Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Most Anticipated SFF Releases of 2022

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and for our first Friday newsletter of the year, I’m getting a little self-indulgent again–I want to tell you about ten books I’m super looking forward to this year. There are a lot more awesome books coming out than just these ten, of course (and this only gets us as far as August so I expect to do this again in six or seven months), but this newsletter can only be so long. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I hope you’re keeping warm! 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

Everything you never knew about movie novelizations

Ten satisfying long-term payoffs in George RR Martin’s Wild Cards series

Why 2022 won’t be anything like the 2022 of Soylent Green

The Future in the Flesh: Why Cyberpunk Can’t Forget the Body

The First Generation Ship

NASA’s new space telescope “hunky-dory” after problems fixed

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about a couple of must-read sequels.

The Ultimate Guide to New Winter YA Books 2022: January-March

Edith Wharton: Horror Writer

You have until the 11th to enter to win a copy of The Starless Crown by James Rollins.

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

Free Association Friday: Coming Up in 2022

I’m sorry for being a bit self-indulgent again, but for all my (I hope understandable) dread about the coming year, there’s a lot to look forward to. Movie-wise, we’re getting Everything Everywhere All at Once why actual goddess Michelle Yeoh and The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent and The Lost City. And books? EVEN MORE EXCITING! Here are the ten I’m looking forward to the most.

Cover of Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse

Fevered Star by Rebecca Roanhorse

Publication date: April 19

This is the sequel to Black Sun, which is one of the best books I read in 2021 and one of two epic fantasy series that’s managed to truly grab me in recent days. If I was only allowed to buy one book in 2022, it would be this one. GIVE IT TO ME N O W.

Cover of The Oleander Sword by Tasha Suri

The Oleander Sword by Tasha Suri

Publication date: August 16

Since we’re talking sequels I’m super looking forward to, here’s another one–the next book in Tasha Suri’s “morally grey lesbian” series that started with The Jasmine Throne. Looking forward to it, hoping the guy I really hate gets set on fire.

Cover of Star Child by Ibi Zoboi

Star Child by Ibi Zoboi

Publication date: January 25

This isn’t a novel, but it’s about Octavia Butler–and it focuses on her childhood and early life during the space race and Civil Rights Movement.

Cover of Light Years From Home by Mike Chen

Light Years From Home by Mike Chen

Publication date: January 25

I’ve enjoyed every one of Mike Chen’s books I’ve read (and with each book it feels like he levels up) so I’m jazzed about his take on complicated sibling relationships and UFOs being real making things worse and then forcing sisters to figure their crap out.

Cover of Redwood and Wildfire by Andrea Hairston

Redwood and Wildfire by Andrea Hairston

Publication date: February 1

Andrea Hairston does gorgeous prose at all times, and I’m excited to see her bend her talents to alternate history that takes place in the vaudeville era, which has hoodoo conjurers also working as performers on the stage and struggling to find the magical world they envision.

Cover of Spear by Nicola Griffith

Spear by Nicola Griffith

Publication date: April 19

You had me at “queer Arthurian fantasy” and then you threw in “girl masquerades as a boy and becomes a warrior and hero who woos maidens.”

Cover of A Strange and Stubborn Endurance by Foz Meadows

A Strange and Stubborn Endurance by Foz Meadows

Publication date: July 26

I am weak to a good arranged marriage trope, particularly when it gets hit with a queer twist, which this one promises with its gay character whose politically arranged wife gets traded out for her brother, much to everyone’s surprise.

Cover of The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean

The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean

Publication date: August 9

In this contemporary fantasy, “The Family” is a secretive clan of book eaters, whose scions literally eat books and retain all the information therein. Devon got fed fairytales and cautionary stories, unlike her brothers, and then when her son is born, he seems more inclined to eat human minds…

Cover of Servant Mage by Kate Elliott

Servant Mage by Kate Elliott

Publication date: January 18

A fire mage who gets saved from indentured servitude by monarchists… and then she gets caught up by a conspiracy to destroy those same monarchists by killing the youngest royal child. Sounds fun, and I love me some Kate Elliott.

Cover of Hunt the Stars by Jessie Mihalik

Hunt the Stars by Jessie Mihalik

Publication date: February 1

I had a heck of a good time with Jessie’s previous science fiction romance series (start with Polaris Rising) so I am on board to read about a bounty hunter and a former general in an enemies-to-lovers trope fest.

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

2022, as Depicted by Sci Fi Books and Movies

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! Here we are, at the first Tuesday of 2022. Where did the time go? I’m Alex, and I’ve got your first set of new releases for 2022 and some links to check out. I hope everyone had good and safe holidays and your new year was significantly less exciting than what we had in my area of Colorado. (A massive grass fire that destroyed parts of two towns just up the road, followed immediately by a winter storm. Whee!) Stay safe out there, shipmates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

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


New Releases

Cover of Where the Drowned Girls Go by Seanan McGuire

Where the Drowned Girls Go by Seanan McGuire

Eleanor West’s Home for Wayward Children isn’t the only place for those who have returned from their doors. There is also the Whitethorn Institute, where the headmaster runs things very differently–not friendly and not safe. Cora, the drowned girl, decides that she wants a different fate and asks to be transferred to this other school. She may get more than she bargained for.

