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Adrian Selby

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Adrian Selby

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JMW Turner's 'Slave Ship'
Reading

The Black Atlantic & Lincoln In The Bardo

July 28, 2024

These two books were so intimidatingly good it’s taken me a while to work up the courage to outline why I recommend them.

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Scene of farmers and tax collectors
Reading

Against The Grain

April 2, 2023April 2, 2023

James C. Scott’s fascinating book argues that we have enslaved ourselves to grain production and the ‘civilisation’ that followed. The inevitable outcome of grain cultivation and sedentism’s propensity to increase birth rates has led to both a patriarchal system that reduces women to breeders and promotes warfare to enslave yet more people to sustain the…

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Brutalisttemple
Reading

The Narrator & Central Station

March 20, 2023March 25, 2023

These two wonderful books, by Michael Cisco and Lavie Tidhar respectively, set me thinking about the role of a protagonist.

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artwork of a skull in a hat with an american flag
Reading

Dead Astronauts & Postcapitalist Desire

August 28, 2022September 16, 2022

Dead Astronauts by Jeff Vandermeer is hard sci-fi. There’s no space opera grandeur here, it’s far more profound. It offers a tender and bleak vision of how humanity changes and fails.

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Stop Being Reasonable & The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle
Reading

Stop Being Reasonable & The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle

July 26, 2020August 28, 2022

With regard to arguing with others about who we should be and how we should act, I wrote recently about how hard I’ve found it to change my mind. So, after the edits and proofs of my forthcoming novel Brother Red, I managed to get stuck into a book I’d bought a while ago precisely…

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Whiteshift
Reading

Whiteshift

April 1, 2020August 28, 2022

Whiteshift, by Eric Kaufman, is an easy book to recommend you read, in part because it is a thoughtful, detailed presentation of some challenging ideas and in part because its subject matter couldn’t (coronavirus aside) be more important. There are aspects to the thesis I don’t accept or understand, but I now accept, more clearly…

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Janesville. A premonition?
Reading

Janesville. A premonition?

December 14, 2019August 26, 2022

I’m reflecting on the aftermath of a UK election result that I, personally, found disappointing. As with the Trump result a few years ago, there’s a fair amount of soul-searching and blame-pinning on the left. In games we call it a ‘post-mortem’ and it’s a reflection on what went wrong and what needs to change,…

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Roadside Picnic & Beneath The World, A Sea
Reading

Roadside Picnic & Beneath The World, A Sea

December 8, 2019August 26, 2022

These two books, one old, one new, continue my lucky streak of ‘boundaried alien geography on earth’ novels that started with the amazing Southern Reach trilogy and continued with Tade Thompson’s award-winning Rosewater.

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Landmarks & Postcapitalism
Reading

Landmarks & Postcapitalism

June 19, 2019August 26, 2022

With the third book’s first draft completed and no more deadlines at this point in time, I’ve begun recharging after years of frantic scribbling. The first book I chose to read after coming up for air is a book I wish I’d read before starting writing at all. I’ve read one previous book by Robert…

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The Sheltering Sky, The Damned United, The Raven Tower and Lanark
Reading

The Sheltering Sky, The Damned United, The Raven Tower and Lanark

May 19, 2019August 28, 2022

I’ve been busy finishing my third novel. While I was wrestling with it over the last few months I managed to read a few books I’m now ready to recommend. Paul Bowles’ The Sheltering Sky, first published in 1949, is the story of Kit and Port Moresby, Americans full of fashionably existential angst deciding to…

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The Blind Assassin
Reading

The Blind Assassin

February 22, 2019August 28, 2022

“In Paradise there are no stories, because there are no journeys. It’s loss and regret and misery and yearning that drive the story forward, along its twisted road.” The Blind Assassin, by Margaret Atwood, is one of the best books I’ve read. It’s a delight to be able to say it so soon, comparatively speaking,…

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All Among The Barley & The Gutter Prayer
Reading

All Among The Barley & The Gutter Prayer

January 28, 2019August 28, 2022

1930’s rural England seen through the eyes of a troubled young girl coming of age and a high-octane rollercoaster fantasy set in a bleak, violent and ancient city were my January reads. Melissa Harrison’s All Among The Barley is meticulously researched. Early in the book it felt heavy-handed, almost over the top. Edie Mather, the…

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So Long, See You Tomorrow & Rosewater
Reading

So Long, See You Tomorrow & Rosewater

December 1, 2018August 26, 2022

I needed to step away from sff reading at least briefly, mix it up. I got a blast of something beautiful. William Maxwell’s So Long, See You Tomorrow is a marvellous novella. I was reminded of Ian McEwan’s prose, still my favourite, for its transparency and depth of perception. Maxwell’s book presents the act of…

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The Wake & Rotherweird
Reading

The Wake & Rotherweird

October 16, 2018August 28, 2022

The Green Man figure from the folklore of numerous cultures and religions manifests in these two glorious novels as a righteous and very english force; a saviour of tradition, a keeper of continuity. The Wake, by Paul Kingsnorth, is the tale of Buckmaster of Holland, an ‘oxganger’ in the 11th century just as the Normans…

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The Winter Road. The other road.
Reading

The Winter Road. The other road.

