Tag Archives: Books

Locus Forthcoming Books: April

Locus Forthcoming Books: APR 2023

  • EDWARD ASHTON • Mal Goes to War • Rebellion/Solaris UK, Apr 2024 (tp, eb)
  • EDWARD ASHTON • Mal Goes to War • St. Martin’s, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • LEIGH BARDUGO • The Familiar • Penguin Random House UK/Viking UK, Apr 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • LEIGH BARDUGO • The Familiar • Macmillan/Flatiron, Apr 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • S.A. BARNES • Ghost Station • Tor/Nightfire, Apr 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • STEVEN BRUST • Lyorn • Tor, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • V. CASTRO • Immortal Pleasures • Penguin Ran¬dom House/Del Rey, Apr 2024 (tp, eb)
  • RIN CHUPECO • Court of Wanderers • Hodder & Stoughton UK/Hodderscape, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • RIN CHUPECO • Court of Wanderers • Simon & Schus¬ter/Saga Press, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • P. DJÈLÍ CLARK • The Dead Cat Tail Assassins • Tordot¬com, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • JULIE E. CZERNEDA • A Change of Place • Astra House/DAW, Apr 2024 (tp, eb)
  • SARAH BETH DURST • The Lies Among Us • Amazon/Lake Union, Apr 2024 (tp, eb)
  • H.E. EDGMON • Merciless Saviors • Daphne Press UK, Apr 2024 (ya, hc, eb)
  • H.E. EDGMON • Merciless Saviors • St. Martin’s/Wednesday Books, Apr 2024 (ya, hc, eb)
  • IAN C. ESSLEMONT • Forge of the High Mage • Tor, Apr 2024 (1st US, tp, hc, eb)
  • DANIEL M. FORD • Necrobane • Tor, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • MAX GLADSTONE • Wicked Problems • Tordotcom, Apr 2024 (tp, eb)
  • LIZ KERIN • First Light • Tor/Nightfire, Apr 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • GREG KEYES • The Wind that Sweeps the Stars • Titan Books UK, Apr 2024 (pb, eb)
  • MARK LAWRENCE • The Lie That Broke the World • Ace, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • MARK LAWRENCE • The Lie That Broke the World • Harper Voyager UK, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • ANN LECKIE • Lake of Souls • Orbit US, Apr 2024 (c, hc, eb)
  • ANN LECKIE • Lake of Souls • Orbit UK, Apr 2024 (c, tp, eb)
  • DARCIE LITTLE BADGER • Sheine Lende • Levine Querido, Apr 2024 (ya, hc, eb)
  • CIXIN LIU • A View from the Stars • Tor, Apr 2024 (c, hc, eb)
  • TARAN MATHARU • Dragon Rider • Harper Voyager US, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • TARAN MATHARU • Dragon Rider • Harper Voyager UK, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • SEANAN MCGUIRE • The Proper Thing • Subterranean Press, Apr 2024 (c, hc, eb)
  • SAMANTHA MILLS • The Wings Upon Her Back • Tachyon Publications, Apr 2024 (tp, eb)
  • THOMAS OLDE HEUVELT • Oracle • Tor/Nightfire, Apr 2024 (1st US, h, hc, eb)
  • CHRISTOPHER RUOCCHIO • Disquiet Gods • Bloomsbury UK/Head of Zeus/Ad Astra, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • CHRISTOPHER RUOCCHIO • Disquiet Gods • Baen, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • SALMAN RUSHDIE • Knife: Meditations After an Attempt¬ed Murder • Penguin Random House/Random House, Apr 2024 (nf, b, hc, eb)
  • R.A. SALVATORE • Pinquickle’s Folly • Simon & Schuster/Saga Press, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • SOFIA SAMATAR • The Practice • the Horizon, and the Chain, Tordotcom, Apr 2024 (na, tp, eb)
  • DAVID J. SCHOW • Suite 13 • Subterranean Press, Apr 2024 (c, hc, eb)
  • DAVID WEBER • Toll of Honor • Baen, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • ALIYA WHITELEY • Polestars 6: Drive or Be Driven • New¬Con Press UK, Apr 2024 (c, tp, hc, eb)
  • LIZ WILLIAMS • Polestars 7: Back Through the Flaming Door • NewCon Press UK, Apr 2024 (c, tp, hc, eb)
  • JOHN WISWELL • Someone You Can Build a Nest In • Astra House/DAW, Apr 2024 (hc, eb)
  • JOHN WYNDHAM • Logical Fantasy: The Many Worlds of John Wyndham • Subterranean Press, Apr 2024 (c, hc, eb)