The Starless Crown by James Rollins

When a student foretells the apocalypse, she’s sentenced to death in punishment. Her only hope for survival is to flee into the unknown, where she meets a broken soldier, a drunken prince, and an escaped prisoner who is also a thief. This group must learn to trust each other and uncover the secrets that could avert the coming doom… which draws closer every day.

Cover of Tiger Honor by Yoon Ha Lee

Tiger Honor by Yoon Ha Lee

A young tiger spirit named Sebin joins the Thousand World Space Forces to be like their Uncle Hwan, the captain of a battle cruiser. But when their acceptance letter arrives, so does the shocking news that Hwan is a traitor, having abandoned his duty to steal the Dragon Pearl and disappeared. Hwan’s new goal is to clear his name and restore honor to their clan–but Inspector Yi and their assistant Min are there to interfere with Hwan’s quest… and accuse them of sabotage as well.

The Crossing Gate by Asiel R. Lavie

Lenora lives in a world where adulthood is a magical transformation undergone by children going into the Crossing Gate. At seventeen years old, Lenora is determined to have her Crossing Day so she can start to work to support her family. It all goes horribly wrong when she’s accused of trying to foment a revolution. She must now obey every law to the letter to prove her loyalty… while trying to investigate why she can’t cross into adulthood.

Cover of The Ivory Key by Akshaya Raman

The Ivory Key by Akshaya Raman

Royal siblings Vira, Ronak, Kaleb, and Riya are estranged, to put it politely. They don’t particularly like each other. But what brings them back together is so important that mutual antipathy must be put aside; they must find the Ivory Key, which will lead them to a new source of magic for their country. Without it, their kingdom will surely fall. Each sibling will gain something different from finding the key, and lose something far worse if they don’t. And the enemies arrayed to keep it from them are deadly and numerous. Working together is the only path toward survival.

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

News and Views

2022 according to science fiction, in novels and films

The 2021 Darth Vader Parenthood Award for Outstandingly Horrible Fictional Parents

International Interactions with Tolkien – A Roundtable

Five story-telling lessons from urban legends

Smeg and the art of sci-fi swearing

Fear Is the Mind Killer; What Enlivens the Mind? Dune‘s Alt-Victimhood and Radical Nonviolence in Nausicaä

What Speculative Fiction Writers Can Learn from the Origins and Evolution of the Wuxia Genre

Fellowship of the Ring at 20: The Film That Revitalised and Ruined Hollywood

Real-life quidditch leagues to change Harry Potter sport’s name after author’s anti-trans remarks (the follow-up Op-Ed here is worth a read if you’re interested in the topic.)

California Appeals Court Rejects Cochran’s Effort to Overturn Judgment Favoring Peter S. Beagle

The Creative and Inspiring People We Lost in 2021: Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Superhero Icons

On Book Riot

Make your own map room with these gorgeous fantasy maps

Excellent Queer Fantasy Romance Books

A Celebration of Series: The Best SFF Series of 2021

8 books like The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

10 Showstopper Books for K-Drama Fans

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes and Noble gift card. Canadians can enter to win a waterproof Kobo.


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

More of the Best Indie SFF of 2021

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with your second installment of indie books (self pub and small press) from 2021 to check out. As a heads up, Book Riot will be taking a break over the holidays, so it’ll be two weeks before you get your next newsletter, on January 4… 2022. I hope you have happy and safe holidays, and I’ll see you in the future!

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


2021 Indie Spotlight Part 2

Cover of Girls of Might and Magic

Girls of Might and Magic edited by K.R.S. McEntire

This is an anthology of short stories written entirely by authors of color and featuring diverse characters in coming-of-age YA adventures centered around magic and self-discovery.

The Black Parade Boxed Set by Kyoko M

This newly published box set contains the novels The Black Parade, She Who Fights Monsters, and The Holy Dark, chronicling the adventures of seer and demon-slayer Jordan Amador and her partner (and lover) Michael as they combat archdemons, ghosts, and any other supernatural baddy who would like to cause hell on Earth.

Cover of A Touch of Fever by Nazri Noor

A Touch of Fever by Nazri Noor

Jackson Prdye has never been good with actually casting spells, so he’s turned his magic instead to creating enchanted devices as an artificer. But his nextdoor neighbor, Xander Wright, is a pretentious jerk–and worse, an actually good mage–who constantly clashes with him over all the noise. These neighborhood enemies are forced to team up with a strange fever starts tearing through their community, driving mages into murderous rages.

Saving Shadows by Eugen Bacon

This is a collection of 48 pieces of speculative prose poetry and micro-lit, 22 of which are brand new and never before published. This collection also includes 35 illustrations from Elena Betti.

Cover of Cyberfunk! edited by Milton Davis

Cyberfunk! edited by Milton Davis

An anthology of 19 stories by Black speculative fiction authors, this imagines a future where the Singularity is freed from its Eurocentric shackles. Authors in the anthology include Eugen Bacon, Zig Zag Clayborne, Kyoko M, Violette Meier, and more!

Monster of the Dark by KT Belt

At the age of six, Carmen Grey was taken away from her family by three men in black and brought to an underground facility that housed those like her–Clairvoyants. Those who run the facility strip away her identity and carefully train her into a weapon that they aim at their enemies.

