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Still the Sun

Charlie N. Holmberg. 47North, $16.99 trade paper (316p) ISBN 978-1-66251-680-1

Holmberg (The Hanging City) sets this gripping science fantasy romp on the planet Tampere, which sits on the edge of the universe. Pelnophe, aka Pell, enjoys tinkering with machines but doesn’t think of herself as particularly gifted. So when a stranger named Moseus knocks on her door soliciting her help in repairing machines inside a nearby tower that locals have always regarded as empty and impenetrable, she finds the whole thing bizarre. Still, Pell takes the job, only to discover that tinkering with the devices gives her intense flashbacks of the planet’s past. This mystery is compounded by the presence of Heartwood, Moseus’s enigmatic companion whom Pell can’t help but feel drawn to. As Pell learns more about her new employers and Tampere, she discovers the dark truth of what the tower is and why the machines within it broke in the first place. Holmberg fans who know her for her romantic fantasy may be surprised there’s only a touch of magic in this heavily sci-fi outing. The worldbuilding occasionally confounds, especially when it comes to the specifics of the technology in the tower. Still, the suspense surrounding Pell’s flashbacks and her slow-burn romance with Heartwood propel the plot forward at a steady clip. This is a fascinating new direction for Holmberg. (July)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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A Sorceress Comes to Call

T. Kingfisher. Tor, $27.99 (336p) ISBN 978-1-250-24407-9

With this riff on the Brothers Grimm’s “The Goose Girl,” set in a fantasy world inspired by Regency romances, Hugo Award winner Kingfisher (Nettle & Bone) continues her hot streak of deeply compassionate, thrilling, and often laugh-out-loud fairy tale retellings. Cordelia, 14, grows up in a house without closed doors. Her mother, Evangeline, is a dangerous enchantress who regularly compels her into total obedience. The first time Cordelia’s allowed some privacy is when Evangeline moves them into the home of her suitor, Squire Samuel Chatham—a home Evangeline means to seize and remake to her specifications by whatever means necessary. The Squire’s sister, Lady Hester, feels an awful presentiment of doom and is on the defensive around Evangeline, but only Cordelia knows the true, murderous extent of her mother’s powers. Can Cordelia speak up against a mother who controls her so completely? Would Hester even believe her if she did? The dual narrators—terrified fish-out-of-water Cordelia and tenaciously sensible Hester—are nuanced, distinctive, and frequently funny. Kingfisher’s remarkable skill for crafting scene-stealing secondary characters is also on full display in ruthless cardsharp Imogen Strauss, über-competent butler Willard, merry widow Penelope Green, and the mysteriously magical horse Falada. Expertly blending humor with folkloric horror, this incredibly satisfying fantasy will delight Kingfisher’s fans and newcomers alike. (Aug.)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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Wings of Sorrow

Yolanda Sfetsos. DarkLit, $2.99 e-book (182p) ISBN 978-1-998851-42-3

The latest horror novella from Sfetsos (Through the Blur) underdelivers on a promising concept. Newlyweds Thera and Hector arrive for a week of sorting and clearing out Thera’s recently deceased aunt’s house only for things to immediately become strange and worrisome. They encounter locked doors with deep scratches gouged into them, paintings that move, and huge numbers of crows and ravens gathering around the property. As the couple uncovers a generational curse that effects the women in Thera’s family, the plot reads like a classic haunted house novel crossed with Hitchcock’s The Birds. It’s a cool combination of tropes, but Sfetsos’s lackluster prose fails to provide the scares and atmospherics necessary to suck readers in. The question of whether Thera and Hector’s true love can break the curse feels well-worn, and attempted feminist commentary about the matrilineal curse, while admirable, never goes particularly deep. This is best suited for Sfetsos’s existing fans. (July)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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I Was A Teenage Slasher