Locus list of Forthcoming Books

Locus List of Forthcoming Books: MAR 2024

  • KAGE BAKER • Maelstrom and Other Martian Tales • Subterranean Press, Mar 2024 (c, hc, eb)
  • BODHISATTVA CHATTOPADHYAY, ED. • Inhumans and Other Stories: A Se¬lection of Bengali Science Fiction • MIT Press, Mar 2024 (oa, tp, eb)
  • SEB DOUBINSKY • The Horror • IFWG Publishing Interna¬tional, Mar 2024 (na, h, tp, eb)
  • HARLAN ELLISON • Greatest Hits • Sterling/Union Square & Co., Mar 2024 (c, tp, eb)
  • HADEER ELSBAI • The Weavers of Alamaxa • Harper Voyager US, Mar 2024 (hc, eb)
  • HADEER ELSBAI • The Weavers of Alamaxa • Orbit UK, Mar 2024 (tp, eb)
  • KIM HARRISON • Three Kinds of Lucky • Ace, Mar 2024 (hc, eb)
  • VERONICA G. HENRY • The Canopy Keepers •Amazon/47North, Mar 2024 (tp, eb)
  • LUCY HOLLAND • Song of the Huntress • Macmillan UK, Mar 2024 (hc, eb)
  • LUCY HOLLAND • Song of the Huntress • Orbit US/Redhook, Mar 2024 (tp, eb)
  • HAO JINGFANG • Jumpnauts • Simon & Schuster/Saga Press, Mar 2024 (tp, eb)
  • STEPHEN GRAHAM JONES • The Angel of Indian Lake • Simon & Schuster/Saga Press, Mar 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • STEPHEN GRAHAM JONES • The Angel of Indian Lake • Titan Books UK, Mar 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • JOE R. LANSDALE • The Unlikely Affair of the Crawling Razor • Subterranean Press, Mar 2024 (na, h, hc)
  • LEE MANDELO • The Woods All Black • Tordotcom, Mar 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • SEANAN MCGUIRE • Aftermarket Afterlife • Astra House/DAW, Mar 2024 (tp, eb)
  • PREMEE MOHAMED • The Siege of Burning Grass • Rebel¬lion/Solaris UK, Mar 2024 (hc, eb)
  • THOMAS OLDE HEUVELT • Oracle • Hodder & Stoughton UK, Mar 2024 (h, hc, eb)
  • ADRIAN TCHAIKOVSKY • Alien Clay • Macmillan/Tor UK, Mar 2024 (hc, eb)
  • MOSES OSE UTOMI • The Truth of the Aleke • Tordotcom, Mar 2024 (na, ya, hc, eb)
  • TIMOTHY ZAHN • The Icarus Job • Baen, Mar 2024 (hc, eb)

AGENDA: FEBRUARY 2023 MonSFFA e-Meeting

AGENDA: FEBRUARY 2023 MonSFFA Meeting

Note: Our meetings take place both on our webpage and on Zoom. To request a link to Zoom, contact <president@monsffa.ca> .

1:00PM, Post 1 of 8 (Meeting Opens!)

Release (Photos of) the Kraken! (This is a quick feature showcasing recent pictures taken of the rarely photographed giant squid, inspiration for many a sci-fi monster.)

1:30PM, Post 2 of 8 (We’ve Been Framed!)
Presentation—Framing Your SF/F Artwork. Keith, with membership participation presents tips on how to show off your projects to best advantage.

2:30PM, Post 3 of 8 Page and Screen: “What Are You Reading/Watching?”  (ZOOM)

3:00PM, Post 4 of 8 (Break): Snack Time, Virtual Display Table, Today’s Raffle Prizes (ZOOM Chat Continues)

3:15PM, Post 5 of 8 (The Purge!)
Discussion: Moderated by Cathypl–Why readers find it so hard to give up books we have loved (It’s not hoarding if it’s BOOKS!)  (ZOOM)

4:15PM, Post 6 of 8 (Show Us Yours!)
Show-and-Tell (ZOOM Chat)

Gallery: Celebrating Famous Sci-Fi Couples (In honour of Valentine’s Day!)  On line

4:45PM, Post 7 of 8 (For the Record!)
Special SF/F LP Record Offer! (Courtesy of the Legacy of Sylvain St-Pierre)

5:00PM, Post 8 of 8 (Wrap-Up!)
Thank You!