Cover of A Theft Most Fowl by Nicole Givens Kurtz

A Theft Most Fowl by Nicole Givens Kurtz

The Kingdom of Aves is an oligarchy where most of the bird clans follow the phoenix goddess who united them, and the Order governs the churches and therefore the lives of the people. After successfully solving one mystery, Hawk Prentice Tasifa returns to her university to find a sacred relic has been stolen from the Museum of the Goddess–and her mentor is being framed for the crime. With the Order breathing down her neck, Prentice is on a short timetable to solve this mystery… but all is not as it seems.

Family Solstice by Kate Maruyama

For generations the Massey family has lived in the same house, on land that’s belonged to them for even longer. It’s a place where everyone comes for fun in the summer, a place of fun and games. And in the winter? The children have to train for their turn to fight what lives in the basement. No child knows what they will be facing down there–it’s a secret–but winning that battle every solstice is what makes the house the warm, beautiful place it is every other day. But this year something is wrong…

Cover of Spelunkers by Cora Buhlert

Spelunkers by Cora Buhlert

College students Evan and Matt (and Evan’s sister Kate, who’s always been responsible for keeping him in one piece) decide to go spelunking during a holiday in Belgium, and that desire takes them to an unexplored cave in the Ardennes. What they find is a portal to another world, and across its threshold could wait adventure… or death.

Scion of Gaia by Michele Amitrani

Persephone (yes, that Persephone, the queen of the Underworld) finds her mother in the ruins of the forest, having been driven mad by some unknown force. Demeter’s madness manifests widespread death and destruction in the world, and Persephone has little time to stop the destruction before it will be too late. She must either save her mother by delving painfully into her own past… or save the world by committing the ultimate crime.

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

News and Views

Big congratulations to all of this year’s Hugo Award winners!! (A few highlights: Best Novel was Network Effect by Martha Wells, Best Novella was The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo, and Best Related Work Maria Dahvana Headley’s Beowulf: A New Translation.)

Hades makes history as the first video game to win a Hugo Award

The Precarious Now

It’s time to reimagine the future of Cyberpunk

Magic and Culture Thrive in Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

The second coming of Octavia E. Butler

The Hugo Awards undermined themselves by being sponsored by Raytheon

“Your family needs you” – Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings

Dragonlance returns in 2022 with a new protagonist after settled lawsuit

On Book Riot

10 queer fantasy romances to warm your cold, cold heart

Why we used to tell ghost stories on Christmas Eve (and why we should restart the tradition)

This month, enter to win a pair of Airpods Pro and a personal reading retreat. Or, if you’re in Canada, you can enter to win a Waterproof Kobo!


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

My Favorite SFF Reads of 2021

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a slightly self-indulgent Friday. This is the last Friday newsletter you’ll be getting from me until 2022 thanks to the upcoming holidays, so I want to tell you about my ten favorite books I’ve read this year. Some of them, you probably already know. Some of them you might now. But maybe there’ll be something in the list that you’ll enjoy just as much! Stay safe out there, shipmates, 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


On Book Riot

The Atlas Six is being adapted into a series by Amazon

Realms to Remember: The Best Fictional Worlds

Murder Mysteries in Space: 10 Thrillers Set Where No One Can Hear You Scream

Anne Rice, beloved author of The Vampire Chronicles, dies at 80

This week’s SFF Yeah! is about year-end favorites

How to start writing fan fiction

Into Every Generation: Buffy Books for Slayers of All Ages

8 fanfics that are even better than the original stories

The best Grishaverse cross-stitch patterns for Leigh Bardugo fans

The mystery of the anonymous fantasy author taking over BookTok

The ideal way to introduce your kids to Middle-Earth

Register by 12/20 to win a copy of Daughter of the Deep by Rick Riordan.

This month, enter to win a pair of Airpods Pro and a personal reading retreat. Or, if you’re in Canada, you can enter to win a Waterproof Kobo!

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

Free Association Friday: Favorites of 2021

This is the last Friday newsletter I’ll be writing for you this year, and I’m going to be a little self indulgent. I’ve mentioned some books I’ve really enjoyed throughout the year as I’ve read them, but I’d like to just tell you my faves in one place as we head toward 2022. This is drawn from everything I’ve read this year–so there may be some books in here that aren’t from 2021.

the cover of The Mirror Season

The Mirror Season by Anne-Marie McLemore

Considering I wrote an entire spot on how much I freaking love this book, its inclusion in my favorites should be no surprise. All I can say is that I’m still thinking about and recommending this book to anyone who will listen, even months later. It’s gorgeous, and thoughtful, and healing. But remember, trigger warnings in this one, particularly for sexual assault.

Cover of Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao

Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao

This is just such a fun book, a combination of bananapants mecha action (I’m glad we’re apparently riding a mecha wave in SF novels right now) and absolute rage against the injustice of gender roles and patriarchy. All I can say is there darn tootin’ better be a sequel.

cover image of the empress of salt and fprtune

The Empress of Salt and Fortune by Nghi Vo

This is a fairly short novella that I would argue is more character portrait than story, in which you learn about the title character through the imprint she’s left in the lives of others. It’s so delicately and deftly done that it was a pleasure to read.

cover of the witness for the dead by katherine addison

The Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison

Another “no surprise” book–everyone knows by now that I love The Goblin Emperor, and I was pretty much doomed to love anything that followed, but particularly since it’s about my favorite sad gay elf, Celehar. This is very slice of life at times, which I find delightful, and was just screaming for a sequel… which is coming next year: The Grief of Stones

Cover of Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

I am not much of a one for epic fantasy, but Rebecca Roanhorse got me good with this one. Her world is vivid and well drawn, she manages to make the politics of it legible and interesting, and she got me to buy all in on what is fundamentally a religious dispute with historically conquered people still resisting (partially) their conquest. The characters absolutely make it.

