Categories
Swords and Spaceships

Getting the (Bounty Hunter) Band Back Together and Other New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a selection of new releases and a few news items for you. My foray into the world of the garage sale went well over the weekend (I was excited to see how many people wanted to buy books!) but things took a downright post apocalyptic turn Saturday morning, when a change in the wind blew a massive amount of wildfire smoke over use. We’re talking yellow skin, dull orange sun, light looking pink on the concrete. It was a commonplace experience last year during wildfire season, and I’m not excited to see it back. I hope you’re staying safe out there, space pirates, and remember that N95s can filter out the smoke if it gets bad where you are. See you on Friday!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


New Releases

Cover of Under the Milky Way by Vanessa Barneveld

Under the Milky Way by Vanessa Barneveld

Dawson, Colorado, is a sleepy town where nothing happens, until Cassidy’s mom check’s into a “wellness center” for apparently no reason. And everyone continues to insist that nothing is happening when mysterious lights appear in the sky and people find themselves missing chunks of time. And the new boy in school, Hayden, starts to notice Cassidy… while she notices that everything weird going on seems to lead right back to him.

They Met in a Tavern by Elijah Menchaca

A group of former heroes known as the Starbreakers have long since gone their separate ways and built their own lives after the destruction of a city left them all blaming each other. But now bounty hunters are tracking them down and they have little choice to reunite if they want to protect what little they have left. After seven years, getting back together is even harder than breaking up, and they need to mend old wounds if they want to survive.

Cover of The Sisters of Reckoning by Charlotte Nicole Davies

The Sisters of Reckoning by Charlotte Nicole Davis

Now that the Good Luck Girls are free, most have crossed the border to pursue new lives, while Aster tries to help more girls escape. But when she finds out about a new welcome house opening, she decides that helping individuals isn’t enough. She hatches an ambitious and dangerous plan to free all dustbloods, and calls upon her friends to make it a reality.

The Rookery by Deborah Hewitt

Alice Wyndham has discovered within herself a magical ability–she can see souls. Now, she wishes to return to the Rookery, learn to use her magic, and discover the truth behind who she is. But barely-remembered secrets from her past threaten her plans and the Rookery is on the brink of destruction. To save her city and her people, there are more sacrifices she must make.

Cover of The Shimmering State by Meredith Westgate

The Shimmering State by Meredith Westgate

A new drug, Memoroxin, is undergoing testing as a treatment for Alzheimer’s. Unsurprisingly, this drug has also seen far more recreational use throughout Hollywood, with those who have abused it finding their memories deeply affected if not completely erased. Lucien, whose mother has Alzheimer’s, and Sophie, a ballerina who makes ends meet with waitressing, meet at a treatment facility for heavy users of Memoroxin. Inexplicably drawn to each other, they cannot remember anything that came before… such as how they might actually know each other.

The Body Scout by Lincoln Michel

Kobo is a scout for Big Pharma-owned baseball teams, scoping out the latest genetically-augmented players… but he’s barely scraping by and doesn’t have the money to update his own cybernetics while loan sharks are closing in. Then his brother gets murdered, and Kobo must level up to searching through an entirely new stratum of corruption and risk both his safety and sanity.

News and Views

Congratulations to the winners of the 2021 Sir Julius Vogel Awards!

Over at his Patreon, Charles Payseur rounded up a ton of queer short SFF published in July

Read Before Assembly: The Influence of Sci-Fi on Technology and Design

Martha Wells and Becky Chambers in conversation

Rankin designs covers for Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy

Arrakis Rippers: A Guide to Dune-inspired Metal

Interview with Adrian Tchaikovsky

Interview with John Appel

Young People Read Old SFF does Neutron Star by Larry Niven

The Tolkien Society has announced its Autumn Seminar

Writing Against the Grain: T. Kingfisher’s Feminist Mythopoeic Fantasy

On Book Riot

Hopepunk featuring creative solutions to the climate crisis

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a $100 gift card to a Black-owned bookstore, a pair of airpods pro, and a QWERKY keyboard.


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 East Asian SFF Smorgasbord

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with some news items to take you into the weekend and a list of some of my favorite SFF that’s been translated to English. My big adventure this coming weekend is I’m going to be attempting to clean out my closet via garage sale, including offloading some old books that I no longer want (including a seven book series by someone who shall not be named), which is a weird feeling after 2020. Hoping to see you on the other side with a bag of nickels and dimes and not too bad of a sunburn. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you next week for new releases!