Date of Next Club e-Meeting: March 11, 13:00h. Guest speaker, Lloyd Penney

Sign-Off

We’re drowning in old books — but getting rid of them is heartbreaking

An article in today’s Gazette which struck a chord, and might resonate with a lot of our members, too.  –CPL

THE FINAL CHAPTER: We’re drowning in old books — but getting rid of them is heartbreaking

Montreal Gazette, 23 Jan 2023
KAREN HELLER The Washington Post*

  GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOTO
“Nobody likes to throw a book away. Nobody likes to see it go into a bin,” says Michael Powell of Powell’s Books in Portland, Ore. The fear that one’s beloved books could be destroyed has been exacerbated by the latest revival of forces that seem keen to ban certain books, resulting in the proliferation of those tiny free-library boxes on the sides of roads.

On a recent weekday afternoon, Bruce Albright arrives in the Wonder Book parking lot, pops the trunk of his Camry and unloads two boxes of well-worn books. “It’s sad. Some of these I’ve read numerous times,” he says.

Albright, 70, has been at this for six months, shedding 750 books at his local library and at this Frederick, Md., store. The rub: More than 1,700 volumes remain shelved in the retired government lawyer’s nearby home, his collection lovingly amassed over half a century. But Albright is on a mission. “I cleaned out my parents’ home,” he says. “I don’t want to do to my kids what my parents did to me.”

He’s far from alone. Books are precious to their owners. Their worth, emotional and monetary, is comparably less to anyone else.

Humorist and social critic Fran Lebowitz owns 12,000 books, mostly fiction, kept in 19th-century wooden cases with glass doors in her New York apartment.

“Constitutionally, I am unable to throw a book away. To me, it’s like seeing a baby thrown in a trash can,” she says. “I am a glutton for print. I love books in every way. I love them more than most human beings.” If there’s a book she doesn’t want, Lebowitz, 72, will spend months deciding whom to give it to.

“I kept accumulating books. My life was overflowing with books. I’d have to live to 150 to reread these books,” says Martha Frankel, a writer and director of the Woodstock Bookfest. She amassed 3,600 — and that was just in the office that she closed in 2018 — “but the idea of getting rid of these books made me nauseous.”

America is saturated with old books, congesting Ikea Billy cases, Jengaing atop floors, Babeling bedside tables. During months of quarantine, book lovers faced all of those spines and opportunities for several seasons of spring cleaning. They adore these books, irrationally, unconditionally, but know that, ultimately, if they don’t decide which to keep, it will be left to others to dump them unceremoniously.

And so, despite denial, grief, bargaining, anguish and even nausea, the Great Deaccession commenced.

“This is the most material flooding onto the market that I’ve ever seen,” veteran Vancouver, Wash., dealer Kolshaver says.

It’s a sentiment shared by sellers across the country. For dealers who survived the pandemic, “the used-book business has never been healthier,” says Wonder Book owner Chuck Roberts, a 42year veteran in the trade, strolling through his three-acre warehouse, a veritable biblio wonderland, jammed with volumes ranging from never-been-cracked publishers’ overstock to centuries-old classics bound in leather.

“We take everything and pretty much what no one else is going to take,” Roberts says, which is how his business accumulated an inventory of six million, with 300,000 more used books arriving every month.

Wonder Book practices “noseto-tail bookselling,” meaning a home or use is found for each item one way or the other through several internet sites (national and international), three brick-andmortar stores, school and charitable donations. Despite the advent of the digerati and ebooks, hardcovers and paperbacks continue to flood the market for readers who prefer the look and feel of physical books, the weight in their hands, the pleasure of turning a page. Three-quarters of trade book revenue last year derived from hardcover and paperback sales, according to the Association of American Publishers. A boom in self- and hybrid publishing has allowed more people to call themselves an “author,” with a juggernaut of titles published annually in print, around 395,000 in 2021, a 15 per cent increase in a decade, according to Bowker, which assigns ISBN numbers and bar codes to books.

