Categories
Swords and Spaceships

SFF Releases by Women to Preorder Now

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Friday, and I’m here with some pre-orders for your perusal and a few links you might find fun. I hope it’s been a good week out there for you–hopefully with a lot less wind than we’ve had here, shaking the house–and you’ve got a relaxing weekend with lots of reading time coming at you. 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

Eugen Bacon: Finding Me: Towards Self-Actualization in Writing

What if the Mandalorian’s armour was birch bark instead of beskar? An Algonquin artist brings that to life

GRRM talks about The Rise of the Dragon

The Tolkien estate recently made a bunch of his paintings and drawings available for online viewing!

Shin Godzilla Turned a Monstrous Eye on Bureaucracy in the Wake of Fukushima

Morena Baccarin Reveals That Online Blowback Led to Her De-Fridging in Deadpool 2

On Book Riot

In this week’s SFF Yeah! Podcast, we revisit speculative poetry

10 More Alien Books

What Is Science Fiction?

Are Novelizations Worth Reading?

Win a copy of The Bone Orchard by Sara A. Mueller

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.

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

Free Association Friday: Another Pre-Orderpalooza

March is women’s history month, so how about some upcoming SFF books by women to pre-order for this year? Show them some love!

Cover of Kaikeyi by Vaishnavi Patel

Kaikeyi by Vaishnavi Patel (April 26)

Kaikeyi is the only daughter of the kingdom of Kekaya, and she was raised on tales of the gods and their fantastic powers that allowed them to vanquish evil. But the stories she hears don’t match the reality she sees, where her mother is exiled and Kaikeyi herself is nothing but a pawn to be married off. She turns to the books that taught her the stories and discovers a magic that allows her to transform from a princess to a warrior–and queen.

Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse (April 19)

Sequel to Black Sun.

With the city of Tova shattered by the Crow God’s eclipse and the social order falling to pieces, Xiala and the former Priest of Knives must find a way to survive as allies–and try to help two living avatars find their way to remain human.

Cover of The Stardust Thief by Chelsea Abdullah

The Stardust Thief by Chelsea Abdullah (May 17)

Loulie al-Nazari is a criminal who sells illegal magic, guarded by a jinn. After she inadvertently saves the life of a cowardly prince, his father blackmails her into finding a magical lamp that will sacrifice all of the jinn to revive the barren land. She and her bodyguard must survive an epic quest–and at the end waits more truth than Loulie could ever imagine.

The Oleander Sword by Tasha Suri (August 16)

Sequel to The Jasmine Throne.

Malini has been declared the rightful empress and is determined to claim that throne, but deposing her brother will be no easy task, no matter how great the army that follows her. And Priya wants nothing more than to free her country from that empire’s rule, even if her soul is intertwined with Malini’s. Their coming together may be the only way to save both of their people, though it will cost them dearly.

Cover of The Final Strife by Saara El-Arifi

The Final Strife by Saara El-Arifi (June 21)

Sylah grew up in the resistance, training for the day she would lead her people to topple the ruling class… until her entire family was murdered. But when she meets Anoor, daughter of the most powerful ruler in the empire, the heat that sparks between them is undeniable. When the empire begins a new series of trial by combat that will find its newest cohort of leaders, they team up with Hassa, a girl who has survived by being socially invisible, to set events in motion that will burn the entire order to the ground.

Babel by R.F. Kuang (August 23)

After his family dies to cholera in Canton, Robin Swift comes to London at the behest of a mysterious professor. There, his days are devoted to the linguistic studies that will get him into Oxford University’s Royal Institute of Translation, which is also called Babel. But beyond languages, Babel is a center for the magic that’s made the British Empire a world-dominating power. Soon Robin realizes that his residence in this academic utopia comes at the cost of betraying his motherland.


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

We Need Diverse Villains

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with another round of new releases for you and some links to check out. Wow, where the heck did that weekend even go? I’m still not sure. But I’m ending it writing to you with a cat purring in my lap, so I guess things could be a lot worse. 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, so white authors are overrepresented here.