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


News and Views

Mercedes Lackey’s Valedmar series is finally getting a TV adaptation

Uncanny issue 41 has too many awesome essays in it to list them all here, so I’ll just link to the TOC

Seven Seas announced they will be translating three of Mo Xiang Tong Xiu’s novels (including the one on which The Untamed is based)

Rewriting the Tradition: Destiny and Diaspora in Shelley Parker-Chan’s She Who Became the Sun

Amazon’s The Lord of the Rings Series Sets 2022 Premiere With First Look at Tolkien Epic

Seanan McGuire’s Wayward Children Series Is in Development at Paramount

SFF eBook Deals

Agency by William Gibson for $1.99

Do You Dream of Terra-Two? by Temi Oh for $1.99

Beowulf: A New Translation by Maria Dahvana Headley for $2.99

On Book Riot

Silkpunk: what is is & what it definitely is not

Coming of age in space stories for teens

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a $100 gift card to a Black-owned bookstore, a pair of airpods pro, and a QWERKY keyboard.

Free Association Friday: East Asian SFF in Translation

In celebration of English translations coming for three of Mo Xiang Tong Xiu’s novels, I wanted to highlight some of my favorite Chinese SFF in translation… and then I got overenthusiastic and wanted to throw a few more novels in here that I also love that aren’t Chinese. So it’s an East Asian SFF in translation smorgasbord!

cover of Strange Beasts of China by Yan Ge

Strange Beasts of China by Yan Ge

The fictional Chinese city of Yong’an is occupied by both humans and an astounding array of cryptids who live alongside them, mostly hidden. An amateur cryptozoologist sets out to document each one of these beasts, and along that journey is drawn into a deeper mystery that asks her to question her very self.

Broken Stars edited and translated by Ken Liu

An anthology of contemporary Chinese science fiction short stories in translation, translated by the inimitable Ken Liu. It’s got three essays within as well, examining the state of Chinese sci-fi and the fandom that’s grown up around it.

Cover of A Hero Born by Jin Yong

A Hero Born by Jin Yong, translated by Anna Holmwood

I have seen Jin Yong called “the Brandon Sanderson of China” which I think honestly downplays his reach a little bit. This is the first volume of an excellent and very famous wuxia series — one that involves Genghis-freaking-Khan — and to the best of my knowledge, a completely excellent translation.

A Summer Beyond Your Reach by Xia Jia, translated by Ken Liu, Emily Jin, Carmen Yiling Yan, and R.F. Kuang

A collection of SFF short stories by Xia Jia, launched using a Kickstarter by Clarkesworld, which has featured some of her stories before. You can read five of her stories over at Clarkesworld for free, actually, to get a taste for why this is a must-have collection.

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

I’m Waiting For You by Kim Bo-Young, translated by Sophie Bowman

A science fiction collection from Kim Bo-Young, but it’s not quite the typical set of separate stories. Rather, it’s four stories in one volume — two pairs of linked stories. One set is about an engaged couple trying to coordinate their relationship and wedding through space and time. The other is about godlike alien beings for whom humans are mere extensions of their will — and a rebellion against that order is coming.

Vampire Hunter D by Hideyuki Kikuchi, translated by Kevin Leahy

This is actually the first of a new omnibus that contains the first three of the Vampire Hunter D novels. (And there are a lot of these novels.) It’s a bonkers post-apocalyptic far future with vampire lords and a gothic sensibility, where D is an incredibly hot guy who hunts vampires and solves mysteries. I love this whole series.

Cover of The Book of Heroes by Miyuki Miyabe

The Book of Heroes by Miyuki Miyabe, translated by Alexander O. Smith

When Yuriko’s brother gets in a fight with bullies, that’s bad enough. But then he disappears, and she finds a magical book in his room in his place — The Book of Heroes, which has possessed him. She must unravel the mystery of the book in order to save her brother and defeat the evil King in Yellow.

All You Need Is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka, translated by Joseph Reeder and Alexander O. Smith

The way-better-than-its-tepid-title-suggests film Edge of Tomorrow was based on this book, which is an excellent time loop action story about an alien invasion that the humans are fighting a losing battle against. And one of the new recruits, Keiji Kriya, gets sent back to the dawn of his final day alive every time he’s killed.


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

Were-Monkeys, USSR Mechas, and Other New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex with a selection of new releases for you this week, and some links for your perusal. On Friday, I mentioned I was going to see The Green Knight… and I’m here to report that it is amazing. Weird, stylish, gorgeous, and wall to wall excellent performances, though of course Dev Patel is the king in more ways than one. I cannot recommend this movie enough. While I love garbage franchise action movies probably a lot more than the next person, this one is still a desperately needed breath of fresh air for the genre in film. I hope you get a chance to see it! Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you again on Friday.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


New Releases

Cover of Monkey Around by Jadie Jang

Monkey Around by Jadie Jang

Maya McQueen is a barista, activist, and… were-monkey, and she’s just trying to figure herself out in modern San Francisco. But with Occupy Wall Street coming home to roost in the Bay Area and disappearances of supernatural people and murders of shapeshifter shaking up her world, she needs to prioritize her most urgent problems and get them solved. Now. Before it’s too late. The good news is, solutions don’t have to be neat, which suits a monkey just fine.