What to do with old books is a quandary that collectors, no matter what age, eventually face — or leave to their heirs who, truly, do not want the bulk of them. Old volumes are a problem for older Americans downsizing or facing mortality, with their reading life coming to a close. They’re a challenge that Washington Post book critic Michael Dirda writes about extensively. They’re a backache every time a collector moves. They’re a headache when collectors want to sell their homes: old stuff, the bane of any listing.

Books do furnish a room, novelist Anthony Powell observed, but they sure do crowd a house. With the exception of family Bibles, rare and personal volumes, books rarely remain in families for generations like photos, china or linen. Says Roberts, “Eventually, they’re going to come up for sale.”

In 2004, Don Dales had the novel idea to transform tiny Hobart, N.Y., into a destination for bibliophiles, inspired by Hay-on-wye in Wales.

“All the storefronts were empty. The little village was totally dead. Dust was rolling down Main Street,” he says.

Today, there are eight used book emporiums in the Catskills town of fewer than 500 residents.

Book lovers are known to practice semi-hardish and anthropomorphic tendencies.

They keep too many books for too long despite dust, dirt, mould, cracked spines, torn dust jackets, warped pages, coffee stains and the daunting reality that most will never be reread. Age rarely enriches a book.

“Nobody likes to throw a book away. Nobody likes to see it go into a bin,” says Michael Powell of Powell’s Books in Portland, Ore.

Owners never want to see their hardback babies pulped. Bibliocide seems particularly painful in this fraught era of banned books. Hence, the sprouting of Little Free Libraries everywhere, and donations to public ones for resale, which enable staff to purchase new books.

“We don’t want them to die. I love them. They’re a part of me,” says author and Georgetown linguistics professor Deborah Tannen, 77. She has books in almost every room of her Virginia home, long ago exhausting shelf space.

“Books represent a significant investment of time and intellectual effort in our lives,” Powell says. “They’re more like friends than objects. You’ve had a lot of conversations with the book. You want to remember the experience. They’re echoes of what you’ve read.”

Topher Lundell, a manager at Second Story Books in D.C., admits that “the vast majority of books I own are unread by me. In some ways, books are symbolic of how we want to feel about ourselves. They’re comforting. I have read these books. These are accomplishments.”

Most people haven’t a clue as to how many books they own. Possibly, they don’t want to know. Roberts routinely make house calls to owners claiming to own 2,000 books only to discover a quarter of that. Or vice versa.

Drexel University law professor Clare Coleman thought she owned 1,300 books until her book group reminded her that she owned twice that many, given that her Billy shelves were stacked two deep.

Lebowitz knows the precise number of her collection because, each time she moves, she hires specialty book movers, who tally her holdings. The hunt for each apartment, and the necessity of blowing her real estate budget, is wholly dependent on it being large enough to hold her collection. In a sense, Lebowitz’s books own her.

Owners may experience relief from jettisoning old books. Not Coleman, 60, whose last move necessitated donating two-thirds of her books to the Goodwill.

“I regret it intensely. Those books were like a journal of my life,” she says. “Having those books surround me for all my adult life was a real source of pleasure.”

With the exception of rare and antiquarian collectors, few owners know the monetary value of their holdings. Invariably, they overvalue them.

That well-thumbed encyclopedia? Worthless. Textbooks? Updated umpteen times, probably shifted to digital.

“Very expensive books are a big nothingburger,” book scout and estate buyer Larry Bardecki says, especially coffee-table doorstops.

Bestselling hardcovers from 10 years, 50 years or a century ago? Possible literal pulp fiction.

“Everyone who wants one already has it,” says Bardecki, who makes as many as three house calls daily, often for Wonder Book. “I’m looking for books that not everyone has.”

Authors prized by one generation are not necessarily valued by the next.

“Everyone had a volume of Tennyson in the 1870s,” Roberts says. “Nobody reads Zane Grey.”

Don’t get him started on Dan Brown’s 2003 The Da Vinci Code. Roberts’s Books by the Foot business sells them wrapped as decoration and sold by colour, starting at $10 a foot. At 10 to 12 books a foot, each volume is worth a dollar or less.

Of the design trend, Lebowitz says, “the upside is at least these people know enough to pretend to read them.”

They’re more like friends than objects. You’ve had a lot of conversations with the book. You want to remember the experience.