Cover of The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson

The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson

This book is honestly a bit too on the didactic side for my general taste, but it’s still on my list because there are just so many crunchy, interesting ideas… and it also offers a sense of hope about the slow motion climate catastrophe. There’s no airily waving the disaster away with science fiction, but offering that one can imagine a potentially realistic way to get through this, even with a world that isn’t terribly united.

Cover of Savage Bounty by Matt Wallace

Savage Bounty by Matt Wallace

The second installment of a series I love (first book: Savage Legion) and looking at it from a distance, I can say that I love it for many of the same reasons as I love Black Sun. It’s epic fantasy that operates on an imperial scale that’s very interested in examining how messed up empire fundamentally is and how it’s predicated on the existence of second-, third-, or worse- class citizens. Matt does it with such an economy of language that the books just fly.

And here’s three non-SFF books I want to call attention to, while I’m being self-indulgent!

image of in the dream house book cover

In the Dream House by Carmen Maria Machado

I’ve been hearing for years how good and important this book is, and everything I’ve heard was true. Carmen Maria Machado takes on a topic that gets swept under the rug far too often in the LGBTQ community (domestic abuse, so big TW on this one) and does so with beauty and very necessary empathy for for herself.

Cover of Underland by Robert Macfarlane

Underland: A Deep Time Journey by Robert Macfarlane

Another absolutely gorgeous book that I was destined to love because it’s about the geological depths of the earth that have been created over millions of years. I’m a geologist, I can’t help it.

Arsenic and Adobo cover image

Arsenic and Adobo by Mia P. Manansala

I mostly read romance when I need a little break from SFF, but I decided to give this cozy mystery a try–and it’s the first cozy I’ve read, I’d say. This book was just hecka fun, and it’s also got a cookie recipe in the back that I want to try.


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 Best Indie SFF of 2021

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex with some books for you to check out this lovely day. We’ve at last hit the doldrums of December where not a whole lot is being published… so I’ve decided to take this opportunity to delve into indie (both self published and small press) SFF that’s been published over the last year to spotlight some books I unfortunately didn’t hear about until I went looking. Discoverability: the true challenge of our book reading time. Here’s part one of my findings, and you’ll get part two next week–there’s a lot of fun stuff out there. Stay safe, 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


2021 Indie Spotlight Part 1

Cover of Evolving Crane by Dave Welch

Evolving Crane: Book One by Dave Welch

In deep space far from our solar system, an alien race struggles to avoid possible extinction. Arlo Crane, a known felon from Earth, is abducted to serve as a tool of salvation–leaving the child he was supposed to be watching alone while his partner, Agent Lawson, is away in London. But Crane unfortunately has far bigger worries, with a multiverse war about to begin…

Exiles of a Gilded Moon Volume 2: Kingdom’s Edge by Dustin R. Cummings

Darshima and his companions have made a daring escape to the kingdom of Tiriyuud on the planet Iberwight, a place that’s been long sealed away from the rest of worlds. These refugees steep themselves in the new culture and find unexpected truths about their own history in it… but they will soon be called upon to defend their new home.

Cover of Once Bitten by Tina Glasneck

Once Bitten by Tina Glasneck

Leslie, a romance author who just wants to unwind by going on a cruise, should have died when she fell overboard into the North Sea. Instead, she’s rescued by something that looks suspiciously like Nessie, who actually turns out to be a shapeshifting dragon. Unfortunately, his last minute intervention turned her into a vampire and sucked her into a supernatural world she knows nothing about.

Purge Sequence by Maquel A. Jacob

The war effort is threatened by the depletion of the Hybrid population. Hana joins forces with some truly shady government organizations to convince people to keep hybrids. The results is… not what he wanted: an underground sex market for those who can afford it. Hana needs to devise a new plan to get humanity back on track before it’s too late.

Cover of The Darkest Soul by D.L. Howard

The Darkest Soul by D.L. Howard

Zazi Ravendark is the scion of an outcast mage family who would like to live her life free of any supernatural obligations, particularly considering her once-proud family is a laughingstock due to their lack of magic. But it turns out Zazi isn’t as magic-less as she thought, and she has no choice but to attend the Shadowcrest University of Magical Arts and Reaping, where it the syllabus doesn’t get you, the gate to the underworld just might.

Galaxy Bound by Vidar Hokstad

With the opening of the Centauri Gate, humanity has at last stepped into a wider galaxy. But when a freighter from Earth is destroyed in this new space, Zara Ortega and her crew are sent to investigate. Soon, they’re finding themselves facing off with a heavily armed fleet who will happily destroy them to keep the truth unknown… and cause a war in the process.