The Hand of the Sun King by J.T. Greathouse

Wen Alder is torn between two legacies. On his father’s side, he’s expected to pass the Imperial exams, learn magic, and serve the Sienese Emperor by rising to become the Hand of the Emperor. On his mother’s side, there’s wild, uncontrolled magic and resistance to the empire, and his introduction comes from his rebellious grandmother. Faced with the choice between rebellion and obedience, he soon comes to realize that this war is not just for the humans, but the heavens as well, and he may be the key to victory.

Cover of The Great Destroyers by Caroline Tung Richmond

The Great Destroyers by Caroline Tung Richmond

Jo Linden lives in an alternate world where the nuclear bomb was never invented — and now wars are decided by giant, mechanical soldiers. The Cold War rages, and the USSR and US posture at each other at the Pax Games, which pits young mecha pilots against each other. After losing every competition since 1963, the US is desperate for a win, and this is the year to do it, with the President of the United States and the Premier of the USSR about to meet in peace talks. Jo, the child of a mecha mechanic, didn’t ever expect to compete at this level, but when she’s recruited at the last moment, she can’t say no. When the Pax Games turn deadly, she must unravel a political plot if she wants to save herself — and stave off world-ending war.

Holdout by Jeffrey Kluger

Model astronaut Walli Beckwith mystifies her colleagues and infuriates ground control when she refuses to leave the International Space Station in the wake of an accident that forces the evacuation of all her colleagues. But this is a matter too important for her to worry about the risk to her career; she sees the incident for what it is, and knows only she can save both a forgotten part of Earth and the person she loves most.

Cover of Saving Proxima by Travis S. Taylor and Les Johnson

Saving Proxima by Travis S. Taylor and Les Johnson

In 2072, Earth finally receives the signal that SETI has been searching for — a broadcast from Proxima Centauri. While nations across Earth debate how to go about first contact — if they respond at all — humanity learns that the Proximans are about to be killed by an extinction-level event. With an entire alien civilization at stake, humanity must figure out how to send help — and how to get there in time.

The Wild Ones by Nafiza Azad

The Wild Ones are girls who have seen the words of the world, girls who have gained access to the place of pure magic called the Between, girls who refuse to be silenced. Together, they will rescue Taraana, a boy with stars in his eyes who helped them gain their magic.

News and Views

July roundup of Indie Speculative Fiction

Exploring Nnedi Okorafor’s Africanfuturist Universe

A great interview with LeVar Burton (who is an SFF author, too! see: Aftermath)

Playing favorites with favorites, or, what we talk about when we talk about our favorite books

Pioneering sci-fi writer Octavia Butler joins a pantheon of futurists

Thoughts on fertility issues in science fiction

A horse by any other name: Anne McCaffrey’s dragons

Vintage ad for SFF books in the 40s & 50s

The Fantasy Hive has its week 4 wrap up for Women in SFF

A response to the backlash against the Tolkien Society Summer Seminar including diversity as a topic

What sci-fi novels can teach us about uncertainty

This Shimmering Black Rock Is a 2,000-Year-Old Exploded Brain

On Book Riot

9 Alone in Space Books

You should also check out 12 LGBTQIA YA Audiobooks to Listen to in the 2nd Half of 2021 — there are some SFF selections on there!


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

Best British Fantasy Finalists

Happy Friday, shipmates! Wow, how the heck is this the last Friday of July already? Where did the month go??? It’s Alex, and I’ve got some neat award nominees to share with you, and some fun links for your edification. And I don’t know about you, but I am going to see The Green Knight tonight and I could not be more excited. I’ll shriek at you about it on Tuesday if it was as good as I expect it to be. Have a great weekend, and stay safe out there, space pirates.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


News and Views

Women, Worldbuilding, and Fantasy

Militaries plunder science fiction for technology ideas, but turn a blind eye to the genre’s social commentary

Q&A with Bonnie Jo Stufflebeam

Interview with Silvia Moreno-Garcia

A24 will adapt Octavia E. Butler’s Parable of the Sower into a movie

Now we know what the guts of Mars look like

Because I still don’t know WTF I watched, you should also see the trailer for Lamb

Star Wars: The High Republic: Out of the Shadows author Justina Ireland explains why the Jedi are a little sexier

Were we wrong all along? Interspecies relations in CJ Cherryh’s Foreigner series

SFF eBook Deals

I’m Waiting for You by Kim Bo-Young for $1.99

The Bone Maker by Sarah Beth Durst for $1.99

City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett for $1.99

On Book Riot

16 books like Red Queen

Rebellions, rivals, and ruthless rulers: 9 fantasy books with epic political intrigue

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast contains a summer reading list

Register to win copies of The Last She by H.J. Nelson and Crossbones by Kimberly Vale

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.

Free Association Friday: British Fantasy Finalists

This week we got to see the short list for the 2021 British Fantasy Awards, and there were a lot of books on there that you might not be familiar with from the other award shortlists. These are just the finalists for the Robert Holdstock Award, which is for Best Fantasy Novel.

NOTE: The City We Became by N.K. Jemisin is also a finalist for this award, and deservedly so, but I’ve left it out of the big list below because I’ve already expounded upon it multiple times in other finalist lists.

