Review: One Year After by William R. Forstchen
A blueprint for surviving the Dark Ages in the modern world, One Year After is William R. Forstchen’s follow-up thriller to the bestselling doomsday novel One Second After.
A blueprint for surviving the Dark Ages in the modern world, One Year After is William R. Forstchen’s follow-up thriller to the bestselling doomsday novel One Second After.
A review of Unvral, the Key to the Universe by Javier Villacís Mejía
Steve travels back to 1922 to look at the first vampire movie, Nosferatu, and its influence on modern vampire movies.
Shadow & Bone a Twilight/Potter mashup in an analog of 18th century Russia
In the spirit of its predecessor, the return of Weirdbook with issue 31 is simply here to entertain us with fresh new “weird” stories from a talented team of writers.
Readers get to decide for themselves who The Forgotten Enemy really is in this Arthur C. Clarke short story about global disaster and the consequences it has on the survivability of man.
Gideon Smith, Aloysius Bent, Rowena Fanshaw, Bell of the Airways and Maria the Mechanical Girl are back, and boy have they got their hands full!
The Last Exodus is set directly after an alien invasion has devastated Earth. All the world’s cities have been destroyed, the oceans are receding and the planet is heating up significantly
Readers will be taken back as they discover a new kind of old hero in the graphic novel collection MONO Vol. 1 by Liam Sharp, Ben Wolstenholme, and Fin Cramb.
A group of wealthy businessmen who have decided to take over the world
Craft and moodiness, ghosts and romance in Guillermo del Toro’s Crimson Peak.
Unidentified Funny Objects returns with its fourth annual anthology, this time engaging a theme of dark humor and including stories from the likes of George R. R. Martin, Mike Resnick, Eric Kaplan, Tim Pratt, Piers Anthony, Jody Lynn Nye, Gini Koch, Esther Friesner and more.
The Slow Regard of Silent Things by Patrick Rothfuss brings every-thing to life through the eyes of a fan favorite King Killer Chronicles character and a knack for poetic imagery.
A review and analysis of Underbreak, the latest novel by Ecuadorian author Cristián Proaño Londoño
It’s all very Spielbergian; in fact in many places Pan reminds strongly of Hook, Spielberg’s own chaotic visit to Neverland
The audio publication of Locke and Key by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez give a new perspective to the macabre world that fans have enjoyed for over half a decade.
The passing of Robert Conroy at the end of 2014 was a blow to the alternate history community as he was one of the most prolific authors in the genre
The novel Dragon Heart by Cecelia Holland has the charm of a fairy-tale and the edge of a dark fantasy as it takes readers in many unexpected directions.
Jamie Todd Rubin takes a side trip during his Vacation in the Golden Age
The third volume of the Sim War saga turns up the volume on interstellar warfare.
Announcing the creation of the Canadian Professional Ghoodminton League!
If you like your humour dipped in acid, these books will definitely be for you
Though Arthur C. Clarke is no longer with us, his timeless writing sure has the knack for contradicting that fact.
Once a popular series in F&SF during the early 50s, Homer Nearing’s delightfully whimsical C. P. Ransom stories have since been almost completely forgotten.
Based on the Dragon Crest fantasy role playing game, The Sleeping King by Cindy Dees and Bill Flippin uses a unique approach in creating a world of sword and sorcery.
A selection of audio Military Science Fiction, from the classic to the new
Numerous authors related the impact that Star Trek had on the science fiction genre – and themselves – on the occasion of its 40th anniversary.
Bad filmmakers who make bad films don’t spark long winded epics about their awfulness

Recent Comments