Catherine Fisher's Relic Master is a brand new fantasy series that will be releasing each of its four volumes once a month throughout this summer. The first book, The Dark City, hits stores this week, on May 17. We have partnered with the publisher to Read More
A medieval story of witchcraft and torture, a historical murder mystery written by a descendant of the family featured in the book — I have to admit I was interested. I don't usually like to buy into hype, but the price was right. Well, sometimes you Read More
First things first: if this book even looks remotely appealing to you, read Oryx and Crake first. The Year of the Flood is less of a follow-up to the post-viral-apocalypse than a parallel of the first book. You could read it independently, but there are Read More
Will McIntosh does a brilliant job with his debut novel. Soft Apocalypse is the chronicle of the collapse of the world shown through the eyes and perspective of Jasper, the twenty-something protagonist of this apocalyptic tale. Read More
Chicks Dig Time Lords is a collection of 23 essays, three interviews, and one cartoon edited by Lynne M. Thomas and Tara O'Shea. They have assembled quite a treasure trove of stories that documents the history of Doctor Who fandom through the individual Read More
You just have a couple of days left to enter our contest to win a copy of Shaun Tan's Lost and Found, a hardcover collection of three stories including "The Lost Thing," which inspired the Oscar-winning short film. Read More
Last week The Lost Thing picked up the Oscar for Best Animated Short Film. This week we have copies of the book that inspired it, Lost & Found by Shaun Tan, to give away to you! Read More
How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe, the first novel by award-winning young short story writer Charles Yu, can best be described as meta-science fiction. Read More
A broken superhero and an apocalyptic world seem a large undertaking for anyone, especially a first-time author. However, Susan Jane Bigelow manages to not only tell an interesting story, but to paint a picture of a world gone wrong and the superheroes Read More
Kirkbride’s Do You Believe in Ninjas? is far more than just “poems about ninjas.” Kirkbride’s verse plays with both poetic form and diction while presenting readers with playful and entertaining subject matter. Read More