Cover of The Bone Orchard by Sara A Mueller

The Bone Orchard by Sara A. Mueller

Charm is a witch alone, the last of her line, a child of a conquered people. She lives confined to the Orchard House and its bone trees, which she tends for the sake of her children. She acts as the madam to a house filled with girls who are not real, and every Tuesday is the mistress of the emperor. But when the emperor is dying, he summons her to his bedside and tasks her with choosing which of his terrible sons will carry on the empire… and finding out which of them has murdered him. If she completes these tasks, she will have her freedom… but she will have betrayed her past.

Remember Me Gone by Stacy Stokes

The Memory House in Tumble Tree, Texas, is a place where people come to have their most painful memories removed by the family that’s long practiced this trade. Lucy, now sixteen, is finally old enough to learn. Her father tries to teach her, using himself as a subject, but she can’t pry his memories loose… and instead sees far more than she should, including a moment from the day her mother died, one that’s left her father wracked with guilt. As she investigates this memory, she realizes that she, herself, has gaps in her memory…

Cover of The City of Dusk by Tara Sim

The City of Dusk by Tara Sim

The City of Dusk is a place where Life, Death, Light, and Darkness–the Four Realms–converge on the city as night falls. Each of the realms has a god of its own, and an heir to that god. Once, the city thrived under their care, but the four have withdrawn their favor and the city is dying–and with it, the realms. It is up to the four heirs to join forces to save the city, no matter what their defiance will cost them.

Comeuppance Served Cold by Marion Deeds

In late 1920s Seattle, a well-respected mage and city leader is trying to criminalize certain types of magick users, and with them its most vulnerable population. He hires a companion for his daughter, intent on curbing her rebellious behavior, but who he gets is the widowed owner of a speakeasy looking to avenge her husband’s murder.

Cover of Plutoshine by Lucy Kissick

Plutoshine by Lucy Kissick

In a future where terraforming has become commonplace, the next great frontier is Pluto, at four billion miles from the Sun and an average temperature of 200 degrees below zero. Humanity’s greatest scientists and engineers are making the project work with captured asteroids and engineers… until they are sabotaged. This horrifying act leaves one family shattered, the father comatose and nine-year-old Nou unable to speak. But Nou might hold the key to what happened… and why someone is trying to destroy the project.

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

News and Views

Brandon Sanderson with Some FAQs You Might Enjoy

Marlon James: Representation doesn’t just mean heroes. We need the villains as well.

Webb Just Sent Back Its First-Ever Sharp Image of a Star

A Sudden Outcry: The Tolkien Estate and Fanworks

The Time Traveler’s Wife shares trailer for new Steven Moffat series

This is a bit of a spoiler but I am SO JAZZED: Stacey Abrams makes a surprise appearance in Star Trek as president of Earth

The Secret Sounds of Dune: Rice Krispies and Marianne Faithfull

On Book Riot

Me(ET) Cute: 9 Thrilling First Contact Stories

What Adaptations of “Little Red Riding Hood” Tell Us About the Lasting Power of Fairytales

Exactly Who Is Moon Knight?

Intro to the Social Horror Genre

You can enter to win a copy of John Scalzi’s The Kaiju Preservation Society

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.


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 Nebula Novella Finalists

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’m here to tell you about the Nebula Finalists for the Novella category this week–as promised. I’ve also got a few links for you to check out, but since it’s a big category this year (for cool reasons) we’ll mostly focus on that. I hope y’all have a really great weekend coming at you! 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

How I learned to stop worrying and love Christopher Nolan’s $200 million Sudoku puzzles

Why Dune should win the best picture Oscar

Interview: Eugenia Triantafyllou

Unutapped Star Wars Spinoff Ideas

Today’s Hottest Speculative Fiction Authors Answer Our Burning Questions

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about must-reads

The Lambda Literary Awards Have Announced Their 2022 Finalists

Win a copy of Kaiju Preservation Society by John Scalzi!

Why We Drink in Medieval Fantasy

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.

Free Association Friday: Nebula Novella Finalists

As promised last week, I’m going to shine the spotlight on the Nebula Finalists in the Novella category this year. The category is actually extra big, because Martha Wells declined her nomination and there was a three-way tie for sixth, just below the line, so now all three of those novellas get to be on the finalist list! In no particular order, the finalists are:

Cover of Flowers For the Sea by Zin E Rocklyn

Flowers for the Sea by Zin E. Rocklyn

After their kingdom was flooded, the few survivors struggle along on an ark with scant resources, always aware of the ravenous beasts that circle them. Iraxi is one of the refugees, a common who is pregnant with a child that might not be entirely human, ostracized because she refused the advances of a prince. Her fate and her child’s will change their world… though for better or ill is the question.