Cover of Threading the Labyrinth by Tiffani Angus

Threading the Labyrinth by Tiffani Angus

Toni leaves behind her failing gallery in New Mexico to come to England and inherit a manor house from a mysterious relative she never knew she had. Surrounded by overgrown gardens and a crumbling house, she submerges herself in the history of the house, learning about all the people who tended the gardens over the centuries. Soon she can see the ghosts in the changing garden and begins to understand the past that echos into her modern life from deep in the past.

Cover of Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow

The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow

When the 19th is about to turn into the 20th century, there is no room for witches, and hasn’t been for quite some time. All the witches have been long since burned, and if a woman wants power now, she needs to fight for her suffrage. When the three Eastwood sisters join the suffrage movement in New Salem, they want not only this new power, but to reclaim what is old and forgotten. But their enemies aren’t just the misogynists that believe women have no place outside the home, but also those who will not suffer a witch to live… let alone vote.

Cover of Dark River by Rym Kechacha

Dark River by Rym Kechacha

A story of two mothers, 8000 years apart, struggling to save their children from the destructive future they see coming. In Doggerland, Shaye takes her family to a sacred oak grove to perform a ritual that she hopes will save them all–but what she discovers will cut her deeply. Shante flees a London threatened by climate change, trying to reach the north and the new opportunities is presents–but first she must survive a dangerous wilderness.

Cover of The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart

The Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart

The emperor’s mastery of bone shard magic has allowed him to rule for many decades, creating bone constructs to maintain his power. His daughter Lin vows to prove her worth when he refuses to recognize her as heir, and the path she sees to that is through mastering the bone shard magic of her father. When the revolution her father has been trying to suppress reaches the gates of the palace, it’s for Lin to decide what she will do to claim the throne–and save her people.

By Force Alone by Lavie Tidhar

A new telling of the Arthurian legend, where nothing you know is true. Arthur is an egotistical gangster promoted above his ability. Merlin is an otherworldly parasite. Excalibur is not a sword, but a shady arms deal with an even shadier dealer. And Britain? A garbage heap that Rome got out of as soon as it could.

…all right, maybe that last one is true, from a certain point of view.


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

Solving Your Own Murder, Dragon Slaying, and Other New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a selection of new releases and some fun links for you on this last Tuesday of July. I’m fresh back from a mini-vacation over the weekend, during which I visited my family, read a lot of books, ate a lot of cheese, and drank a lot of wine, so I’m feeling energized and ready to tackle the start of August. Here’s hoping you find a long weekend to get a little relaxing done out of the smokey air soon, too. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Thing that made me laugh this week: The Two Guards

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


New Releases

Cover of The River Has Teeth by Erica Waters

The River Has Teeth by Erica Waters

This is not the first time that girls have gone missing in the woods, but Natasha is determined that her sister will be the last. Following rumors of supposed witchcraft, she asks Della for magical help to bring her sister home. But Della has her own fears that center on the woods, ones she keeps carefully secret–she believes the beast that takes the girls might in fact be her own mother, transformed by a spell gone wrong. With little to lose, they are each other’s only hope.

Far Out: Recent Queer Science Fiction and Fantasy edited by Paula Guran

An anthology of science fiction and fantasy short stories from the last decade that includes a wide spectrum of queer identities and voices. Authors include Sam J. Miller, Amal El-Mohtar, Neon Yang, Charlie Jane Anders, and many more!

Cover of The Dying Squad by Adam Simcox

The Dying Squad by Adam Simcox

Detective Inspector Joe Lazarus thought he was going to take down a drug ring; instead, when he storms a farmhouse in Lincolnshire, he discovers his own corpse and a woman named Daisy-May who has some bad news and some good news for him. The bad news: yes, he’s dead, and she’s a spirit guide. The good news? She’s there to recruit him into the Dying Squad, a detective force of the recently dead, so at least his afterlife won’t be boring. His first mission: solve his own murder, and do it before his memories fade away to nothing.

Hold Fast Through the Fire by K.B. Wagers

The crew of Zuma’s Ghost, one of the Near-Earth Orbital Guard ships, has won the Boarding Games for their second year in a row, cementing their reputation as an absolutely unstoppable team. But in the wake of this victory, they find out their commander and their Master Chief are both retiring, so a change in dynamic is inevitable–but they get more disruption than they counted on in the form of Spacer Chae Ho-Ki, who has a dark past as a convict and an even darker secret. As the crew of Zuma’s Ghost struggles to find its equilibrium again, the Trappist colonies start a war, and the ship is directly in their sights.

