strange and very sinister about this family… and that they are responsible for the ruin of her own.

Cover of Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman

Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman

Sol is an archivist with a terrible secret: he suffers from an illness known as vampirism. Being an archivist is a good career choice for him, since he can hide from the sun in his basement office. But when he meets Elsie, the widow of a somewhat famous television writer who is trying to donate her late wife’s papers, there’s a spark between them that will quickly bloom into love.

Cover of Only a Monster by Vanessa Len

Only a Monster by Vanessa Len

Joan is a monster, from a family of monsters, each of them with terrifying powers that they must carefully keep secret. And then she finds out that the cute boy she’s just met at her work is a monster slayer, and he’s hunting for her family. Jess must embrace her own monstrous nature if she wants to protect her family… because monsters don’t get happy endings.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

News and Views

Sarah Gailey: On Trauma-Informed Writing

Stranger Things is getting a fifth season

Interview with Steven H Silver (about alternate history!)

How Lewis Carroll Built a World Where Nothing Needs to Make Sense

Astronomy, sci-fi, and the roots of the space economy: my long-read Q&A with Alex MacDonald

What will California’s coast look like in 100 years?

On Book Riot

There’s still time for you to register to win a copy of Goliath by Tochi Onyebuchi!

12 Fascinating Near-Future Science Fiction Books

Time Traveling Books: Historical Fiction or Speculative Fiction?

Delectable YA Fantasy Duologies

This month you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

The Stabby Award Winners You Should Read

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, writing to you from another snowy week in Colorado while I’ve got a cat in my lap. So I am going to keep this short and sweet… because while it’s not a bad place to be, he’s making it really hard for me to type! This little monster. I hope everyone has had a lovely week, and stay safe out there, space pirates–I’ll see you on Tuesday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


News and Views

We got a trailer for Jordan Peele’s new movie, Nope

Here’s an interview with Kyoko M.!

Peer into the Uncanny Valley With these AI-Generated Fake ’70s Sci-Fi Book Covers

Octavia Butler imagines a world without racism

Science Fiction Goes Mainstream: The Marian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury

There’s going to be a Bioshock movie

John Cena Is the Reason That Peacemaker Isn’t Straight

Drought Exposes an Underwater ‘Ghost’ Village in Spain

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! is about performers in SFF novels

The Best LGBTQ Books of 2021, According to American LibrariansSorrowland made the list!

12 Things You Didn’t Know About LeVar Burton

A Definitive Ranking of Goosebumps Covers

Win a copy of Goliath by Tochi Onyebuchi

Or you can enter to win a copy of Solimar: The Sword of the Monarchs by Pam Muñoz Ryan

This month you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Free Association Friday: The Stabby Awards

I mentioned that the winners of the awards were announced earlier this week, but I wanted to shine the spotlight on them now!

Cover of Never Have I Ever by Isabel Yap

Never Have I Ever by Isabel Yap

Winner of Best Anthology, Collection, or Periodical.

This is Isabel Yap’s first short story collection, a set of fantasy stories that range from urban legends to the fairy tales of immigrants. And you cannot beat this start:

“Am I dead?” Mebuyen sighs.

She was hoping the girl would not ask.

Cover of Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells

Fugitive Telemetry by Martha Wells

Winner of Best Novella.

After the inimitable Murderbot discovers a dead body on Preservation Station, it has no choice but to assist station security to determine the identity of the decedent… and that there was, indeed, murder involved. Not Murderbot murder, however. It’s going to require all of Murderbot’s skill and energy to do the worst… speak with humans.

Cover of She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

Winner of Best Debut Novel.

In 14th century China, a family of starving peasants in the Central Plains are given two fates–for their eighth-born son, there will be greatness, and for their second-born but highly clever daughter, there will be nothing. But when the son dies after the two children are orphaned in a bandit attack, the daughter sees her chance to change her fate.

Cover of Of Blood and Fire by Ryan Cahill

Of Blood and Fire by Ryan Cahill

Winner of Best Self-Published/Independent Novel.