Stephen Graham Jones. Simon & Schuster, $29.99 (384p) ISBN 978-1-66802-224-5

Bestseller Jones (the Indian Lake trilogy) again riffs on 1980s slasher movies in this indulgent bloodbath. Tolly Driver witnesses a massacre at a high school party at the hands of Justin Jones, an undead classmate who died during a vicious prank gone awry. Having gotten infected with a couple drops of Justin’s blood, and reeling from a near-death experience stemming from his peanut allergy, Tolly finds himself driven by the urge to go on a murder spree of his own. He dons a mask and slashes his way through his small Texas town. Only his childhood friend, final girl Amber Dennison, serves as a tether to the scared and fragile kid he was before the killing began. Will she be able to stop the slaughter once and for all? The story has a clear love for the splashy slasher films that inspired it, and Jones does a great job of landing the plot’s gorier excesses as the bodies pile up. Unfortunately, chaotic plotting undercuts the story’s tension and narrator Tolly’s many tangents make the pacing somewhat start-and-stop. Still, fans of meta horror will find a lot to love as Jones remixes well-worn tropes with glee. Agent: BJ Robbins, BJ Robbins Literary. (July)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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These Deathless Shores

P.H. Low. Orbit, $19.99 trade paper (432p) ISBN 978-0-316-56920-0

Low debuts with a gritty Peter Pan retelling about what happens to Neverland’s lost boys when they grow up. Peter alone remains forever young, replacing his cohort with new children whenever the other lost boys fall prey to the passage of time—if Peter doesn’t kill them first. Former lost boys Jordan and Baron were cast in the role of the twins by Peter, though they weren’t biologically related or even similar in appearance beyond their Hanwa ethnicity. Jordan, the only girl, would normally have been forced into Wendy’s old role of mother, but she used magic Dust to disguise herself as a boy, and ended up developing a dependence on the stuff. Years later, the pair have been forced to return to the Outside, the world beyond Neverland, where Baron suffers debilitating anxiety, and Jordan has switched from Dust to karsa, running the drug for a crime syndicate. Unlike Baron, Jordan is determined to reclaim her place on Neverland. But doing so means changing the role she plays in Peter’s story: she must become the villain. Low takes the childlike wonder of the original and turns it on its head. Fans of dark fairy tale retellings won’t want to miss this. Agent: Sara Megibow, KT Literary. (July)

Reviewed on 05/17/2024 | Details & Permalink

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The Court of Miracles

Victor Dixen, trans. from the French by Françoise Bui. Amazon Crossing, $28.99 (400p) ISBN 978-1-66250-573-7

Dixen again impresses in his second Vampyria thriller (after 2023’s The Court of Shadows), set in an alternate reality in which Louis XIV has reigned for centuries as a vampire. Teenager Jeanne Froidelac’s family was massacred by the king’s forces, but she survived, assumed the identity of a baron’s daughter, and gained access to Louis’s inner circle as a royal squire. Her ongoing efforts to end his reign are complicated when Louis faces a challenge from a woman calling herself the Lady of Miracles, who claims to already rule Paris with an army of ghouls and demands that Louis make her vice-queen of the city, or be overthrown. Jeanne is asked to track down this rival for power, both by the king, and by a leader of the growing resistance to his rule, who fears that Louis could defeat the Lady and gain control over her ghouls, which would make him unstoppable. Dixen never lets the nail-biting plot overwhelm his nuanced characterizations, and heightens the stakes by making it clear that any character could die at any time. Series fans will not be disappointed. (July)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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Midnight Rooms

Donyae Coles. Amistad, $28 (336p) ISBN 978-0-06-322809-2

Coles astounds in her atmospheric gothic debut set in Victorian England. Orabella has never been expected to amount to much due to her lower-class background and biracial (half-Black, half-white) identity. When her white uncle, who took her in after her parents’ deaths, accrues a massive gambling debt, he barters Orabella as a wife to the mysterious Elias Blakersby to get out from under it. At 26, Orabella has never been with a man, making her nervous but determined to be a good wife. Fortunately, Elias is a kind man who spirits her away to his old but vast estate, Korringhill Manor, and dotes on her. Despite Elias’s apparent dedication to her happiness, life at Korringhill Manor grows increasingly nightmarish. Orabella’s creepy new servants refuse to leave her alone even for a moment, she has spells of dizziness and dissociation, and unexplained bruises show up on her thighs. As her perception of reality distorts, Orabella seeks to uncover the secrets of the Blakersby family before she is subsumed into the dreamlike manor. Coles’s prose is evocative and strange and pairs brilliantly with the gothic tropes she expertly deploys. This is a fever dream of a novel that readers won’t want to wake up from. Agent: Lane Heymont, Tobias Literary. (July)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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In the Shadow of the Fall