Forthcoming Books for July

Locus List of Forthcoming Books July

JUL 2022

  • A.C. WISE • Hooked • Titan Books US, Jul 2022 (tp, eb)
  • A.C. WISE • Hooked • Titan, Jul 2022 (tp)
  • ANYA OW • Ion Curtain • Rebellion/Solaris, Jul 2022 (eb, tp)
  • BECKY CHAMBERS • A Prayer for the Crown-Shy • Tordotcom, Jul 2022 (na, hc, eb)
  • BLAKE CROUCH • Upgrade • Penguin Random House/Ballantine, Jul 2022 (hc, eb)
  • BRIAN ATTEBERY • Fantasy: How It Works • Oxford University Press, Jul 2022 (nf, hc)
  • C.T. RWIZI • Primeval Fire • Amazon/47North, Jul 2022 (tp, hc, eb)
  • CATHERINE ASARO • The Jigsaw Assassin • Baen, Jul 2022 (tp, eb)
  • CHARLES STROSS • Ghost Engine • Little Brown UK/Orbit, Jul 2022 (hc)
  • DARRELL, ed. SCHWEITZER • Shadows Out of Time • PS Publishing, Jul 2022 (hc)
  • DEAN KOONTZ • The Big Dark Sky • Amazon/Thomas & Mercer, Jul 2022 (h, hc, eb)
  • DONNA, ed. SCOTT • Best of British Science Fiction 2021 • NewCon Press, Jul 2022 (hc, eb, tp)
  • EMMI ITÄRANTA • The Moonday Letters • Titan Books US, Jul 2022 (tp, eb)
  • EMMI ITÄRANTA • The Moonday Letters • Titan, Jul 2022 (tp)
  • ERIC BROWN • Kon Tiki Quartet Coda (with Keith Brooke) • PS Publishing, Jul 2022 (na, hc)
  • FOZ MEADOWS • A Strange and Stubborn Endurance • Tor, Jul 2022 (hc, eb)
  • GEORGE MANN • The Albion Initiative • Titan, Jul 2022 (tp)
  • GREG KEYES • Realms of the Deathless • Skyhorse/Night Shade Books, Jul 2022 (tp, eb)
  • HARRY TURTLEDOVE • Three Miles Down • Tor, Jul 2022 (hc, eb)
  • JONATHAN MABERRY & JUSTIN CRIADO, EDS. • Weird Tales: Best of the Early Years 1923-25 • WordFire Press, Jul 2022 (an, tp, hc, eb)
  • JONATHAN MABERRY & KAYE BOOTH, EDS. • Weird Tales: Best of the Early Years 1926-27 • WordFire Press, Jul 2022 (an, tp, hc, eb)
  • LUCINDA ROY • Flying the Coop • Tor, Jul 2022 (hc, eb)
  • MICHAEL, ed. COBLEY • Night • Rain, and Neon, NewCon Press, Jul 2022 (hc, eb, tp)
  • NEAL ASHER • Jack Four • Skyhorse/Night Shade Books, Jul 2022 (1st US, hc)
  • NEIL CLARKE & XIA JIA, ET AL., EDS. • New Voices in Chinese Science Fiction • Wyrm Publishing/Clarkesworld Books, Jul 2022 (oa, tp, hc, eb)
  • PAUL KINCAID • Brian W. Aldiss • University of Illinois Press, Jul 2022 (nf, b, tp, hc, eb)
  • PAUL TREMBLAY • The Pallbearers’ Club • HarperCollins/Morrow, Jul 2022 (h, hc, eb)
  • PAUL TREMBLAY • The Pallbearers’ Club • Titan, Jul 2022 (h, tp)
  • RAYMOND E. FEIST • Master of Furies • Harper Voyager US, Jul 2022 (1st US, hc, eb)
  • RICH LARSON • Ymir • Orbit US, Jul 2022 (tp, eb)
  • SARAH GAILEY • Just Like Home • Hodder & Stoughton, Jul 2022 (h, hc)
  • SARAH GAILEY • Just Like Home • Tor, Jul 2022 (h, hc, eb)
  • SILVIA MORENO-GARCIA • The Daughter of Doctor Moreau • Penguin Random House/Del Rey, Jul 2022 (h, hc, eb)
  • SILVIA MORENO-GARCIA • The Daughter of Doctor Moreau • Quercus/Jo Fletcher, Jul 2022 (hc)
  • T. KINGFISHER • What Moves the Dead • Tor Nightfire, Jul 2022 (na, h, hc, eb)
  • TAD WILLIAMS • Into the Narrowdark • DAW, Jul 2022 (hc, eb)
  • THEODORA GOSS • The Collected Enchantments • Mythic Delirium Books, Jul 2022 (c, hc, eb)
  • TIM LEBBON • The Last Storm • Titan Books US, Jul 2022 (tp, eb)
  • TIM LEBBON • The Last Storm • Titan, Jul 2022 (tp)
  • TJ KLUNE • Heat Wave • Tor Teen, Jul 2022 (ya, v, hc, eb)

What are you reading?