The Giants of the Violet Sea by Eugenia Triantafyllou

On the island of Alimnia lives an old woman who is a tattoo artist for the dead, who ensures that their spirits can reach the promised waters of heaven, and her estranged daughter. They come together to clear the air between them, to lay to rest a lost brother and son.

Cover of The Necessity of Stars by E. Catherine Tobler

The Necessity of Stars by E. Catherine Tobler

Elder diplomat Bréone Hemmerli has one last task she’s set herself–to negotiate a new peace between humanity and a species of aliens that have come to an Earth slowly falling to ruin due to climate change. Unfortunately for Bréone and the future of humanity, her memory has also started to fail… and when she and the alien, named Tura, find a way forward, she can no longer remember.

Sun-Daughters, Sea-Daughters by Aimee Ogden

In a space opera retelling of The Little Mermaid, the galaxy has been populated by scattered clans of gene-edited humans, those who live in the sea and those who live on land. The daughter of a Sea-Clan lord, Atuale, started a war between two clans by choosing to marry a land-bound husband. But now he and his people are dying of a plague, and she must find a cure at all costs.

the cover of the fireheart tiger

Fireheart Tiger by Aliette de Bodard

Princess Thanh spent most of her childhood as a hostage in the kingdom of Ephteria, which hasn’t moved to colonize her homeland… though it’s only a matter of time. While there, she had her first romance–with the daughter of Ephteria’s ruler–and survived a devastating fire that destroyed much of the royal palace. Now back home, she must navigate between that first love, her conflicted relationship with her disapproving mother, and her loyalty to her home country–and herself.

And What Can We Offer You Tonight by Premee Mohamed

Jewel is an established courtesan in a luxurious and well-renowned House in a far-future city where the government will cull anyone for a single mistake. Jewel is keeping her head down and living her life… until one of her friends dies at the hands of a client and then, even more shockingly, comes back to life.

Cover for A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers

A Psalm for the Wild-Built by Becky Chambers

Centuries ago, the robots used as mindless workers in Panga became self-aware and walked out into the wilderness, never to be seen again. Until one day, a tea monk having a crisis of purpose meets one of the robots who has returned. The robot has a very specific mission: to find out the answer to the question, “What do people need?”

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

Restless Dead, the Realm of the Djinn, a Poets’ War, and More SFF New Releases!

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a round of really cool new releases for you.. on the Ides of March. I cannot attest that there is no brutal betrayal and stabbing in these books… but there also might not be. You’ll just have to read to find out. 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 When We Were Birds by Ayanna Lloyd Banwo; dark blue with pink and green flowers forming the outlines of a man and a woman

When We Were Birds by Ayanna Lloyd Banwo

Yejide and Darwin meet at the gates of Fidelis, an ancient and sprawling cemetery on the island of Trinidad. Yujide has been left a legacy she doesn’t want by a neglectful and bitter mother: she is the one woman with the power to shepherd the city’s souls to the afterlife. Darwin was raised as a devout Rastafarian, forbidden from interacting with death at all… but the only job he’s been able to find is as a gravedigger. Together, they will contend with the restless dead of the city and their own wounds that need to be healed.

The Cartographers by Peng Shepherd

Nell Young hasn’t spoken to her father, legendary cartographer Dr. Daniel Young, since he fired her and ruined her reputation over a cheap highway map that sparked an argument between them. But when her father is found dead in his office with that same worthless map hidden in his desk, Nell has no choice but to investigate both his death and the map. And what she finds is this apparently common thing might be the last of its kind–because a mysterious person has been hunting them down and destroying them.

Cover of Kundo Wakes Up by Saad Z. Hossain

Kundo Wakes Up by Saad Z. Hossain

After the powerful AI named Karma goes silent, there is nothing to save the dying city of Chittagong from falling into the sea and taking all of its remaining residents with it. Kundo goes searching through Chittagong for his missing wife; along the way he will build a crew of unlikely companions and journey from cyberspace to the magical realm of the djinn.