Cover of Songs of Insurrection by JC Kang

Songs of Insurrection by JC Kang

Once the Dragon Singers liberated humanity from the tyranny of the orcs, using their songs to summon typhoons and destroy armies. With a new cataclysm threatening the world, the legends must be reborn, and the best hope is Kaiya, a misfit blessed with a perfect voice. With no one else to guide her, she must rely on a disgraced paladin whose motives may not be entirely noble. (This is a reissue of a book first published in 2018, which contains two new chapters and a short story.)

Chrystine’s Sleep Solution by Danielle Williams

Chrystine Brown is an insomniac who hasn’t gotten a full night’s sleep in over a year. But she’s found a new music app that can put her to sleep–and keep her asleep–but there’s something hiding behind the interface that is a horror that may never let her sleep again…

Cover of Evasion by Glynn Stewart

Evasion by Glynn Stewart

A former nova fighter pilot turned owner-operator of a freelance star freighter, Captain Evridiki Bardacki has had enough betrayal and trouble to last a lifetime. He just wants to trek across space in the Evasion and deliver his cargo on time. But when the victim of a powerful crime syndicate stows away on his ship, he finds he might finally have something to fight for again.

The Awakening by Dusk Peterson

Barrett Boyd was dead a short time ago. Alive again, he’s trying to make sense of a life that’s baffling to him. He’s a guard in the Eternal Dungeon, the royal prison of the queendom; that at least makes sense. But why do some of the prisoners feel so important to him? Why do some of the other guards act as if they have claims to him? And how is he going to survive all this?

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

On Book Riot

The Best Gender-Flipped Retellings

Retellings That Haven’t Happened But Should

How Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine Helped Teach Me to Read

Retellings of Asian Myths, Epics, and Folklore

Enter before 12/16 to win a $100 ThriftBooks gift card!

This month, enter to win a pair of Airpods Pro and a personal reading retreat. Or, if you’re in Canada, you can enter to win a Waterproof Kobo!


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

10 of the Best SFF Standalones from 2021

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, bringing you a list of standalone novels from this year that are worth a second look! And there were so many good standalone books that came out this year, I had a tough time cutting it down to just ten–and I’m sure I’ve missed some other good ones. Because I’ve got so many books stuffed into this newsletter, you’ll get a double helping of news on Tuesday.

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


On Book Riot

10 things you didn’t know about Lewis Carroll

Book Riot’s 2022 Read Harder Challenge

A love letter to Saga, take 2

I’m here to set you free: Its okay if you don’t want to read the classics

You have until the 14th to register to win a copy of The Upper World by Femi Fadugba

This month, enter to win a pair of Airpods Pro and a personal reading retreat. Or, if you’re in Canada, you can enter to win a Waterproof Kobo!

Free Association Friday: A Celebration of Standalones

Continuing with my December tradition, let’s look back on the standalone SFF novels that were published this year and celebrate some of the best!

Cover of I'm Waiting For You by Kim Bo-Young

I’m Waiting For You: And Other Stories by Kim Bo-Young, translated by Sophie Bowman

This is a collection of two pairs of science fiction stories. One set is about an engaged couple on separate missions trying to coordinate a return to Earth at the same time through the grace of relativity–and the Earth they return to will be profoundly different. The other pair of stories is about the interaction between humanity and the godlike beings that created it, and our different views on the necessity of rebellion.

Light from Uncommon Stars book cover

Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

Shizuka made a literal deal with the devil to escape damnation. The price? She has to convince seven of her fellow violin prodigies to trade their souls for success. She’s managed to swindle six, but in her pursuit of the final soul, she runs into complications she could have never imagined: a retired starship captain who she can’t help but love and a runaway with a wild talent who all too quickly feels like family.

Cover of The World Gives Way by Marissa Levien

The World Gives Way by Marissa Levien

Myrra is a contract worker, and has been since she was five years old. In fifty years, she’ll be free… but until then, her life and labor belong to whoever is the highest bidder on her contract. She’s worked many jobs, but her latest, for the Carlyles, ends abruptly when she finds them dead. She must care for the orphaned daughter of her dead “employers” and face the secret they died to escape.

cover of Sorrowland

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

A pregnant woman escapes from a religious compound to give birth to her twins in the woods. But cults don’t let go easily, and she’s forced to fight against that community and the outside world to defend her family–a battle that begins an uncanny metamorphosis of her body that can only be understood by facing the past.

Cover of Black Water Sister by Zen Cho

Black Water Sister by Zen Cho

Jessamyn Teoh is closeted, broke, and jobless, so she’s moving back to Malaysia, a country she hasn’t seen since she was a toddler, with her parents. When she starts hearing a voice in her head, at first she assumes it’s stress… but then she finds out it’s the ghost of her grandmother, who in life was the avatar of a god called the Black Water Sister. Grandma wants Jess to help her settle an old score with a local business magnate… whether she wants to or not.

Cover of We Are Satellites by Sarah Pinsker

We Are Satellites by Sarah Pinsker

A new brain implant called a Pilot is sweeping the nation, quickly going from a curiosity to a necessity to keep up with school or work. Soon all people face a choice: get a Pilot or be left behind. The new technology divides a family, setting Sophie against her parents and her brother… and then against the powerful manufacturer of the device.

