Next SFF Author: Ben Aaronovitch

Author: Jason Golomb


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SHORTS: Brookside, Simmons, Card, Sheckley

The Last Days of JerichoĀ by Thomas Brookside (2010)

The Last Days of Jericho is Thomas Brookside‘s follow up to his incredibly creative and well-executed novella De Bello Lemures, or The Roman War Against the Zombies of Armorica. Let’s make one thing clear: Thomas Brookside may be self-published, but his writing is as crisp and descriptive as that of any big house published author. Both stories take place in a very particular historical setting, and Brookside nails the narrator’s tone and delivers an extremely genuine-sounding account.


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The Monstrumologist: Genuine Gothic gross-out horror for young adults

The Monstrumologist by Rick Yancey

Yes, my dear child, monsters are real. I happen to have one hanging in my basement.

Rick Yanceyā€™s story revolves around Dr. Wathrop who investigates and studies monsters ā€” heā€™s the Monstrumologist. The setting is late 19th century New England, and the Monstrumologist has taken in Will Henry, the orphan of his former assistant. Itā€™s through this young apprenticeā€™s eyes that Yancey tells his tale of mythological monsters run amuck in pre-industrial Massachusetts. The Monstrumologist is a creepy,


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From a Buick 8: Equal parts horror, science fiction and Lovecraftian ode

From a Buick 8 by Stephen King

Stephen KingĀ tends to get hammered in the press and by literati. Heā€™s pulp, they say. Heā€™s popular, they say. Nobody can be as productive (he publishes an average of two books per year) and still write quality, they say. I remember starting college in Boston in 1988, shortly after U2 released their huge Joshua Tree album. The established U2 fans rejected it outright as a ā€™sell out’. They couldnā€™t believe that their heroes sold out to ā€˜the manā€™ and became…


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Tales of Cthulhu Invictus: Ancient Rome does battle with the Lovecraftian mythos

Tales of Cthulhu Invictus: Nine Stories of Battling The Cthulhu Mythos In Ancient Rome edited by Brian M. Sammons

She shivers. She is cold, and she shivers, despite the blanket that wraps her, despite her motherā€™s enfolding arms.Ā 
It is not the fever, but the place.
A place that feelsā€¦ old.
Old when Rome was young. Old when the she-wolf gave suckle to Romulus and Remus. Oldā€¦ beyond old. Ancient, and wrong.

~from ā€œFecunditati Augustae,ā€ by Christine Morgan

Tales of Cthulhu Invictus addsĀ nine new stories to the large anthology subgenre of the Cthulhu mythos built upon the cosmic horror foundations laid by H.P.


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SHORTS: Swirsky, Scalzi, Wong, Sriduangkaew, Heisler, Brookside

There is so much free or inexpensive short fiction available onĀ the internet these days. Here are a few stories we read this week that we wanted you to know about.Ā 

Grand JetƩ (The Great Leap) by Rachel Swirsky (2014, free at Subterranean Press)

ā€œMara, please wake up. Iā€™ve made you a gift.ā€ But gifts can be complicated: often there are strings attached, and the giver may not be completely in tune with the desires of the recipientā€¦ may, in fact,


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Who Goes There?: An influential, entertaining novella

Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell, Jr.

Three mad, hate-filled eyes blazed up with a living fire, bright as fresh-spilled blood, from a face ringed with a writhing, loathsome nest of worms, blue, mobile worms that crawled where hair should growā€¦

John W. Campbellā€™s novella Who Goes There?, first published in 1938 in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction, formed the foundation for the thrice-made movie The Thing. John Carpenter directed the 1982 film starring Kurt Russell and it holds a significant place in my childhood memories as it was the first horror movie I was able to watch all they way through.


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Journey to the Center of the Earth: On the Edge

Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne

Et quacumque viam dederit fortuna sequamur
– And whatever route fortune gives, we shall follow

This IS your great-great-great-grandfather’s adventure story, so reader beware. There’s a lot of walking, a lot of exposition, and quite frankly, not a lot of action. But keep in mind… this is an original. Our modern day sensibilities expect high action out of our adventure stories: monsters, critters, thrill-a-minute. But in a much different time when society was in a much different state,


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The Rim of the Morning: Great old school cosmic horror

The Rim of the Morning: Two Tales of Cosmic Horror by William Sloane

New York Review Books Classics has just packaged two novels by renowned author, editor and teacher William Sloane into a single offering, The Rim of the Morning: Two Tales of Cosmic Horror. Sloane is not an author Iā€™d previously known, probably due to the fact that these stories are two of only three novels that he ever published. Stephen KingĀ contributes a short but impeccable introduction,


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The Sparrow: A deep space exploration of new worlds and the meaning of religion

The Sparrow by Mary Doria Russell

Not one sparrow can fall to the ground without your Father knowing it.Ā ~Matthew 10:29

I thoroughly enjoyed this expansive story of space travel and first contact. The SparrowĀ (1996), a multiple award-winning novel from Mary Doria Russell and the first book in THE SPARROW duology, is wonderfully deep in its exploration of culture clash and how individual experiences, both spiritual and physical, shape those interactions. Russell is at her best in bringing her characters to life and deftly creating three dimensional imagery that are at once understandable,


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Timeā€™s Eye: Action, science andā€¦ Alexander the Great vs. Genghis Khan?

Timeā€™s EyeĀ by Arthur C. Clarke &Ā Stephen Baxter

Action, you say? Science!? Characters in 3D!?? But waitā€¦ thereā€™s more! How about an ancient battle-royale between Alexander the Great and his army vs. Genghis Khan and his Mongolian horde?

Oh yes, sci-fi power couple Arthur C. Clarke and Stephen Baxter have all that and more in the 2003 opening to their A TIME ODYSSEYĀ series, which, in theory, takes place in the same universe as Clarke’s SPACE ODYSSEYĀ stories.

Inexplicably,


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Next SFF Author: Ben Aaronovitch

We have reviewed 8403 fantasy, science fiction, and horror books, audiobooks, magazines, comics, and films.

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