April 27, 2018August 4, 2021

My second novel is called The Winter Road and it’s out in November. It’s been a journey. I’ll shortly create a page on this site with more cool stuff relating to it, but here’s the cover reveal and blurb over on the marvellous ‘The Fantasy Hive’. The cover, a part of which is this post’s…

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The Fifth Season & Nigerians In Space
Reading

The Fifth Season & Nigerians In Space

March 20, 2018August 26, 2022

As saddened by the whole Hugo ‘puppy’ bullshit as any right-thinking person would be, it did introduce me to The Fifth Season, so thank you for that guys. Incidentally, Deji Bryce Olukotun’s Nigerians In Space bubbled up to the top of my ‘to read’ pile too. I loved both these books.

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The Southern Reach trilogy
Reading

The Southern Reach trilogy

December 22, 2017August 26, 2022

I love Jeff Vandermeer’s work because I love HP Lovecraft’s work. But I enjoy Vandermeer more. Horror describes the ways in which people strive to escape the painful and grisly annihilation of the self. It can be personal or impersonal, understandable or insensate. It can also describe our confrontation with the unfathomable. This last is…

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Ninefox Gambit & Aurora
Reading

Ninefox Gambit & Aurora

October 7, 2017August 26, 2022

I’m reading a bit of sci-fi at the moment as I’m woefully under-read in the genre. How lovely to have these two line up back to back. Ninefox Gambit is a brilliant debut by Yoon Ha Lee. Kel Cheris is a captain given a seemingly impossible mission to destroy an impregnable space fortress that is…

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Dark Tales
Reading

Dark Tales

September 19, 2017August 26, 2022

Dark Tales, by Shirley Jackson, is a hugely effective collection of short gothic horror stories written in the fifties and sixties. She died in ’65. I confess, like many I’ve spoken to about this book, not to have heard of her until a recent review of this collection, many of which were originally published in The…

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The Familiar Volume 1 & A Stranger In Olondria
Reading

The Familiar Volume 1 & A Stranger In Olondria

July 19, 2017August 28, 2022

“But preserve your mistrust of the page, for a book is a fortress, a place of weeping, the key to a desert, a river that has no bridge, a garden of spears.”  Sofia Samatar I’ve long been fascinated by virtuosi and recently I’ve read two almost without equal. Mark Danielewski and Sofia Samatar are virtuosi,…

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Senlin Ascends & The Sudden Appearance of Hope
Reading

Senlin Ascends & The Sudden Appearance of Hope

February 10, 2017August 26, 2022

I do almost all my reading on the bus. Thus, my go-to indicator of a great read is how surprised I am that I’ve reached my destination. With Senlin Ascends, by Josiah Bancroft, I’ve been oblivious to my journey altogether. Our protagonist, Thomas Senlin, is a newly-wed on his honeymoon to a fictional Tower of…

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The Name of the Wind
Reading

The Name of the Wind

January 7, 2017August 28, 2022

“I was brilliant. Not just your run-of-the-mill brilliance either. I was extraordinarily brilliant.” Patrick Rothfuss has written an astounding debut that I cannot unequivocally recommend. Well, that’s not strictly true. I can, but it’s clear why, despite its assured place in the modern canon, it’s divisive. It’s easy to see why the book is captivating….

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Beyond Redemption and Hunters & Collectors
Reading

Beyond Redemption and Hunters & Collectors

December 22, 2016August 26, 2022

In the last few weeks I’ve read two great books; both are clever and both feature a strong central trio of characters. In Beyond Redemption by Michael Fletcher, we have three emotionally stunted, savage and amusing warriors who wander a dark and wretched world leaving a trail of death and chaos behind them until they…

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The Buried Giant & The Quarantined City
Reading

The Buried Giant & The Quarantined City

November 28, 2016August 26, 2022

Kazuo Ishiguro’s The Buried Giant bolsters the list of fantasy genre writing that pushes its boundaries and should invigorate the genre’s authors and fans.