What We Harvest by Ann Fraistat

Hollow’s End is a picturesque small town turned tourist attraction because of its “miracle” crops, including the iridescent wheat grown on Wren’s family farm. But Quicksilver blight has come, destroying those crops one by one, and then bleeding into the earth, infecting the livestock and wildlife… and then the humans. Wren is one of the last people standing, and it’s up to her and her ex to find the source of the blight and save their town.

Cover of The Carnival of Ash by Tom Beckerlegge

The Carnival of Ash by Tom Beckerlegge

Cadenza is a city run by poets, also called the City of Words. Its libraries are legendary and legion; its printing presses are its thrumming heartbeat. Carlo Mazzoni arrives with the intention of making a name for himself, but as he steps through the gates, the city’s bells are tolling for the death of the poet-leader. Instead of an exciting place to perfect his art, he finds a city at the verge of war–and a web of intrigue that might destroy Cadenza and take him with it.

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

News and Views

Storytelling and the Craft of Quiltmaking

My Le Guin Year: Storytelling Lessons from a Master

I Put a Spell on You: Robert E. Howard’s Conjure and Voodoo Stories

Hitchcock’s sci-fi movie, “a forecast of days to come”

You can watch Black Feminist Futures Series: Planting the Future

Star Wars fans rally to raise funds to support transgender youth: “This is something we refuse to stand by silently for”

Hoard of the rings: “lost” scripts for BBC Tolkien drama discovered

SFWA has finally changed its name from Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America to Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (this is a change we’ve been waiting on for a long time!)

Privatising the moon may sound like a ridiculous idea, but the sky’s no limit for avarice

On Book Riot

20 Must-Read Genre-Bending Sci-Fi Books

8 Fantastic Middle Grade Books for Dungeons & Dragons Fans

Enter to win a copy of The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books merch bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.


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 Novel Nebula Finalists You Should Read

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and this week we’re talking Nebula finalists in the novel category! It’s a really nice array of books this year–scroll down if you want to see the list. (The novella category is also super cool, but we’ll talk about that later.)

It’s been another cold week in Colorado, which is actually pretty normal for us, but I’ve been reminding myself of the joy of non-instant hot chocolate and it’s made my evenings a delight. I hope you are staying warm where you are. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I will see you on Tuesday for the Ides of March!

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


SFF eBook Deals

Beasts of Prey by Ayana Grey for $5.99

The Big Book of Science Fiction edited by Ann and Jeff Vandermeer for $2.99

Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho for $1.99

News and Views

On Coming to Ursula K. Le Guin in My Own Time

A Look at Andre Norton’s Witch World

Why Stories Are Dangerous – and Why We Need Them Anyway

My Super Hero Is Black will tell the other history of the Marvel Universe

What I Owe Bounty Hunter Leia

On Book Riot

The Birth and Evolution of Gaslamp Fantasy

8 Fantastic Middle Grade Books for Dungeon & Dragons Fans

9 of the Best Jewish Fantasy Books

The Evolution of the Magical Girl in Manga and Anime

Bookish Dragon Goods for Your Hoard

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about award-winning short fiction, among other things

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.

Free Association Friday: Nebula Finalists!

The finalists for the Nebula Awards, given by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, came out on March 8, and it’s a great list. Let’s shine a spotlight on the novel nominees this week. (Novella for next week, because that’s another fantastic list.)

The Unbroken cover

The Unbroken by C.L. Clark

The empire Luca is to inherit is crumbling around her as her uncle, sitting on the throne, continues to make matters worse. Her best opportunity is a land long since conquered, where she can sway the rebels there toward peace… and use them to reclaim the magic her land has long since lost. There she meets Touraine, a soldier conscripted by the empire as a child, whose bonds of blood to her homeland should be long broken… and aren’t.

Cover of A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark

A Master of Djinn by P. Djèlí Clark

It’s 1912 in a Cairo very different from the one we know, where Djinn have come into the world and the Ministry of Alchemy, Enchantments, and Supernatural Entities regulates magic. When an entire secret brotherhood is slain, Agent Fatma is put on the case and discovers the murderer claims to be the man to whom that brotherhood was dedicated–al-Jahiz himself, the one who opened our world to magic. Whether he is real or imposter, he must be stopped, and she’s the woman to do it.