The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina Book Cover

The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina by Zoraida Cordova

The Montoya family is one surrounded by inexplicable magic and mysteries they know better than to ask about. But when Orquídea Divina, the matriarch who refused to ever leave their home, even for weddings and baptisms, invites them to her own funeral, rather than answers or a direct inheritance, her transformation leaves them only with more questions. After seven years, this inheritance has manifested differently for each of her descendants… and put them in the line of fire of a mysterious enemy that seems determined to pick them off, one by one.

the cover of Within These Wicked Walls

Within These Wicked Walls by Lauren Blackwood

Andromeda has been training as an debtera, a special kind of exorcist that cleanses the Evil Eye… except her mentor threw her out before she could complete her training. Her only hope is to find a rich patron to vouch for her, so when Magnus Rorschach contacts her, it seems like her best opportunity. Only she arrives to find that he runs his house on a set of weird and capricious rules, and he’s gone through quite a few debtera before her…

Cover for The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

The Chosen and the Beautiful by Nghi Vo

Jordan has anything a woman could want in 1920s America: money, education, social clout, a great talent with golf. But as a Vietnamese adoptee who is also queer, she also gets treated like an exotic pet by her peers and finds many doors are closed to her. Her world isn’t just money and parties though–it’s also ghosts, magic, and infernal pacts. And Jordan has always been a fast learner.

Cover of No Gods, No Monsters by Cadwell Turnbull

No Gods, No Monsters by Cadwell Turnbull

Laina gets tragic news one October morning: Boston police have shot and killed her brother. But soon, this horror reveals something far stranger: monsters are real. And they’re coming out of the shadows now, looking for safety. This shift in the social fabric of the world leads to strife and protests. But the one question no one seems to be asking as society reshapes itself is: what has frightened the monsters so badly that they came out of the dark?

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

Death Oracles, Telepathic Soldiers, Queer Vampires, and More New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex with… a surprising number of new releases for December. I seem to remember this time last year I was reviewing older indie book releases since December tends to be a bit of a dead zone for trad publishing. Maybe it’s the supply chain issues, delaying things all over the place. Whatever the reason, enjoy, and here’s some interesting links besides! 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 The Upper World by Femi Fadugba

The Upper World by Femi Fadugba

Esso is having the worst week of his life… and then an accident lets him see beyond space and time, into the past and future. If what he saw is reality and not just a hallucination, however, he needs to change history if he wants to survive. In order to do so, he must seek out the help of Rhia, the student he’s supposed to tutor at physics, and with her unravel a fifteen-year-old mystery.

The Righteous by Renée Ahdieh

Odette faces her final death, and only the half fey Arjun Desai could possibly save her… if he’s willing to cross over into the Sylvan Vale, a world that he absolutely despises. This, he’s willing to do to save Odette; but unknown to him, Pippa Montrose is following his path between worlds on her own search for a friend… which may just help her find the love and security she’s been missing.

Cover of Cyber Mage by Saad Z Hossain

Cyber Mage by Saad Z. Hossain

Dhaka, Bangladesh in 2089 is a strange place where climate catastrophe has been averted by pumping a sufficient amount of nanotech into the people of this densely-populated city that it can sustain its own microclimate… if no one moves. But the people are getting restless, and all the nanotech is started to have some weird effects. This is the reason the mercenary Djibrel has to carry a machete with him at all times, because beheading someone is now the only way to make sure they’re actually dead. He’s trying to track down the Djinn, a race of magical super geniuses that have seemingly disappeared… and he’s being tracked by the Cyber Mage, a snotty, privileged teenager who also moonlights for a Russian crime syndicate.

No Beauties or Monsters by Tara Goedjen

Twentynine Palms is a military base in the Mojave Desert, and a place Rylie has been avoiding since he death of her father. There are too many memories and too many contentious relationships with both family and friends. Yet when she’s forced to return there due to her mom’s new work assignment, the place seems at least somewhat welcoming. But not everyone is happy to see her, there might be a killer on the loose, and Rylie starts having visions of monstrous creatures stalking the desert.

Cover of Absynthe by Brendan Bellecourt

Absynthe by Brendan Bellcourt

Liam is a reclusive, shell-shocked veteran who has few memories of his time during the Great War… until he’s saved from a brutal attack at a Chicago speakeasy by Grace. Formerly, Liam was from a squad known as the Devil’s Henchmen, who were given experimental treatments to make them telepathic killing machines. As Liam tries to dig into his past and his newly-remembered powers, his former commander will stop at nothing to keep those secrets. And as the President of the United State, he’s got a lot more resources than Liam.

The Coldest Touch by Isabel Sterling

Elise is a Death Oracle who can experience how her loved ones will die with a single touch–she’s already proven it works by predicting and being unable to prevent her brother’s death. Claire is a vampire assigned to help Elise master her powers. It would be complicated enough already if the two girls, who are at first suspicious of each other then perhaps sliding toward romance, weren’t also sharing their town with a killer who also has paranormal powers.

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

News and Views

How Afrofuturism Can Help the World Mend

Andrea Hairston and Sheree Renée Thomas will be hosting the Hugo Awards Ceremony

Interview with Diana M. Pho

Ian Douglas: On Telling the Truth in Science Fiction

Interview withe Lawrence M. Schoen

A year in books not read

The Evolution of Brandon Sanderson: How Elantris Planted the Sees for Future Cosmere Goodness

Interview with Cat Rambo

What accounts for the lasting appeal of Dune?

Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse Trailer!!!!

On Book Riot

Is YA Leading Diversity in Publishing?

The Worst Books to Bring on a First Date

This month, enter to win a pair of Airpods Pro and a personal reading retreat. Or, if you’re in Canada, you can enter to win a Waterproof Kobo!


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 Best SFF Series of 2021

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s the first Friday of December and this is Alex. And I’m going with my December tradition of celebrating the books of the last year, so I’ve got some series that have finished in 2021 for you to check out, along with some links. I hope your month has started out strong. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!

We’re hiring an Advertising Sales Manager! Do you like books and comics? Does helping advertisers reach an enthusiastic community of book and comics lovers intrigue you? This might be your job. Apply by December 5, 2021.

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


News and Views

Round up of indie speculative fiction for November

The Future Finds Its Own Uses for Things

When Is a Horror Movie Not a Horror Movie?

20 Surprising Facts About Bram Stoker’s Dracula

Ian Douglas: On Telling the Truth in Science Fiction

‘A safe haven’: how Dungeons & Dragons is slaying social anxiety

I’m Colombian. Here’s what Encanto means to me

Here’s Why Movie Dialogue Has Gotten More Difficult to Understand (and Three Ways to Fix It)

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about go-to SFF authors

Why are MCU superhero movies sexless?

Literary scandals: who was the real-life Dracula?

15 must-read dystopian romance novels

The main categories of magic systems

15 YA fantasy books that feature amazing love triangles

You’ve got two days to win a copy of The Eye of the World (The Wheel of Time book one) by Robert Jordan.

This month, enter to win a pair of Airpods Pro and a personal reading retreat. Or, if you’re in Canada, you can enter to win a Waterproof Kobo!

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

Free Association Friday: A Celebration of Series

In December, I like to take some time to look back over the year and spotlight some books that will make great presents. Or in this case, some completed series where you can hook someone in with the promise that yes, it is finished. Please, in general don’t wait to start reading until they’re finished because then they’ll never be finished, but… finishing a series is a major accomplishment to celebrate! For these, I will highlight the first book of the series and then list the others in the description.

cover of Jade City by Fonda Lee

Jade City by Fonda Lee

Followed by Jade War and Jade Legacy to make up the completed Green Bone Saga!

This is an epic trilogy that features lots of kung fu action scenes in a fantasy metropolis where rival clans battle it out. Green Bone warriors use jade to fuel their magic in adherence with ancient tradition, but times are changing–and foreigners would like to get their hands on that jade.

leviathan wakes

Leviathan Wakes by James S. A. Corey

Followed by Caliban’s War, Abaddon’s Gate, Cibola Burn, Nemesis Games, Babylon’s Ashes, Persepolis Rising, Tiamat’s Wrath, and Leviathan Falls to make the completed Expanse series.

What is there to say? This is a nine-book space opera behemoth that takes humanity from squabbling in the Sol system to across the galaxy–and it’s the basis for one of the most beloved sci-fi series on TV today, which is also finishing up this year.

the gilded wolves roshani choksi

The Gilded Wolves by Roshani Chokshi

Followed by The Silvered Serpents and The Bronzed Beasts to complete the series.

An alternate history fantasy that starts out at the close of the nineteenth century, where a Parisian treasure hunter assembles a strange team to help him steal an ancient and powerful artifact so that he can earn his rightful inheritance.

Cover of The Snow Chanter by Linda Nagata

The Snow Chanter by Linda Nagata

Followed by The Long War and Days of Storm to complete the Wild Trilogy. It’s one of those strange ones that was all published this year!

Disaster has forced humanity to make its home on a wild continent inhabited by cruel and hostile spirits of nature that want them all dead. To survive, humans need to seek new alliances–and new magic.

Cover of Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer

Too Like Lightning by Ada Palmer

Followed by Seven Surrenders, The Will to Battle, and Perhaps the Stars to finish the Terra Ignota series.

Set about 430 years in the future, this series starts in a world where the nation state hasn’t existed for 300 years and humanity is made up of seven remaining “hives.” The four books follow the events that lead this strange Earth to war for the first time since the 22nd century.


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

Interplanetary Adventure Epics, Destiny-Breaking Romance, and Other New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! Here we are at the last Tuesday in November, and here’s Alex coming at you with the last round of new releases. The end of November is apparently home to a lot of sequels–and to the final book in one of our modern space opera epics! To all those in the US, I hope you had a lovely holiday weekend–and to those not, I hope you had a lovely week regardless. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday.

We’re hiring an Advertising Sales Manager! Do you like books and comics? Does helping advertisers reach an enthusiastic community of book and comics lovers intrigue you? This might be your job. Apply by December 5, 2021.

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 Leviathan Falls by James SA Corey

Leviathan Falls by James S. A. Corey

The ninth and final book of The Expanse has arrived at last. Thirteen hundred solar systems have been freed by the fall of the Laconian Empire, but the ancient enemy that destroyed the gate builders has returned, ready to start a new war. With the annihilation of all of humanity on the table, James Holden and the crew of the Rocinante struggle to find a new future for themselves and find a way to unite humanity in a galactic civilization that will be free of wars.

