Nonfiction
Book Review: No Gods, No Monsters, by Cadwell Turnbull
Reviewer Arley Sorg loved No Gods, No Monsters, the new novel by Lightspeed alum Cadwell Turnbull. Find out what made it such a great read for Arley, and see if you’ll like it too.
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Reviewer Arley Sorg loved No Gods, No Monsters, the new novel by Lightspeed alum Cadwell Turnbull. Find out what made it such a great read for Arley, and see if you’ll like it too.
For this month’s review, Chris Kluwe looks at a millennia-spanning novel by Monica Byrne, The Actual Star, which follows the lives, both past, present, and future, of three extraordinary individuals, and how their relationships intertwine over the long years of historical time. Find out just why he calls it “a masterpiece”!
Reviewer LaShawn M. Wanak dives into weird waters when she reviews the anthology Weird Women II: Classic Supernatural Fiction by Groundbreaking Female Writers (edited by Lisa Morton and Leslie S. Klinger). Find out which stories are her favorite and see if you’ll like them, too.
How does the newest of the year’s best SF/F anthologies stack up? Let Arley Sorg tell you why you want to read this one!
It’s never easy to wrap up a series, but reviewer Chris Kluwe tells us why Richard Kadrey nails the finale of his Sandman Slim tales.
LaShawn M. Wanak celebrates short fiction about our identity in her review of the new anthology Seasons Between Us.
Arley Sorg knows a lot about short fiction. Find out why he’s recommending the reprint anthology Far Out, edited by Paula Guran.
This month, Chris Kluwe’s reading goes royal. Find out just why you should read Jennifer Estep’s new novel Capture the Crown.
This month, LaShawn M. Wanak goes out into the woods to bring you a review of For the Wolf, a new novel from Hannah Whitten.
Arley Sorg reviews new anthology Sword Stone Table: Old Legends, New Voices, edited by Swapna Krishna and Jenn Northington. Did he really say it leaves “hella cool” in the dust? Read his review and find out!