Epheria is a land divided, north and south, where the High Lords of the latter are only held in check by the Dragonguard who serve the former. Calen Bryer is a young man preparing for the Proving, a test he may not survive, even as he struggles with the recent, tragic loss of his brother. Then three strangers arrive in his town and throw him head first into a centuries-old war.

Cover of The Shadow of the Gods by John Gwynne

The Shadow of the Gods by John Gwynne

Winner of Best Novel.

A century after the gods fought war that ended in their extinction, those who want power seek out their bones. But gods will not stay dead forever, and the fate of the realm of Vigrid rests in the hand of a huntress pursuing dangerous quarry, a noblewoman seeking fame in battle, and a former thrall turned mercenary searching for vengeance.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Congratulations To the Winners of the 2021 Stabby Awards!

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got another round of new releases for you to check out–there’s a lot coming out this week! I hope everyone had a great weekend, whether you were looking at Super Owls or not. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


New Releases

cover of Mickey7 by Edward Ashton, image of astronaut floating in space next to a giant number 7

Mickey7 by Edward Ashton

There was only one position available when Mickey joined the colonial expedition, so he took it, since it had to be better than nothing. Now, knowing that it involves going on all of the dangerous, suicidal missions the rest of the crew doesn’t want to deal with, he’s starting to doubt his choice. Every time he dies, a new body is generated for him, one with most of his memories. When the seventh version of him goes missing on a scouting mission, the crew wastes no time making a Mickey8… but then Mickey7 returns alive and well. And there can be only one iteration of an expendable at a time. The other is destined for the recycler.

The Thousand Eyes by A.K. Larkwood

Sequel to The Unspoken Name. Two years after escaping into the unknown, Csorwe and Shuthmili have new lives and a new profession: hunting for magical secrets. And they’ve allowed Tal Charossa to tag along, even. But when an expedition goes wrong and they find themselves hunted by a new enemy, it brings them right back to Belthandros Sethennai. Because the enemy of your enemy is… less of an enemy, perhaps.

the cover image of Reclaim the Stars

Reclaim the Stars: 17 Tales Across Realms and Space edited by Zoraida Córdova

This is an anthology of stories about the Latin American diaspora that ranges from a magical now to a far future, from Earth to other planets to fantastical realms. It features stories by: Vita Ayala, J.C. Cervantes, Zoraida Córdova, Isabel Ibañez, Anna-Marie McLemore, Yamile Saied Méndez, Daniel José Older, Claribel A. Ortega, Mark Oshiro and Lilliam Rivera, and more!

Dark Breakers by C.S.E. Cooney

Dark Breakers is a story collection from World Fantasy Award-winning author C.S.E. Cooney that contains five stories, three of which have never before been published. The common thread is the veil between worlds, the gentry, and their crossing into the human realm.

Moon Witch, Spider King book cover

Moon Witch, Spider King by Marlon James

In the previous book, Black Leopard, Red Wolf, Tracker and the Moon Witch Sogolon clashed in a mythical African landscape, brought into opposition by the disappearance of a mysterious boy. Now it’s time for Sogolon to tell her story–and that of a century-long feud with the chancellor fo the king.

Age of Ash by Daniel Abraham

An ancient trade center named Kithmar is home to many people and each has a unique story to tell. Alys is a petty thief from the slums; when her brother is murdered, she sets out to find his killer and answer the most difficult of questions: why? The deeper she delves into his life, however, the more she learns about herself, and the more she might wish to forget.

the cover of bitter by akwaeki emezi

Bitter by Akwaeke Emezi

The city of Lucille is a place divided by many deep injustices, and people are beginning to wake to that and protest it. But Bitter, who has lived her life in foster care, is just happy to have been chosen to attend Eucalyptus, a special arts school where she can focus on her painting. The new friends she’s made are interested in the justice movement, while all she wants to do is work on her art and find romance. Can she find a way to take part in the revolution and remain true to herself?

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

News and Views

Congratulations to the winners of the 2021 Stabby Awards!