Cover of the Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub by Randy H. Garcia

Death Song of the Dragón Chicxulub by Rudy H. Garcia

La Muerta Blanca is a mysterious dragon-like ghostly creature that’s been stalking Central America since the days of the Aztecs, eating hearts and spreading terror. Now, Miguel Reilly comes to modern-day New Mexico and falls in with a shaman named Tomás, who shows him that he’s not “pure” Irish-American while trying to train this innocent nerd into a dragonslayer. Along his journey, Miguel meets a Maya med student named Maritza who has survived a brush with the spectral monster and come away with her own ambitions to slay it. Náhuatl codices lead the two to Chichén Itzá for a final, fantastical battle to slay a dragon and find themselves.

News and Views

The new Dune trailer has dropped

The Fantasy Hive does another round of 5-Star Books in 5 Words

Kate Elliott on adapting history into SFF

Interview with Chuck Wendig

Interview with Cassandra Khaw

Interview with Shelley Parker-Chan

Apex Magazine is running its 2022 fundraising Kickstarter

Haunted Objects in Women’s Weird Fiction

Season 13 trailer for Doctor Who

Wheel of Time is coming to Amazon in November

On Book Riot

2021 World Fantasy finalists announced

How rereading The Lord of the Rings helped me cope with my OCD

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.


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

Genre-Savvy, Trope-Subverting SF

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a look at some genre-savvy trope-subverting books and some news links for you to peruse over the weekend. By the time you’re reading this, I’ll be off visiting family in Idaho! Not sure how I feel about trying to get on an airplane even now. I’ll let you know how it feels on the other side. 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: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


News and Views

Congratulations to the winners of the Kitschies! Especially to Micaiah Johnson for winning the Golden Tentacle Award for debut for The Space Between Worlds!!!

And congratulations to the 2021 World Fantasy Award finalists!

Celebrating the women of SFF and an obscure (by which I mean fake) Egyptian Goddess

The Space to Exist: The Other Kind of Diversity in Storytelling

The Many Shades of Gatekeeping: How “Emerging Author” Hurts More Than Helps

Neutron Stars Have Mountains That Are Less Than a Millimeter Tall

SFF eBook Deals

Prime Deceptions by Valerie Valdes for $1.99.

The Other Log of Phileas Fogg by Philip José Farmer for $1.99.

The Green Man edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling for $1.99.

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about SFF set in the 1920s-ish.

You have until July 25 to enter to win a copy of Realm Breaker by Victoria Aveyard.

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.

Free Association Friday: Genre Savvy Subversion

On Monday, I saw Nic Cage’s new movie, Pig. Which is a shockingly excellent film and not at all what I expected from it. I don’t want to spoil anything in case you’re an indie movie person, but one of the stand outs was the fact that the writer and the the director were obviously very familiar with revenge film (a la John Wick) tropes and both used them and subverted them to make something completely different and very unexpected. So I got to thinking… what books have that kind of twist to them? I think it’s an even harder lift for books to play with tropes in that exact way, because it’s normally a massive marketing error to imply the reader is going to get something they don’t end up getting–especially because a book is a bigger time investment than a movie. You have to really stick the landing. So, with that in mind, what did I come up with?

Beneath the Rising cover

Beneath the Rising by Premee Mohamed

This book is in the cosmic horror genre, and it’s got all the Lovecraftian beasties you could want coming in from the outer worlds. It’s very self aware of what that’s all about. But rather than the horror of man’s insignificance in the face of the unending night, the real horror of this book is a really awful, twisted relationship… and it’s working through a realization of that which almost drives someone mad.

Savage Legion by Matt Wallace

This is a book that’s very acquainted with the tropes of epic fantasy, and is interested in turning as many as possible upside-down with thorough examination through a class-analysis lens. The savage armies of the invading force? Conscripts pulled off the streets of the empire and ready to rebel against the system that’s given them the worst end of the stick. Wise leaders making difficult choices? An entire bureaucratic department of them that tries to make a new recruit and gets more than they bargained for.

Spin the Dawn cover

Spin the Dawn by Elizabeth Lim

This starts out extremely fairy tale (in this case, The Weaver Girl and the Cowherd) then adds in a feminist twist with a girl taking her brother’s place and then also ending up in “The Quest for the Lost Husband” rather than “The Quest for the Lost Wife.” And more than halfway through the book, the main character changes her ambitions completely. It’s a delight.

The Light Brigade cover

The Light Brigade by Kameron Hurley

Tropes employed include those associated with corporate dystopias, military sci-fi, and time loop stories. And yet wherever I thought this book was going, I was wrong at every turn. Now, I can’t even tell you if this amounts to trope subversion or just being really freaking good at writing them. Maybe that’s part of the magic. It’s both. It’s neither. It’s just a really good book.

Under the Skin cover

Under the Skin by Michael Faber

Nominally a science fiction novel, it’s more on the horror side as far as I’m concerned. You never quite know where this book is going; it seems to start with a female serial killer, and then it keeps getting weirder and weirder and weirder, before diving into a new set of tropes that I’m not going to tell you because it’s a massive spoiler. I will say that the 2013 film of the same name is also very good (maybe even better than the book, sorry) and left me so wound up and disturbed that I couldn’t sleep for the entire night after watching it.