Tobi Ogundiran. Tordotcom, $20.99 (160p) ISBN 978-1-250-90796-7

Ogundiran’s thrilling novella (after the collection Jackal, Jackal) draws on Yoruba mythology to set up a cosmic battle. Acolyte Ashâke has watched all of her peers hear the voice of an orisha and move on to being priests, but the otherworldly spirits remain silent to her. Desperate, she secretly builds an effigy to bind an orisha to her—resulting in a terrible fire. She wakes in the care of Ba Fatai, a witch doctor, and must face the wrath of the leading priests, who sentence her to a fortnight of isolation in the cellars. There, Ba Fatai’s bird familiar brings a message that, thanks to Ba Fatai’s undesired gift of prophecy, he knows Ashâke will never advance to priesthood. Ashâke runs away and finds a spot among the griots, nomadic memory keepers who share with her a shocking truth about why the orisha have not spoken to her. Before Ashâke can act on this new knowledge, High Priestess Iyalawo tracks her down, urging her to return to the protective temple grounds, which are warded against a dangerous foe who also seeks Ashâke. Ogundiran keeps the action humming while still managing to probe impressive emotional depths, and a cliffhanger ending sets things up nicely for a sequel. Fans of mythic fantasy drawing from non-Western traditions will want to snap this up. (July)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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The Undermining of Twyla and Frank

Megan Bannen. Orbit, $19.99 trade paper (448p) ISBN 978-0-316-56825-8

In this enchanting fantasy rom-com, Bannen returns to the whimsical world of Tanria, first visited in The Undertaking of Hart and Mercy. Middle-aged neighbors and best friends, Twyla Banneker and Frank Ellis have spent eight years patrolling magical Tanria as marshals, but a recent lull in excitement has left them yearning for some action. When another marshal turns up dead and Frank unexpectedly becomes guardian to a baby dragon, the duo find themselves entangled in a sinister mystery that threatens to upend their lives and their relationship. Bannen’s witty prose and skillful genre blending shine as she seamlessly weaves together elements of romance, mystery, and adventure. The mature protagonists, particularly the wonderfully complex Twyla, offer a refreshing perspective on love and self-discovery in midlife. While the emphasis on aging and domestic disillusionment grows a tad repetitive, Bannen’s heartfelt exploration of second chances and the transformative power of friendship resonates. Perfect for fans of T.J. Klune and Alix E. Harrow, this cozy, humor-filled romp celebrates the enduring magic of love at any age. Agent: Holly Root, Root Literary. (July)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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The Spice Gate

Prashanth Srivatsa. Harper Voyager, $30 (464p) ISBN 978-0-06-326683-4

Srivatsa explores class discrimination in his lush and ambitious debut. Spice is king in the eight kingdoms involved in the Spice Trade, each of which produces one specific spice. To travel between kingdoms one must make the painful passage through a Spice Gate, a task relegated only to the lowest caste, the bearers of the spice mark. One such Carrier is Amir, of the saffron kingdom Raluha. Tired of being treated as society’s punching bag, Amir aims to abandon his duty and go rogue with his family. But for his mother, who does not bear a spice mark, to travel through the Spice Gate, he’ll need to obtain Poison, a rare liquid that allows for painless passage. During one of his trips to the turmeric kingdom of Halmora, Amir meets Fylan, a fatally wounded stranger who claims to be from the secret ninth kingdom of Illindhi. Before dying, Fylan entrusts Amir with an olum, the spice key to Illindhi, and a secret mission. Desperate for a better life far from Raluha, Amir sets out on an arduous journey to a kingdom that might not exist. Srivatsa’s worldbuilding is complex, captivating, and original. The result is a masterful fantasy epic bursting with flavor. (July)

Reviewed on 05/10/2024 | Details & Permalink

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