As part of the break, we are asking the Danny question:

 

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Locus recommended Reading

The Locus recommended reading list is on line and can be viewed here.

Welcome to the annual Locus Recommended Reading List!

Published in Locus magazine’s February 2021 issue, the list is a consensus by the Locus editors, columnists, outside reviewers, and other professionals and critics of genre fiction and non-fiction — editor-in-chief Liza Groen Trombi; reviews editor Jonathan Strahan; Locus reviewers Liz Bourke, Alex Brown, Karen Burnham, Katharine Coldiron, Paul Di Filippo, Amy Goldschlager, Paula Guran, Rich Horton, Maya James, John Langan, Russell Letson, Adrienne Martini, Ian Mond, Colleen Mondor, Tim Pratt, Elsa Sjunneson, Gary K. Wolfe, and Alvaro Zinos-Amaro; Bob Blough; critics and authors Gwenda Bond, James Bradley, Niall Harrison, Paul Kincaid, Cheryl Morgan, Adam Roberts, and Graham Sleight. Art books were compiled with help from Arnie Fenner, Karen Haber, and senior editor Francesca Myman. Short fiction recommendations had input from editors and reviewers Rachel S. Cordasco, Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki, Vanessa Fogg, Maria Haskins, Charles Payseur, Nisi Shawl, TG Shenoy, Sheree Renée Thomas, Sean Wallace, and Alison Wise, plus our own reviewers. Locus thanks all involved for their time and their expertise. Essays by many of these contributors, highlighting and discussing their particular favorite books and stories, are also published in the February issue, along with the Magazine Summary and Book Summary for 2020.
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We looked at over 900 titles between short and long fiction. The final list comprises our best recommendations for your consideration. There will be titles you loved that do not appear here; any one of the recommending group would have built a distinct list, but this is the aggregate, compiled with great affection for the field.

You can let us know what your favorites were by voting in the 2021 Poll & Survey. The Poll decides the winners of the Locus Awards, presented in June 2021 at the Locus Awards Weekend, and is open to all to vote on. The Survey helps us be a better magazine. Thank you for participating!

Locus: Forthcoming books

January, Forthcoming books

for more, see: locusmag.com

  • MELISSA ALBERT • Tales from the Hinterland • Penguin Random House/Penguin UK, Jan 2021 (c, ya, hc)
  • KEVIN J. ANDERSON • Vengewar • Tor, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • PIERS ANTHONY • Skeleton Key • Open Road, Jan 2021 (tp, hc, eb)
  • L.X. BECKETT • Dealbreaker • Tor, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • OCTAVIA E. BUTLER • Kindred, Fledgling, Collected Stories • Library of America, Jan 2021 (c, hc)
  • KRISTIN CASHORE • Winterkeep • Penguin Random House/Dial, Jan 2021 (ya, hc, eb)
  • KRISTIN CASHORE • Winterkeep • Orion/Gollancz, Jan 2021 (hc)
  • MIKE CHEN • We Could Be Heroes • Harlequin/Mira, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • STEPHEN DEAS • The Moonsteel Crown • Angry Robot, Jan 2021 (eb, tp)
  • KEVIN HEARNE • A Question of Navigation • Subterranean Press, Jan 2021 (na, hc, eb)
  • DAVE HUTCHINSON • Europe at Midnight • Rebellion/Solaris US, Jan 2021 (1st US, pb)
  • ALAYA DAWN JOHNSON • Reconstruction • Small Beer Press, Jan 2021 (c, tp, eb)
  • STINA LEICHT • Persephone Station • Simon & Schuster/Saga Press, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • NICK MAMATAS • The Planetbreaker’s Son • PM Press, Jan 2021 (c, tp, eb)
  • SEANAN MCGUIRE • Across the Green Grass Fields • Tor.com Publishing, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • NNEDI OKORAFOR • Remote Control • Tor.com Publishing, Jan 2021 (na, hc, eb)
  • TIM PRATT • Doors of Sleep • Angry Robot US, Jan 2021 (tp, eb)
  • TIM PRATT • Doors of Sleep • Angry Robot, Jan 2021 (eb, tp)
  • BENJAMIN ROSENBAUM • The Unraveling • Erewhon, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • SAMANTHA SHANNON • The Mask Falling • Bloomsbury USA, Jan 2021 (hc, eb)
  • SAMANTHA SHANNON • The Mask Falling • Bloomsbury, Jan 2021 (hc)
  • ADRIAN TCHAIKOVSKY • The Expert System’s Champion • Tor.com Publishing, Jan 2021 (tp, eb)
  • ADRIAN TCHAIKOVSKY • Bear Head • Head of Zeus/Ad Astra, Jan 2021 (eb, hc)
  • JANEEN WEBB • The Gold-Jade Dragon • PS Publishing/PS Australia, Jan 2021 (hc)
  • LIZ WILLIAMS • Blackthorn Winter • NewCon Press, Jan 2021 (hc, eb, tp)