Machinehood by S.B. Divya

By 2095, people generally don’t die from violence–instead they get taken out by designer diseases or starve in the streets because they can no longer keep up with AI squeezing them out of the gig economy. The key to survival is a plethora of pills. Welga is an executive bodyguard in this milieu, and when her client is killed by a mysterious terrorist group called the Machinehood, she finds herself in the middle of a plot to stop all pill production.

Cover of A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine

A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine

The sequel to A Memory Called Empire sees Mahit Dzmare and Three Seagrass leaving the heart of the Teixcalaanli empire to go to the edge of space, where an alien species that no one knows how to communicate with has begun slaughtering Teixcalaanli colonies. Together, they must figure out how to talk to a species whose language quite literally makes them ill… and also how to talk to each other.

Cover of Plague Birds by Jason Sanford

Plague Birds by Jason Sanford

Plague Birds are the melding of human and artificial intelligence, marked by their bright red hair and clothes so ordinary people know to fleet them. They serve as the judges and executioners in the world that still survives after civilization has collapsed. Crista first met the Plague Birds when one killed her mother when she was a child. As an adult, she becomes this thing she hates and fears most in order to save her village. Her first mission is to chase down a group of murderers who wield what looks like magic.

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

An Otherworldly Lake, Dystopian Adventures, and the Writer Who Witnessed the Future

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with your second round of new releases for March. We had a snowy weekend over in Colorado, which made the cats happy because it meant we stayed inside with them the whole time. (Maybe cats actually have weather magic. Hm.) Stay safe 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


New Releases

Cover of The Way Spring Arrives and Other Stories edited by Yu Chen and Regina Kanyu Wang

The Way Spring Arrives and Other Stories edited by Yu Chen and Regina Kanyu Wang

This is a collection of Chinese science fiction and fantasy short stories written, edited, and translated by a female and nonbinary team. Stories range from a restaurant at the end of the universe (but not that restaurant) to the island of the gods that travels on the backs of giant fish.

Scattered All Over the Earth by Yoko Tawada

Hiruko is a climate refugee and citizen of the former nation of Japan; her country has long since disappeared from the face of the earth and is remembered now only as “the land of sushi.” She’s made her new home in Denmark, but still searches for someone who can speak Japanese. As she travels across Europe on this quest for her friends, she’ll have quite a few odd and rather dystopian adventures…

Cover of Lakelore by Anna-Marie McLemore

Lakelore by Anna-Marie McLemore

The lake is an other worldly place where the boundary between air and water begin to blue; beneath its surface exists an ethereal and supernatural landscape… though Bastián Silvano and Lore Garcia are the only two who know this for certain. Then one day, that underwater world begins to drift to the surface, threatening to bring their secrets with it. Bastián and Lore can stop this from happening if they work together, but they haven’t spoken for seven years…

Last Exit by Max Gladstone

When she was in college, Zelda and her friends thought they had figured out how to make the world a better place–fighting monsters, ones no one else believed existed. But one of her friends fell to the darkness they were supposedly fighting, and the group split up. Zelda’s the only one who hasn’t moved on. Now her fallen friend is coming home and bringing hell with her.

Cover of Cinder and Glass by Melissa de la Cruz

Cinder & Glass by Melissa de la Cruz

In 1682, the king invites all the maidens in France to a series of of events where Prince Louis will be choosing his bride. But for Cendrillon de Louvois, now reduced to being called Cinder after her father’s death, the invitation requires subterfuge for her to escape the watch of her cruel stepmother. Then, at a ball, she meets Prince Louis and his brother Auguste… and catches the attention of both. While she wants Auguste, Louis is her best chance to escape the life she hates…

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

News and Views

Dystopian Novel Authors Talk About the Current State of the World

Philip K Dick: The Writer Who Witnessed the Future

Clarkesworld has announced the winners of the 2021 readers poll!