Tor.com reveals Africa Risen, a new anthology of African and Afro-diasporic SFF

Teaser trailer for The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and here’s a Vanity Fair article about the series, with a bunch of “first look” pictures

John Williams, Hollywood’s Maestro, Looks Beyond Movies

Finding True Love With The Last Unicorn

On Book Riot

Quiz: What Work of Speculative Fiction Should You Read Next?

10 of the Best SFF Standalone Books

Pre-Order-Palooza: 2022 Black SFF to Preorder Now

Register by February 16 to win an audio copy of Our Dark Duet and This Savage Song by V.E. Schwab.

This month you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Pre-Order-Palooza: 2022 Black SFF To Preorder Now

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I have some pre-orders that you should consider this lovely February, as well as a few fun links to check out. We’re not quite halfway through the month, but I’ll admit my thoughts are nothing but screaming about the video game Destiny (if you want to see why…) because it’s t-minus eleven days until it swallows my life. Until then, books! Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Tuesday.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


News and Views

The Wheel of Time from a Geological Perspective

Futurama is coming back, on Hulu

Alex Brown’s selection of must-read speculative short fiction from January 2022

New issue of Imaginary Papers!

Marlon James did an AMA

The National Book Foundation Science + Literature program has selected 3 titles for this year

On Book Riot

Queer Retellings Coming Out 2022

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about some favorite SF/F magazines

How I Fell in Love With YA Fantasy

Don’t forget to check out our new line of bookish, Wordle-inspired merch! There are mugs, t-shirts, hoodies, and more. The campaign is temporary, so order yours now!

You have until February 14 to register to win a copy of Nettle and Bone by T. Kingfisher. Or register by February 16 to win an audio copy of Our Dark Duet and This Savage Song by V.E. Schwab.

This month, you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Free Association Friday: Pre-Order-Palooza

Since February is Black History Month, I like to celebrate it by showing as many awesome Black SFF authors as possible some pre-order love. So if you’d like to join me, here’s a non-exhaustive list of what’s coming up in 2022! (Please note that release dates seem to be… flexible these days.)

Cover of The Memory Librarian by Janelle Monáe

The Memory Librarian (And Other Stories of Dirty Computer) by Janelle Monáe (April 19)

This is a collection of stories by Janelle Monáe and a collection of collaborators expanding upon her landmark album Dirty Computer, telling the stories of a world where thought and memory can be controlled or erased by a few elites who believe they have the right to control the fate of everyone.

The Merciless Ones by Namina Forna (May 31)

Sequel to The Gilded Ones. Six months after freeing the goddesses and discovering the truth of her identity, Deka faces a kingdom at war with itself and a people who call her and those like her monster. And the battle has only begun…

Cover of Survive the Dome by Kosoko Jackson

Survive the Dome by Kosoko Jackson (March 29)

An aspiring journalist named Jamal Lawson heads to Baltimore to document a protest against police brutality after the murder of a Black man. But Baltimore implements a new safety protocol: a dome that surrounds the city and enforces a militarized shutdown. No one can leave. Jamal must find what allies he can in the increasingly violent and oppressive lockdown if he wants to free the city… and survive.

Bloodmarked by Tracy Deonn (November 8)

Sequel to Legendborn. Bree has become much more than she never expected: medium, bloodcrafter, scion. She’s infiltrated the Legendborn Order and discovered her own power. But now she must use this power to take her place in the ancient war between the demons and the Order.

Cover of Sweep of Stars by Maurice Broaddus

Sweep of Stars by Maurice Broaddus (March 29)

It’s taken generations for the Muungano Empire, a coalition of city-states that stretches from original Earth to Titan, to free itself from the endless wars and oppression of Earth and build into a true utopia. But the powers remaining behind on Earth aren’t interested in letting them thrive and will stop at nothing to destroy everything they’ve built.

Moon Witch, Spider King by Marlon James (February 15)

The sequel to Black Leopard, Red Wolf. After her clashes with Tracker in the previous book, the 177-year-old Moon Witch Sogolon has her own tale to tell.