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The N3F Review of books

Behold, The N3F Review of books for June 2020, including

Editorial

1 … Editorial

Novels

2 … A Pius Geek by Declan Finn ­ Review by Pat Patterson
3 … The Burning White by Brent Weeks ­ Review by Jim McCoy
6 … Dissolution by Lee S. Hawke ­ Review by Jim McCoy
7 … Dragon’s Code: Anne McCaffrey’s Dragonriders of Pern by Gigi McCaffrey
­ Reviewed by Sam Lubell
8 … Hostile Territory by T.L. Knighton ­ Review by Pat Patterson
8 … The Last Pendragon by Holly Chism ­ Review by Pat Patterson
9 … Lancer One by Kevin Ikenberry Review by Pat Patterson
10 … Monster Hunter International by Larry Correia ­ Review by Jim McCoy
11 … Noumenon Infinity by Marina J. Lostetter ­ Reviewed by Sam Lubell
13 … P.A.W.S. by Debbie Manber Kupfer ­ Review by Jim McCoy
14 … Prisoner of the Mind by Kal Spriggs ­ Review by Pat Patterson
15 … Shadow Lands by Lloyd A Behm II ­ Review by Jim McCoy
17 … She Called It, Wolf: Revised and Updated Edition by Cyn Bagley ­ Review by Pat Patterson
18 … Shipminds and Ice Cream by Kevin Ikenberry ­ Review by Pat Patterson
Some of the common side effects of both these drugs is to stimulate the body. viagra generika Stay-on Power Oil has the potentialto treat different types of sex related problems and cialis viagra australia make a sex-related lifestyle pleasant.KamagraIf thinking to take Kamagra as treatment for your erectile-problems: Never take the medicine without doctor s approval. Alcohol cialis doctor Alcohol is never a good idea when you’re taking erectile dysfunction medication. It cialis online order is used only for treating serious medical conditions. 18 … Silver Shackles: Revelations by Fiona Skye ­ Review by Jim McCoy
20 … Torchship Captain by Karl K. Gallagher ­ Review by Pat Patterson
21 … The Wasteland Chronicles Omnibus by Kyle West ­ Review by Jim McCoy
23 … The Wielder: Sworn Vengeance by David Gosnell ­ Review by Jim McCoy
24 … Wild Cards: Texas Hold’Em. Edited by George R.R. Martin ­ Reviewed by Sam Lubell

Prose Bono

25 … The Importance of Having an Editor – And How to Work with One … Chris Nuttall
27 … Dredits by Cedar Sanderson
28 … Wright’s Writing Corner: Interior Dialogue by L. Jagi Lamplighter

Literary Criticism

31 … Avengers Infinity Saga and Philosophy Edited by Heather Rivera and Robert Arp
­ Review by Tamara Wilhite
33 … JK Rowling Is Not Your Slave by Chris Nuttall
35 … The Last Closet: The Dark Side of Avalon by Moira Greyland ­ Review by Pat Patterson
36 … The Pulp Jungle by Frank Gruber ­ Review by Jon D. Swartz, Ph. D., N3F Historian

FINIS … 37-

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The Machine Stops

https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-52821993

The Machine Stops is not simply prescient; it is a jaw-droppingly, gob-smackingly, breath-takingly accurate literary description of lockdown life in 2020.

If it had been written today it would be excellent, that it was written over a century ago is astonishing.
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