The Unspoken Name cover image

The Unspoken Name by A. K. Larkwood

This is another extremely genre-savvy fantasy book, though it’s more on the side of “I’ve definitely played this D&D campaign.” It plays with other worlds and portals in a really smart way, and the fact that the main character is a very smart orc lady who becomes an assassin and then gets to have an unexpected but adorable sapphic romance is an object lesson in the subversion of everything the genre ever tried to tell us about orcs.


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

Stolen Destinies, Last-Chance Reincarnation, an Interstellar War, and Other New Releases

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, and I’ve got quite the selection of new releases for you this lovely day. This weekend was a very hot one in Colorado, and I was hoping for some delicious watermelon to cool down — except our watermelon turned out to be rotten. At the first puncture of a knife, an unbelievable tide of slimy pink liquid that smelled like bad fish spurted out of it. It’s the most horrifying thing to ever happen in my kitchen. So, my wish for you this week, space pirates: may your watermelons be ever fresh and never bad! State safe out there, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Thing that made me smile this week: Check out the trailer for Reservation Dogs

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


New Releases

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

She Who Became the Sun by Shelley Parker-Chan

When a bandit attack leaves an eighth-born son destined for greatness and his second-born sister destined for nothing orphaned, it’s another trick of fate that the son dies. The daughter takes on her brother’s name, Zhu, and in an attempt to escape her own fate, enters a monastery masquerading as a male novice. But when the monastery, too, is destroyed, Zhu must fully take her brother’s fate of greatness and make it her own.

Assassin’s Orbit by John Appel

The planet Ileri is about to join the Commonwealth when a government minister is assassinated, threatening to spark an interstellar war. A disparate team must come together to solve this mystery and avert the possible destruction of their planet: a private investigator named Noo Okereke, a spy named Meiko Ogawa, and a police chief named Toiwa.

Cover of Colorful by Eto Mori

Colorful by Eto Mori, translated by Jocelyne Allen

The angel Prapura kicks a formless soul into the body of fourteen-year-old Makoto Kobayashi, who has just died by suicide. This is the soul’s second and last chance if he doesn’t want to be entirely removed from the cycle of rebirth. He needs to remember the worst mistake of his past life while living Makoto’s life and understanding the circumstances of his death.

Savage Bounty by Matt Wallace

The Savages that the empire culls from its cities and uses as shock troops have risen in rebellion and started their own war. Leading the legion is Evie, called the Sparrow General. Along with Dyeawan, a strategist operating in the shadows of imperial government; Lexi, the head of a guild who finds herself at the center of a political power play; and Taru, who has just been conscripted into a new legion of Savages, she will decide the fate of an empire and a world. (Full disclosure: Matt and I have the same agent.)

The Necessity of Stars cover

The Necessity of Stars by E. Catherine Tobler

Bréone Hemmerli is a diplomat negotiating what might be humanity’s most important alliance if we wish to survive a world devastated by climate change: peace with an alien race represented by a being named Tura. But Bréone’s memory is failing badly with age, and humanity’s time grows short.

News and Views

Congratulations to the winners of the 2021 Rhysling Awards!

Hayao Miyazaki’s Lost Magic of Parenthood

The Fellowship of the Ring and the memes of Middle-earth

The novel solutions of utopian fiction

Fantasy Faction has begun its Seventh Annual Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off

Cast of Wonders is celebrating its 10th anniversary

Brian Murphy argues that sword & sorcery needs a revival

The Heroine’s Journey – A Study in Story Structures

5 monsters in need of career advice

Post-Human Capitalism and Revolution: Detroit and Blade Runner 2049

Why the MCU’s Lighting Kind of Sucks

Loki costume designer tells us the secret of Tom Hiddleston’s magic pants

Check out The Cage, the first science fiction film made in Venezuela

On Book Riot

If you enter by the 22nd, you can win a $150 ThriftBooks gift card.

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.


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

I Will Keep Shrieking Until You Read This Book

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex with some links to take you into the weekend, and a book that really grabbed me by the heart that I want to talk about–The Mirror Season by Anna-Marie McLemore. And I’m still excited over here about all the Emmy nominations WandaVision got. (I bet Loki is going to get some next year, too.) Here’s hoping Marvel takes the hint and gives us something much weirder in the future. Have a great weekend, space pirates, stay safe out there, and I’ll see you on Tuesday!