Cover of The Blood Trials by N.E. Davenport

The Blood Trials by N.E. Davenport (April 5)

Ikenna, the granddaughter of a murdered Legatus, seeks justice and revenge for his death. In order to do this, she must become one of the Praetorian Guard, and to achieve that she must first pass the trials, a brutal contest that kills three quarters of those who attempt it. Beyond that, her half-Khanaian heritage and her gender direct far more prejudice upon her head. But truth–and revenge–will not wait.

Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (April 19)

Sequel to Black Sun. After the Crow God’s eclipse, the great city of Tova has been shattered, and a comet that heralds death is about to make its appearance in the skies. Ordinary people and living avatars struggle for survival and self as enemies no longer held by empire prepare for war.

Cover of The Ballad of Perilous Graves by Alex Jennings

The Ballad of Perilous Graves by Alex Jennings (June 21)

Perilous “Perry” Graves is a failed magician who makes his home in the gorgeous, wonder-filled city of Nola, where music is magic and haints dance in the night. But nine songs of power have escaped the city’s heart, and if they aren’t recovered, Nola will fall. It’s up to Perry and his sister to find the songs and save Nola.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

The Headless Stars of Amazon’s new Lord of the Rings Series

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got a few new releases for you in this second week of February–for some reason, not a lot of books were coming out today. Hopefully there’s still something to pique your interest in the selection available! Over this weekend, I had the pleasure of taking a dear friend to Convergence Station, an interactive art experience by Meow Wolf. This is my second trip there, and I love this intersection of art and speculative fiction. If you ever get a chance to go yourself, take it! Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


New Releases

Note: The new release lists I have access to weren’t as diverse as I would have liked this week.

Cover of Clean Air by Sarah Blake

Clean Air by Sarah Blake

The climate apocalypse isn’t rising sea levels or heatwaves; it comes with overgrown plant life filling the air with so much pollen that no one can breathe it. Izabel lives in a world with people living in a series of airtight domes, one where humanity is finally flourishing again and there is safety and prosperity. Then an unknown person begins slashing domes open, letting the outside air in to kill the residents–a new kind of serial killer. And Izabel’s daughter begins having strange sleep-conversations about the murders.

The Book of the Most Precious Substance by Sara Gran

The titular book is a 17th century manual on sex magic, which just might be the most powerful occult book ever written… if it exists. Lily, a former novelist who has consigned herself to loneliness after suffering a tragedy, sets out to find this book under the promise of how much money she’ll be paid if she can. The world’s wealthiest people might wish to fulfill their desires with black magic… but it’s Lily’s desire to join their ranks.

Cover of Rise of the Mages by Scott Drakeford

Rise of the Mages by Scott Drakeford

Emrael Ire is an ordinary man who wants only to be a weapons master… but his final test becomes surviving an insurrection that ends with his brother enslaved. In so doing, he discovers a powerful, latent magic within himself, a skill he never wanted or imagined he might have. His one stroke of luck is his War Master tutor is also an undercover mage, and she might be able to teach him the skills he needs if he’s to rescue his brother and defeat the Fallen God.

Stan Lee’s The Devil’s Quintet: The Armageddon Code by Stan Lee and Jay Bonansinga

Five former Navy SEALS, each with a different background, are brought into a special ops unit and dispatched to the Caucasus to stop a terrorist threat. When their mission goes awry, they’re offered a bargain by the literal Devil, who offers them mystical powers that will allow them to send evil people directly to Hell for his enjoyment. But no gift from the Devil comes without strings, and each member of the the new Devil’s Quintet must struggle against the corruption of their powers or face damnation themselves.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

News and Views

The Octavia Butler Novel for Our Times

The Horror Writers Association is running a Black Heritage interview series

A man in a Star Wars costume gives out free masks to travelers. Meet “The Maskalorian.”