The 42nd Annual Razzie Award Nominations have been announced

Thinking Big: Dyson Spheres and Ringworlds

The Sci-Fir Crime Novel That’s a Parable of American Society

J. Michael Straczynski did an AMA

Clarion West did a great panel back in January on Speculative Fiction and Romance you can watch on YouTube

On Book Riot

Historical Fiction With a Hint of Magic

Monstrous Alien Stories to Invade Your Shelves

Books to Read if You Love Studio Ghibli

Last week’s SFF Yeah! podcast was about graphic novels and manga

Enter to win a copy of Into the Mist by P.C. Cast!

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.


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

How to Design a D&D Character Based on Your Favorite Book Character

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, thinking about witches this week courtesy of The Witch Queen. Sorry, yup, still have video games on the brain. I’ll get better soon… ish. I’ve also got some links to click and the new give aways for March for you to check out. 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

Sheree Renée Thomas has been inducted into the Dal Coger Memorial Hall of Fame

Nnedi Okorafor’s Books Focus on the Future Tense

Young People Read Old SFF have done Fritz Leiber’s Midnight by the Morphy Watch

Brandon Sanderson dropped a surprise Kickstarter and it’s… doing unsurprisingly super well

Sword and Sorcery Round Table: Making sense of the S&S label

A school has renamed itself after Octavia E. Butler!

Priscilla Tolkien has passed

The 10 Best Sci-Fi Board Games, Ranked (I have played a non-zero number of these, and let me tell you, Terraforming Mars is SUPER FUN.)

On Book Riot

8 Talented Multi-Genre Writers of Comics

How to Design a D&D Character Based on Your Favorite Book Character

You can enter to win a copy of Into the Mist by P.C. Cast

This month you can enter to win an iPad Mini, a Banned Books bundle, a Kindle Oasis, $200 at The Ripped Bodice, and a 1-year subscription to Book of the Month.

Free Association Friday: Witches

Look, I just spent a week injecting The Witch Queen directly into my veins, so I have witches on the brain. (Alien witches, to be more precise, but that’s… much less common even in our genre.) So how about some (slightly dark and spooky) books with witches, to honor the Witch Queen herself?

Cover of Killing Gravity by Corey J. White

Killing Gravity by Corey J. White

This one is witches in space! Mariam Xi was turned into a “voidwitch” by the organization MEPHISTO. She’s since escaped their clutches during a bloody coup, but they’ll do anything to get her back, including sending bounty hunters on her trail. It’s becoming increasingly hard for her to keep running, and she’s been betrayed by more than one person… she just needs to figure out who.

Cauchemar by Alexandra Grigorescu

After the death of her adoptive mother, Hannah ends up living alone at the edge of a swamp in Louisiana. She’s settling into the new rhythm of her life–including falling in love with a boat captain–when her birth mother comes back into her life, a witch who is rumored to be able to commune with the dead. Soon Hannah must confront her past, the deadly spirits that share the swamp with her, and the gift that lives in her blood.

Cover of The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

The Year of the Witching by Alexis Henderson

Dark and unbearably tense at times, this was one of my favorite books that came out in 2020. Immanuelle Moore lives in Bethel, a place where the Prophet’s word is law. Her mother had her with an outsider of a different race, and that has made Immanuelle and her entire family outcasts. When she is lured into the Darkwood that surrounds Bethel, a place where the Prophet supposedly killed four witches, she begins to learn the truth of Bethel, herself, and her own powers.

How to Hang a Witch by Adriana Mather

Samantha Mather is a descendant of Cotton Mather; when she comes to Salem from New York City, she finds herself targeted by a group of girls who are the descendants of those accused of witchcraft by her own ancestor. With that enough of a complication, she also finds out that ghosts are real when one shows up to demand she stop touching his stuff. The source of all these troubles is even more worrying–she’s caught in a curse that links everyone with ties to the Salem Witch Trials, and she has to break it if she wants to stop history from repeating itself.

the cover of The Bone Witch

The Bone Witch by Rin Chupeco

Tea comes from an entire family of witches, but her abilities set her apart: she can resurrect the dead, a fact she learns when she accidentally brings her brother back to life. Her necromantic talents mean she is a bone witch, and she will find few friends from here on out… until she and her brother are taken in by an older bone witch. Tea tries to learn to wield her powers and how to work elemental magic, but dark forces are gathering and danger will soon be at her door.

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

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.