Here’s a thing to smile about: I love excavators

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


News and Views

Queer Dads: Demons and Machines in Sorcerer’s Son by Phyllis Eisenstein and the Terminator Franchise

Goodreads: Meet the Authors of the Summer’s Biggest Sci-Fi and Fantasy Adventures

Makeshift Modernity: The rise of African speculative fiction

Cixin Liu’s The Three Body Problem has now become a serialized podcast

How women are written in sci-fi movies

What We Do in the Shadows season 3 teaser

How WandaVision Went From “Totally Bananas” Underdog to Emmy Juggernaut

Elon Musk Is Correct, I Am Specifically Attacking Space Itself and Not Just His Mars Colonization Project

90-year-old William Shatner conquers his fear of sharks by swimming with them

The ultimate fate of a nearby four-planet system: cosmic pinball, then game over

We’re getting a Wheel of Time prequel film trilogy to augment Amazon series

SFF eBook Deals

Autumn Bones by Jacqueline Carey for $1.99

Alpha Bots by Ava Lock for $0.99

The Traitor’s Son by Pedro Urvi for $0.99

On Book Riot

Incredibly epic fantasy journeys for every reader

I spy with my little eye 9 fantasy books about spies

15 magical books like Legendborn

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about our favorite SFF of 2021 so far

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.

Free Association Friday

While I know I normally like to do fun little lists that the ol’ brain meats free associate this day of the week, I occasionally want to take this corner of the newsletter to talk about a particular book that’s really stuck with me, that I want to shove at everyone and shriek at them to read.

This is one of those Fridays.

The Mirror Season by Anna-Marie McLemore

I will say up front that this book comes with big trigger warnings for sexual assault and, to a lesser extent, bullying. It is an easy book to read because Anna-Marie McLemore’s prose is gorgeous and rich while still being sleek and light. It’s an incredibly hard book to read because of what it’s about, which is two teenagers who start out as strangers meeting on the worst night of their lives, during which they are both sexually assaulted. It follows them through the stutter-step process of reaching a full understanding of what happened to them and how it affects them and their friendships and their relationship to each other. It’s unflinching in its depiction of healing as an uneven, nonlinear process that takes time and is never entirely finished.

The Mirror Season isn’t a plot-heavy book because it’s so much about what’s going on with the characters, and it gives them space to process and interact and think and breathe, which is something I feel like I find only rarely in genre books. There’s a lot of push for things to be pacy in SFF, which makes it really stand out to me when I find a book that’s so completely focused on character.

Also, if you are even a tiny bit into baking, this book is an absolute feast. Which feels like a strange thing to say about a book built around recovery from sexual assault, but there’s very consciously a lot of joy in the pages of The Mirror Season to balance out the pain and anxiety. The main character, Graciela, works at a pasteleria and has a magical ability to tell exactly what kind of pan dulce every customer wants. In the immediate aftermath of the assault, she loses her power, but then slowly recovers it as part of her own healing. And the baked goods she describes! I spent a lot of this book absolutely desperate for a concha.

I’ll be thinking about The Mirror Season for a long time. Difficult, beautiful, and necessary.


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

IKEA Assembly Manuals for Aliens

Happy Tuesday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a selection of new releases for this week and a few news items for your clicking pleasure. In Colorado, we’re now firmly back into the season where “smoke” is a valid weather condition according to my weather app, so that tells you how we’re doing out here. Stay safe out there, space pirates, read some good books, and I’ll see you on Friday!

Thing that made my weekend: Cat drinking milk, becomes music. And part 2.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


New Releases

Hollywood Heroine by Sarah Kuhn

After years of being legends in the real world, superheroines Aveda Jupiter and Evie Tanaka are about to take the world by storm in their own TV show. But Aveda has a hard time getting excited; there’s Otherworld activity outside the Bay Area, and she still has to worry about the fate of the world. When on-set drama goes supernatural, Aveda and Evie must swing in to save the day again.

Cover of The Freedom Race by Lucinda Roy

The Freedom Race by Lucinda Roy

The second Civil War left behind an America that’s no longer the United States, riven with sickness and radiation and divided into factions. One of these factions, the Homestead Territories, has restarted the slave trade, and the other factions let it. Ji-ji was born enslaved in one of the plantations in the Homestead Territories; her possible way out is the annual Freedom Race. She also unknowingly holds the key to breaking the power of the Homestead Territories. To do so, she must unravel the voices of the dead.

The Justice in Revenge by Ryan Van Loan

Partners in crime-solving Buc and Eld have taken a place on the board of the Kanados Trading Company with the intention of destroying the nobility from within and trying to force a little more equality into the island nation of Servenza. But boardroom politics and mages keep progress slow, and the two reach out to a potential patron — the Doga who rules the nation. If they figure out who is trying to assassinate her, they’ll gain her support; if they fail their deadline, they’ll be exiled to to the ends of the world. (Full disclosure: Ryan and I have the same agent.)

Cover of In Beta by Prescott Harvey

In Beta by Prescott Harvey

In 1993, small-town high school seniors (and total geeks) Jay and Colin discover a disk that contains a computer program that’s a pixel-perfect replica of their entire town. And then they discover that if they alter the program, they alter reality. They react to this knowledge with all the calm thoughtfulness one can expect from two teenage boys. But someone is watching what they do, and that someone has their own way of warping reality.