File770 has chosen all 30 of its semifinalists for the Self-Published SF Competition 2021

Amazon Releases Lord of the Rings TV Show Character Photos With One Thing Missing

The Winterfell set from Game of Thrones got set on fire

A Riftwar Cycle series is one again in development

Bill Nighy Will Play David Bowie’s Role in The Man Who Fell to Earth Series on Showtime — unsure how to feel about this but… who could even follow in Bowie’s footsteps?

On Book Riot

Queer Retellings Coming Out in 2022

The World of YA Book Covers

Legendborn Series Is Being Adapted Into a TV Show

Back For More: 12 Exciting Sequels Coming in 2022

Fantasy Tiger Books to Read in the Year of the Tiger (ICYMI when it was in the newsletter!)

This month you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Snowy SFF to Read During a Blizzard

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and this week, I got a snow day! As an adult! Whence the the theme this week for free association Friday. The Colorado Front Range got hit with a nasty snow storm, so we hunkered down inside while the flakes piled up. Hope you stayed warm wherever you are, space pirates. I’ll see you on Tuesday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


News and Views

Nerds of a Feather have put out their Hugo Awards recommended reading lists for 2022: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3

Voting for the Stabby Awards is open and ends on February 7

Clarkesworld has announced the finalists for the 2021 Reader’s Poll

An absolutely hilarious twitter thread of “I fed a bunch of convention programmes to an AI and here are the panel titles it spat out”

Sci-fi’s Empty Techno-Optimism

The Hugo Book Club blog posits that science fiction ended in 1973 (and not in the way you think)

Robert E. Howard: Tiers of Canonicity

Solarpunk Magazine run by crypto bros?

The Guardian view on prescience in novels: reading the future

What Happens If a Space Elevator Breaks

On Book Riot

Stuck in You Mind: 8 Fascinating Characters in SFF

How I’m Decolonizing My Sci-Fi Reading

This week’s SFF Yeah! is about recent faves

Terry Pratchett Is Getting an Official Biography, Out This Year

9 Books to Read If You Love Pokémon

This month you can enter to win a year of tailored book recommendations, a $200 gift card to the Ripped Bodice, and $50 at your favorite indie bookstore.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Free Association Friday: Snowy SFF

As I mentioned above, it is a snowy time in my home state–and I know we’re not the only ones–so how about some more cold and snowy SFF? The last time I looked at books with snow in them was over two years ago, and there’s still plenty to choose from without repeats!

Cover of Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

The events of this book collapse in on the inflection point of the winter solstice, which is when a god may be reborn and an empire might fall. And as one might expect of a winter solstice, it’s cold and snow in the canyon that’s the center of that empire. I know I mention this book a lot, but that’s because it’s so freaking good.

The Five Daughters of the Moon by Leena Likitalo

With the Crescent Empire about to fall to a revolution, five sisters are going to determine its future. Each one has her own life and desires, but the Great Thinking Machine that may or may not be powered by evil magic has no time for their pedestrian lives. The whole setting is historical fantasy Russia, so expect it to be cold.

cover of The Changeling by Victor LaValle

The Changeling by Victor LaValle

Apollo Kagwa and his wife Emma are supposed to have a happily ever after with the birth of their new baby, but then Emma insists the baby is not actually hers, but a changeling… A story that’s in a lot of ways about post-partum depression and the difficulties of being a new parent–but also about an ancestral curse all the way from Norway laid on a family that really does not deserve to have bad crap happen to them. There’s not actually snow until the end of the book, but the whole thing feels like winter, emotionally.

The Brief History of the Dead by Kevin Brockmeier

This book is split roughly in half, with part of it describing the City, which is a boundless afterlife that’s neither heaven nor hell, a place where the people remain as long as there is someone alive who remembers them. The other half is about an employee of Coca-Cola who is dispatched to Antarctica to research if they can use the ice melting courtesy of climate change in their products. Things go very wrong for her, with a deadly virus that was probably engineered in a lab sweeping across the world right as she arrives and leaving her stranded.