A Swift and Savage Tide by Chloe Neill

Captain Kit Brightling is invaluable to Queen Charlotte of the Saxon Isles because she is Aligned to the magic of the sea. And her magic and determination are about to be put to the test; Gerard Rousseau, the former Gallic emperor, has escaped the island he was imprisoned on and is gearing up for a new war of conquest against the continent–using whatever dark magic he can find to his advantage. Kit’s quest to serve queen and country will take her and her crew across the seas and into a clash with an old enemy who has thrown his lot in with Gerard.

Cover of Jade Legacy by Fonda Lee

Jade Legacy by Fonda Lee

Everyone in the world wants to get their hands on jade and the supernatural power it provides. As this struggle for power between such disparate groups as governments, mafiosos, and athletes grows more deadly, the Kaul family will never be the same. As more and more enemies descend on their country, the clan must figure out how to stop fighting amongst itself and discern enemy from ally if they want to protect their nation and their way of life.

Hælend’s Ballad by Ian V. Conrey

A young orphan who died by drowning has come back to life in a strange land; everyone he meets will die because of him. But rumors are already spreading that the entire world is dying. And a set of strangers–a young man who signs on to a failing militia, an abused teenage girl who craves what she despises, a childless mother who has been convicted of murder–will find their fates intertwined with his.

Cover of Girls and Fate and Fury by Natasha Ngan

Girls of Fate and Fury by Natasha Ngan

The last Lei saw of Wren, the girl she loves, was her facing down an entire army in a battle to the death. And now Lei is being taken back to the Hidden Palace and its sadistic king, the very last place on earth she wants to go. Lei and Wren must find a way to escape their perilous fates and find each other again… even if they have to break destiny to do it.

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

News and Views

The Kids Aren’t Alright: The Race Essentialism of Sci-fi Hybrids

4 Types of Literary Horror That Hold Up

Neverending Stories, Or: The Best Books I’ve Never Actually Finished

Tolkien estate blocks ‘JRR Token’ cryptocurrency

NPR shares its 2021 ‘Books We Love’

Jacqueline Carey: Writing With Food

Kim Stanley Robinson on Science Fiction and Reclaiming Science for the Left

Mermaids Monthly is crowdfunding for its second year

Games Workshop has issued a statement about not wanting hate groups at their events

On Book Riot

15 lovers-to-enemies books: when breakups go apocalyptically bad

Getting back to work with Alanna of Trebond

The TTRPG you should play next, based on your reading habits

Saga, then and now

The weirdest literary conspiracy theories people really believe

A history of the Cinderella fairytale

Don’t forget to check out our new podcast Adaptation Nation, all about TV and film adaptations of your favorite books!

This month you can win a selection of spicy sequels and a $200 Barnes and Noble gift card, a $100 Amazon gift card and a Radish swag bag, and a $250 Barnes and Noble gift card.


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

Getting the Jump on SFF Gifts

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, hoping if you’re from the US you managed to survive a lot of family togetherness and a deluge of carb-laden sides–and if you’re not in the US, I sure hope you survived your work week and are powering through to the weekend! Since this is the official-ish start of the holiday gift-purchasing season, this will be a slightly different newsletter. We’re going to check out some SFF literature-adjacent merch!

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


You know I’m going to start off with an item of Octavia E. Butler merch. How could I not?

Image of a print with the Earthseed philosophy on it.

This is a really cool print with a couple verses from The Book of the Living in The Parable of the Sower illustrated. A big part of the beauty of those books is the philosophy she lays out in them. $25

A pin that says "Be their nightmare" and has glittering, firey wings on either side of it.

Iron Widow is such a new book, I didn’t honestly expect to find anything inspired by it. But now I must have this pin that quotes one of the book’s many memorable lines. $12

White sweatshirt with a quote from "These Violent Delights" on it: "You know me. Running around. Living life. Committing arson."

If you’re a fan of These Violent Delights, there’s a quote sweatshirt for you. (And I’m impressed I was able to find it among all of the Shakespeare merchandise.) $26

An image of two colorful bookmarks with quotes from the book "Raybearer:" "Uniformity is not unity. Silence is not peace." and "If the world didn't care about injustice, then I would simply have to care enough for all of them."

These bookmarks with quotes from Raybearer are freaking gorgeous, and you can never have too many bookmarks. Honestly, this seller has a lot of great bookmarks. $3

Necklace with the quote "The mystery of life isn't a problem to solve but a reality to experience."

This is a nifty necklace with one of my favorite quotes from Dune on it. I really like the simplicity of it. $66

A dark red headband with the cartoon-style faces of the main characters of Cemetery Boys repeated on it. So cute!

This headband is so adorable, I cannot. It’s got fan art of the main characters from Cemetery Boys on it. You can also get it as a scrunchie! $10

A set of bookends that feature lamposts with little direction signs on them, pointing toward locatins such as "Atlantis" and "Mordor"

I’m a sucker for bookends, even if I’m running out of space to put them. The number of SFF references on this set is just impressive! $69

A pendant made of intricate twistings of sterling silver wire around a piece of polished agate.

Elise Matthesen is a ubiquitous presence at science fiction literary conventions and has supplied more than a few authors with jewelry for the Hugo or Nebula Award ceremonies. Her whole Etsy store is dazzling, but this pendant is one of my favorites: Where the Dragons Went. $175

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.