The Fallen by Ada Hoffman

The planet Jai has now become a chaotic, galactic no-go zone; its laws of physics are forever altered and its inhabitants have all changed. The AI gods that once ruled the galaxy have become Jai’s jailers, and Tiv, who once believed utterly in these gods, turns to helping the survivors and fighting for freedom. Her girlfriend, Yasira, debilitatingly ill, cannot lead the necessary revolution. But somehow together, they must solve the mysteries that fractured their planet — and save it.

News and Views

If you’re quick, you can sign up for a flash science fiction reading courtesy of Space Cowboy Books tonight.

Congratulations to the winners of the 2020 Aurealis Awards!

Video interview with Farah Mendelsohn.

Interview with Cat Rambo.

Interview with Sheree Renée Thomas.

Fantasy Hive has a selection of SFF cover art done by women cover artists.

How to create fantasy villains.

Daario Naharis and The Death of Khans: From the Mongol Empire to Game of Thrones.

Future Lord of the Rings films should acknowledge the book’s queer leanings.

Writing with an emotional landscape.

IKEA made assembly manuals for aliens.

Bezos and Branson are going to space! Or maybe not. If you have paid much attention, you can already guess my opinion of the “billionaire space race.” But this is an interesting article that’s about the definition of space itself — particularly where it actually begins.

On Book Riot

8 female authors like Sarah J. Maas

Everything we know about the Ursula K. Le Guin stamp the USPS is releasing

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.


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

SFF Cures for Summer Boredom

Happy Friday, shipmates! It’s Alex, with a few book suggestions for fighting any summer boredom that might be weighing you down, as well as links to check out. The good news is, after mainlining Benadryl for a day and a half because my mosquito bites were that bad, I am coherent and awake, so any spelling mistakes you find are completely my fault. Stay safe out there, space pirates, and I’ll see you with new releases on Tuesday!

Fun thing for the weekend: This crossover of my two fandoms fills me with delight.

Let’s make the world a better place, together. Here’s somewhere to start: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/ and anti-asianviolenceresources.carrd.co


News and Views

Shortlist for the SFF Rosetta Awards has been announced

Interview with Katherine Addison

Catherynne Valente will discuss her new book The Past Is Red via Zoom on July 20

Troy L. Wiggins: The Necessity of Slavery Stories

Ainehi Edoro: What is Africanjujuism?

Abigail George: Moscow in Autumn

How Marginalized Authors Are Transforming Gothic Fiction

Young People Read Old SFF covers “Repent, Harlequin!” Said the Ticktockman

This is kind of funny: DC and Marvel superheroes top breached password lists.

SFF eBook Deals

The Grace of Kings by Ken Liu for $1.99

Dragon Keeper by Robin Hobb for $1.99

Vox by Christina Dalcher for $1.99

On Book Riot

This week’s SFF Yeah! podcast is about SFF that’s perfect for camping.

This month you can enter to win a $250 Barnes & Noble gift card, a Kindle Paperwhite, and a Kindle Oasis.

Free Association Friday: Anti-Boredom SFF

July is apparently National Anti-Boredom Month, which I didn’t even know was a thing. I suppose that makes sense for a month when all the under-18s are out of school and potentially at loose ends. And books are a cure for boredom, right? Especially when they’re out there challenging tropes and doing something different.

Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

Bored with quasi-European epic fantasy? This is the start of a series that’s got it all–magic, gods, tons of politics, family drama, giant animals that people ride around on, and a deep history that unfolds without requiring infodumps… and it’s all set in a fantasy Mesoamerica.

(Also check out The Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter, which is African-inspired epic fantasy with dragons.)

The Tiger’s Daughter by K. Arsenault Rivera

Bored with fated lovers who always seem to be a heterosexual couple? Here’s Barsalayaa Shefali, a horse-riding female warrior, and O Shizuka, a divine empress, and they have a big destiny together that may be leading them to either their deaths or the godhood they must attain to save the world.

Son of the Storm by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

Bored with fantasy that front and centers fighters? This one’s about a scholar and a politician trying to maintain their places in a crumbling empire… then you throw a mage who shouldn’t exist into the mix, and they’re all sent on dark journey through some even darker history–and deadly secrets.

Ancillary Justice by Ann Leckie

Bored with the AI always being the bad guy? This starts a series about an embodied AI who takes on an empire in her quest for revenge–and then justice.

Also, Martha Wells’s Murderbot series, starting with All Systems Red, scratches this itch nicely as well… and gives us an AI with some severe social anxiety.

The Ministry for the Future by Kim Stanley Robinson

Bored with dystopias? Much of Kim Stanley Robinson’s work is quasi-utopic, though in a way that’s very uniquely his. Rather than trying to imagine a future where technology runs everything and resources are abundant, he looks for the ways people can aim for utopia with work and managing scarce resources.

The Ruin of Kings by Jenn Lyons

Bored with chosen ones? Here’s a thief who finds out that he might be the missing son of a prince, but rather than being swept into an epic quest, he’s drafted into his ruthless family’s political machinations. Worse, if he’s got a great destiny at all, it’s not that he’ll save the world — he’s going to be the one to destroy it.


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.