Cover of We Have Always Been Here by Lena Nguyen

We Have Always Been Here by Lena Nguyen

A very dysfunctional crew of humans and their robot servants are sent by a corporation to explore an ice planet where some very strange things are happening. This book swings between the claustrophobia of being trapped on a ship with a bunch of people who don’t like each other to being trapped on a hostile ball of ice and snow where everything is going wrong. And then things get werid.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

A Rage Virus, Alien Bounty Hunters, Nihil Marauders, and More SFF New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got some fresh new releases, coming in hot for this very first day of February. I hope you all had a lovely weekend–I spent an absolutely embarrassing amount of time playing video games while I listened to audiobooks, but dang it was some relaxation I needed. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


New Releases

Note: The new release lists I have access to weren’t as diverse as I would have liked this week.

Cover of This Woven Kingdom by Tahereh Mafi

This Woven Kingdom by Tahereh Mafi

Alizeh appears to be an unimportant and disposable servant–but she is the long-lost heir to a Jinn kingdom, hiding in plain sight for her own safety in the kingdom of a human. The crown prince, Kamran, already worries about the prophecies of his king’s death… but little does he suspect that a servant girl in his own house will be at the center of the coming storm.

The Violence by Delilah S. Dawson

Chelsea Martin is a housewife in an outwardly perfect marriage that is in fact a nightmare of domestic abuse perpetrated by her husband David. When a strange condition of unknown origin sweeps across the nation, causing anyone infected to explode into fits of animalistic rage and attack anyone nearby, Chelsea sees in it the opportunity to save herself and her daughter from the monster that’s been living with them all along.

Cover of Star Wars The High Republic: Midnight Horizon by Daniel José Older

Star Wars: The High Republic: Midnight Horizon by Daniel José Older

The Republic believes that it’s finally got the Nihil marauders beaten… until they seem to attack the Galactic Core itself, causing destruction on Corellia. Jedi Masters Cohmac Vitus and Kantam Sy and their Padawans are sent to investigate, though none of them are in the best mental place to be doing so, dealing with the after effect of months of danger and trauma. What they uncover shows the attack is not a lone incident, but part of a greater design aimed right at the Jedi.

Azura Ghost by Essa Hanson

Caiden has spent the last ten years constantly on the run, keeping his Graven ship, the Azura, out of the hands of Threi. His life has almost become a routine… until his childhood friend he’s long believed was dead reappears, and lures him into a far more deadly game of keep-away with Threi’s sister, Abriss. If he wants to survive and fly free, his will have to unlock the Azura’s full power… and confront his own origins.

Cover of Hunt the Stars by Jessie Mihalik

Hunt the Stars by Jess Mihalik

Octavia “Tavi” Zarola is the dedicated leader of a crew of bounty hunters, a found family she’ll do anything to keep together. Strapped for cash and at the end of her rope, she’s forced to take a job from her sworn enemy, a ruthless former general named Torran Fletcher. But with the amount of money on offer, it comes with a big catch–Torran and his own crew are going to be joining up with Tavi. As sparks fly between Tavi and Torran, they also uncover a plot that threatens the delicate peace between the humans and the alien Valoffs.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

News and Views

An uplifting pandemic drama? How Station Eleven pulled off the impossible

Can science fiction wake us up to our climate reality?

An official biography of Sir Terry Pratchett is coming

And so is season 2 of Good Omens

Cora Buhlert’s roundup of indie speculative fiction for January 2022

Eric Schwitzgebel recommend five sci fi books that go deep into philosophy

How LeVar Burton Landed Whoopi Goldberg Her Role on Star Trek

JMS did a commentary video on the Babylon 5 episode “The Coming of Shadows”

Dungeons & Dragons & Novels: Revisiting The Halfling’s Gem

Welsh town to retell tale of how it built Star Wars‘ Millennium Falcon

Doctor Who fans find hidden Scots “Easter egg” in released scripts from the latest series

Studio Ghibli theme park!

On Book Riot

8 of the Best Queer Space Opera Books

Toil and Trouble: 8 Bewitching Books About Magic Schools

You can enter to win a copy of The Supervillain’s Guide to Being a Fat Kid by Matt Wallace

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.

Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Fantasy Tiger Books to Read In the Year of the Tiger

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got some tiger-themed books for you as we head toward Lunar New Year. I hope you’ve got some delicious dumplings and noodles in your near future–I certainly do. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I will see you on Tuesday for the first new releases of February!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: NDN Collective and Jane’s Due Process


News and Views

RUSA has announced its year’s best in genre fiction for adult readers

Malorie Blackman on seeing her sci-fi novel about a pig heart transplant come true

Judging a Book by Its Covers: The Foundation Trilogy

Who Was Clifford Ball?

Here’s a cool free Zoom lecture coming up: Blasting into Space: The Poetics of Faith and Astronomy in 17th Century England

On Book Riot

20 of the Most Accurate Sci-Fi “Predictions”

Teaser Trailer Released for Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio

15 Things You May Not Know About J.R.R. Tolkien

The Changing Impact of Books and Timeless Truths: Thoughts While Reading Station Eleven

Why Star Wars Villains Have the Best Stories to Tell

10 Fascinating Sci Fi Books Like The Matrix

8 of the Best Queer Horror Books

Ninth House Gifts for Fans of Leigh Bardugo

This week’s SFF Yeah! is about 2021’s stats.

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes and Noble gift card and a Nook Glowlight Plus. Canadian readers can enter to win a waterproof Kobo.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Free Association Friday: Tiger Books

We’re only four days away from Lunar New Year, and then it’ll be the Year of the Tiger. (And the Water Tiger at that!) The tiger isn’t the most common animal seen in in SFF–that award probably goes to horses, cats, and dragons–but there are still quite a few good books to fulfill your tiger needs.

when the tiger came down the mountain cover

When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain by Nghi Vo

A monk confronted by not one, not two, but three hungry tigers needs to buy time if they don’t want to be eaten (and they don’t), so they get the tigers talking, telling the story of a female tiger that fell in love with a human woman. The monk and the tigers each have their own version of the story, but when there are disagreements… it’s probably better to let the tigers win.

the cover of Tiger Honor

Tiger Honor by Yoon Ha Lee

Tiger spirits… in space. A young tiger spirit joins the space forces because they want to captain a battle cruiser some day like their uncle. But just as they’re accepted into those ranks, that uncle is declared a traitor for supposedly stealing the fabled Dragon Pearl. The only possible course of action is to clear their uncle’s name… but there’s a special investigator on the case that seems intent on making matters even worse.

the cover of the fireheart tiger

Fireheart Tiger by Aliette de Bodard

Thanh is the princess of a kingdom that hasn’t been violently conquered, but is in danger of being slowly crushed under the weight of an empire that will colonize them all the same. She spent her childhood “visiting” that empire, where she fell in love with the ruler’s daughter in a romance that’s both deeply unhealthy and definitely not acceptable to her own mother. But she’s made a friend along the way… a fire spirit, who loves her even more fiercely.

the cover of The Years of Rice and Salt

The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson

An alternate history in which the Black Death is far more devastating to Europe than it already was, killing 99% of people there. As with all KSR novels, the scope is an epic expanse of time… and this involves reincarnation, with the characters moving through the eras. And at one point, one of them gets reincarnated as a tiger.

the cover of The Tiger at Midnight

The Tiger at Midnight by Swati Teerdhala

Admittedly not a tiger-focused book, but it’s in the title, and it’s a fun book. The story draws inspiration from both Indian history and Hindu mythology, and follows an assassin named Esha, who all others fear as the Viper, who’s given an important mission: taking down a general who contributed to the royal coup that took everything from her.

the cover of the tiger's daughter

The Tiger’s Daughter by K. Arsenault Rivera

Barsakayaa Shefali isn’t literally the daughter of a tiger, but the story behind how she got that moniker is an epic of war and prophecy and sapphic love that then continues on for two more books. She and the love of her life are the only hope for stopping the incursion of demons that would be happy to consume the world.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!


See you, space pirates. If you’d like to know more about my secret plans to dominate the seas and skies, you can catch me over at my personal site.