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The Vorrh
Reading

The Vorrh

September 18, 2016August 28, 2022

Brian Catling’s The Vorrh is a very beautifully written book, with the most unforgettable first chapter I’ve read in years.

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Chicago World Fair
Reading

Against The Day

August 21, 2016August 28, 2022

Where do I begin? While this is not my favourite book, it is the best novel I’ve read. Pynchon, for me, is the most accomplished writer in English alive. Here is my impossible benchmark.

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Jonathan Strange & Mr.Norrell
Reading

Jonathan Strange & Mr.Norrell

June 5, 2016August 28, 2022

If the awards and critical acclaim have not steered you towards the fractious company of the two foremost English magicians of the nineteenth century, then it is unlikely my meagre addition to the chorus will tip the balance. Nevertheless, I exhort you to go get this enchanting novel. And I was enchanted.

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The Violent Century
Reading

The Violent Century

March 26, 2016August 26, 2022

This is a story about superheroes in the second world war and beyond, a counterfactual fantasy. At first you will rightly think of Watchmen and X-Men but Lavie Tidhar has created something here that is more bleak and more noir, as though the X-Men had been re-told by John le Carré.

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Reading

It’s Snakewood launch day :)

March 15, 2016August 26, 2022

Edited 26.08.22 This page contained a link to the soundcloud audio for chapter 1 of Snakewood. You can get that and more here.

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Cliffe Fort Jetty
Reading

The Bone Clocks

December 28, 2015August 26, 2022

The title of David Mitchell’s marvellous book almost fully encapsulates it, as all its characters, deathless or otherwise, serve its dominant theme: the misery of ageing.

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The Children Act
Reading

The Children Act

August 28, 2015August 28, 2022

I’ve written here about my miserable realisation I wouldn’t read more than a couple of thousand books in my lifetime, if I really went for it.  I thus struggle to read more than one or two books by any author because there are so many more authors to read.  How could I read another Philip…

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Hawk Helen MacDonald
Reading

H is for Hawk

August 19, 2015August 28, 2022

Helen Macdonald has opened her soul, and unlike most of us, is able to articulate its pain and its healing with a beautiful and haunting power.

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Goldfinch
Reading

The Goldfinch & The Liars’ Gospel

August 3, 2015August 28, 2022

Theo Decker, the protagonist of Donna Tartt’s brilliant novel The Goldfinch contemplates the way Carel Fabritius’s painting of the same name has dominated his life, a complicated connection beginning with the shocking opening as his mother is killed in a terrorist bomb blast in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in their hometown of New York. …

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Girl with all the Gifts
Reading

The Girl With All The Gifts

June 19, 2015August 28, 2022

Minor spoilers regarding early part of novel ahead… I’ve not personally overdosed on zombie movies/games/books/TV shows/tee shirts etc. but because the rest of the world has, I’ve got a second-hand kind of weariness of it, so much so I have tried to avoid it. I’ve done the odd George Romero, loved Shaun of the Dead…

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Tooze Deluge
Reading

The Deluge

June 13, 2015August 28, 2022

I’d been putting off trying to articulate my thoughts on Adam Tooze’s masterful analysis of global history from 1916-1931, The Deluge, because, being so ignorant about that era, I wasn’t sure what I could say other than ‘read it, it’ll educate ya’, for fear of drawing incorrect or misleading conclusions from this densely detailed and…

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Quantum Thief Rajaniemi
Reading

The Quantum Thief

March 20, 2015August 28, 2022

This book has no right to be a debut.  It’s exhilarating, a tour de force. The Quantum Thief is a heist thriller the threads of which are woven into a sinuous and densely realised future.  It’s a challenging read, I’ll admit hard to follow in places, as Hannu Rajaniemi displaces the awesome intelligence and agency…

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Joe Abercrombie
Reading

Rivers of London & The Blade Itself

March 6, 2015August 26, 2022

I recently read, back to back, Ben Aaranovitch’s Rivers of London and Joe Abercrombie’s The Blade Itself, the latter a long overdue read for me as a fantasy author. It was because of their similarities that I’m writing about (and recommending them) together.

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Here Richard McGuire
Reading

Here

December 30, 2014August 26, 2022

Here, by Richard McGuire, is no less than the zenith of the graphic novel as an art form. It is one of the most profound things I’ve read.

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Miéville City
Reading

The City & The City

August 11, 2014August 26, 2022

Hopefully all China Miéville’s novels are as original and engaging as this one.  The City & The City is on one level a standard ‘detective investigating death of girl uncovers big conspiracy’ story, but Miéville has decided to weave the tale into a quite unique milieu.  

