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Paul Auster (1947-2024)
Author Paul Auster, 77, died April 30, 2024 of lung cancer at home in Brooklyn NY. Auster wrote more than 30 books, inluding literary novels and non-fiction, and occasionally incorporated surreal and genre elements in his fiction.
Paul Benjamin Auster was born February 3, 1947 in Newark NJ. He attended Columbia University, graduating with bachelor’s and master’s degrees before moving to Paris in 1970, where he worked as a translator. ...Read More
SF/Fantasy/Horror ReviewsView All
A.C. Wise Reviews Short Fiction: khōréō
khōréō 3.3
khōréō 3.3 includes two short stories and a novelette in two parts. The one I found to be most effective of the three is “The Blue Glow” by Lisa Hosokawa, which follows a failed suicide pilot as he returns home in search of his family, and finds only destruction. His journey is plagued by ghosts, but he holds onto hope that his mother and baby ...Read More
Niall Harrison Reviews Jumpnauts by Hao Jingfang
Jumpnauts, Hao Jingfang (trans. Ken Liu) (Saga 978-1-53442-211-7, 368pp, $18.99). March 2024.
Deep in the bowels of Hao Jingfang’s Jumpnauts, an alien guide reveals to the human protagonists that what defines civilisational progression, from their elevated perspective, is ‘‘the capacity for information exchange.’’ The development of writing, which allows information to be transmitted widely in space and time, was the necessary precondition to reach the ‘‘zeroth rank’’ of ...Read More
Gary K. Wolfe Reviews The Dead Cat Tail Assassins by P. Djèlí Clark
The Dead Cat Tail Assassins, P. Djèlí Clark (Tordotcom 978-1-25076-704-2, $20.99, 224pp, hc) April 2024.
Like Chekhov’s famous gun, it seems to be an unstated principle among writers as diverse as Robert Ludlum and Octavia E. Butler that a character suffering from total amnesia in the first act is in for some world-shaking revelations by the third. The same is true of P. Djèlí Clark’s The Dead Cat Tail ...Read More
Paul Di Filippo Reviews A View from the Stars by Cixin Liu
A View from the Stars, Cixin Liu (Tor 978-1250292117, hardcover, 224pp, $27.99) April 2024
Most authors segregate their fiction from their non-fiction, compiling the two classes of work into separate collections. I always recall one exception I read as a teen, a minor Frederik Pohl volume titled Digits & Dastards, which featured two essays along with the stories. And I suppose that Harlan Ellison’s inclusion of long anecdotal ...Read More
Jake Casella Brookins Reviews Truth of the Aleke by Moses Ose Utomi
The Truth of the Aleke, Moses Ose Utomi (Tordotcom 978-1-2508-4905-2, $24.99, 112pp, hc) March 2023. Cover by Alyssa Winans.
Among the more fascinating things that Moses Ose Utomi seems to be doing with his Forever Desert series is looking at how worldviews change with experience. The protagonist of The Lies of the Ajungo, a young teenage boy, cut through the titular deception with a heroic self-sacrifice. Generations later, ...Read More
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New Books Video for March 26 is up!
Come spend a few minutes with Amelia finding out about all the great books coming out this week! Science fiction, fantasy, horror, young adult, you name it!
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2024 Australasian Shadows Awards Shortlist
The 2024 Australasian Shadows Awards (previously known as the Australia Shadows Awards) shortlist has been announced. The award is given by the Australasian Horror Writers Association (AHWA) for “the finest in horror and dark fiction published by an Australasian within the calendar year.”
Novel
- Polyphemus, Zachary Ashford (Darklit)
- When Ghosts Call Us Home, Katya de Becerra (Page Street; Pan Macmillan)
- The Graveyard Shift, Maria Lewis (Angry Robot;
Paul Di Filippo Reviews In Universes by Emet North
In Universes, Emet North (Harper 978-0063314870, hardcover, 240pp, $26.99) April 2024
I never would have predicted that the fantastika genre would be graced in 2024 with a novel that resonated so vibrantly with two classics from the 1970s: Joanna Russ’s The Female Man and Marge Piercy’s Woman on the Edge of Time. And yet that is precisely the vibe that I feel confident in proclaiming emanates from Emet ...Read More
Liz Bourke Reviews Cascade Failure by L.M. Sagas
Cascade Failure, L.M. Sagas (Tor 978-1-25087-125-1, $17.99, 416pp, tp) March 2024.
Clearly this is the month for me to discuss debut novels. Cascade Failure is the first novel from L.M. Sagas: a science fiction adventure in the high-octane tradition. Stories set in futures ruled by soulless corporations have multiplied in recent years, perhaps as the naked greed of unfettered capitalism has grown more blatant since the decade-defining financial crash ...Read More
Kaguya Sci-Fi Contest Winners
Japanese science fiction website VirtualGorillaPlus (VG+) has announced the winners of its 2021 Kaguya Sci-Fi Contest, judged by Kanata Inoue, Tatsuya Isogami, Hakka Kishitani, and Mahiro Saeki.
- Grand Prize: “Magic Ball”, The Carrier of Violence and Ruin
- Readers’ Prize: “The Multiverse Scavenger Hunt race, which was held in the afternoon of the Jonan Elementary School Sports Day”, Dainei Makino
- Judge’s Special Prize: “Screams”, Noe Itokawa
Winners were chosen from 381 ...Read More
2024 Aurora Awards Ballot
The 2024 Aurora Awards ballot for works by Canadians has been announced. The Aurora Awards are nominated by members of the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association. The top five nominated works were selected, with additional works included when there was a tie for fifth place.
Best Novel
- The Valkyrie, Kate Heartfield (HarperVoyager)
- Bad Cree, Jessica Johns (HarperCollins Canada)
- Silver Nitrate, Silvia Moreno-Garcia (Del Rey)
- Moon of