The latest from Andy Weir is just so gosh-darn hopeful; one can’t help but smile the whole way through.
By Andy Weir
The latest from Andy Weir is just so gosh-darn hopeful; one can’t help but smile the whole way through.
The latest from Andy Weir is just so gosh-darn hopeful; one can’t help but smile the whole way through.
Darcy Coates will have you gripping the covers with this immediately entertaining, surprisingly funny horror novel.
Both exhilarating and deeply unsettling, Firebreak shines a light on how easy it can be to manipulate people through the media they consume.
This refreshing, delightful and magical mystery is the literary equivalent of a cup of lovely mint tea.
Sometimes a book makes you forget everything: the water boiling on the stove for tea, the lunch or dinner that has long since gone cold.
Chapman pulls no punches, revealing how the simplest of misrepresentations can result in a sort of mass hysteria against someone.
Sarah Beth Durst’s latest fantasy is the most creative, empathetic book about bone magic you will ever read.
Jayne Entwistle, best known for her narration of the Flavia de Luce series, brings Angrboda to life with a husky, sage voice and northern English lilt.
Kim’s prose is always oh-so-gorgeous, even when it’s exploring complex ideas about space travel and philosophical and metaphysical riddles.
For all its disturbingly plausible grime, gore and occasional horror, The Unbroken is not a dark fantasy. There is a current of optimism that flows throughout.
This well-executed fantasy uses three separate timelines to tell a beautiful story of struggle, loss and, eventually, triumph.
Two monsters lurk on Mattie’s mountain. The first is her husband, William. The other is an unknown terror in the woods.
Malice transforms Sleeping Beauty into a dark and compelling fantasy romance between the storybook princess and Alyce, a dark sorceress.
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