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House Danielewski
Reading

House of Leaves

June 30, 2014August 28, 2022

If the horror genre is a journey, then House* of Leaves, by Mark Z. Danielewski, is its destination. I say this not only because it is an attempt to get at the fundament of what is horrifying, but also because the nature of the attempt is an audacious, remarkably intelligent and emotionally satisfying weaving of…

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Gabriel García Márquez
Reading

One Hundred Years of Solitude

June 10, 2014August 28, 2022

Hearing that I hadn’t read any of Gabriel García Márquez’s work, when his death was announced, a friend kindly bought me this, as he had Wolf Hall.  Clearly, he knows what’s good for me. This twentieth century classic in the magical realist tradition was my first foray into the realm, unless Calvino’s If On A…

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Grimwood Replay
Reading

Replay

April 18, 2014August 26, 2022

Replay, by Ken Grimwood, tackles the classic ‘What if…’ scenario: “What if I could live my life over again?” It treads a path between the wonderful Star Trek episode ‘The Inner Light’ and Groundhog Day.  Jeff, the book’s protagonist, is going to ‘replay’ his life more than once, unlike Picard; but unlike Phil Connors, he’s…

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wolf hall mantel
Reading

Wolf Hall

April 11, 2014August 28, 2022

Wolf Hall, by Hilary Mantel, is a masterpiece.  It is one of the best books I will ever read. I know this because I’ve lost count of the times I’ve paused over a page, muttered ‘Fuck off’ at the sheer and dazzling quality and control of the form and the narrative, and then carried on reading,…

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murakami norwegian
Reading

Norwegian Wood

March 12, 2014August 28, 2022

So, I’ve popped my Haruki Murakami cherry, having heard from a number of different sources about this writer and his cult following and magical prose. Norwegian Wood is a story, set in Japan, of a teenage boy, Toru Watanabe, in love with a girl, Naoko, who we learn is schizophrenic and with whom he shares…

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Altered Carbon (veers into bonus thoughts on mental continuity and my nan!!)
Reading

Altered Carbon (veers into bonus thoughts on mental continuity and my nan!!)

October 18, 2013August 26, 2022

Altered Carbon, by Richard Morgan, is a cyberpunk-noir detective thriller of the ‘locked room’ variety.  If you want steam rising out of your grates in grimy streets straight off the ‘Blade Runner’ mood boards and a bosomy femme fatale in a plot full of twists and turns then stop reading and go buy it, because as a debut novel,…

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jeff vandermeer
Reading

City of Saints and Madmen

October 9, 2013August 26, 2022

City of Saints and Madmen, by Jeff Vandermeer, has been labelled ‘avant-garde fantasy’.  It is.  The city is the star; Ambergris is a violent and gothic-romantic ecosystem, the inhabitants of which live in a fearful symbiosis with the deeply mysterious ‘Greycaps’.  These underground dwellers were initially displaced by the founders of Ambergris from the much older city that it grew…

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wool howey
Reading

Wool

September 4, 2013August 28, 2022

Spoiler free.  Rest easy… Hugh Howey is in the enviable position of the author who self-published with a good enough book, got a buzz going and then took off into the stratosphere – publishing deal! film in the offing!  I’m delighted for him. It reminded me afresh that all the self-marketing in the world isn’t…

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Robert MacFarlane
Reading

The Old Ways

August 14, 2013August 28, 2022

The Old Ways by Robert MacFarlane is a book about walking country paths. I know, that’s what I thought, and I only bought it because writers of the stature of John Banville named it as one of the books of the year on its release last year. But then I started reading it, and I was…

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tim powers
Reading

The Stress Of Her Regard & Sum

July 11, 2013August 26, 2022

Byron, Keats and Shelley – check. Vampires – check. Life or death adventures through London, Venice, Rome and the Alps – check. As with the other Tim Powers novels I’ve read (The Drawing of the Dark, On Stranger Tides and Last Call), The Stress Of Her Regard pits a hopelessly outclassed protagonist, here Michael Crawford, against…

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jack vance
Reading

The Intellectuals and the Masses, The Dying Earth trilogy and Little, Big

June 20, 2013August 28, 2022

I’ll share my thoughts and recommendations here of great books I’ve read.  Here are three I’ve read recently, I’ve not read a bad book in a while it seems ;) “The tragedy of Mein Kampf is that it was not, in many respects, a deviant work but one firmly rooted in European intellectual orthodoxy.” John Carey So, I’ve…

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