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Blog Archive
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2021
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January
(14)
- The Last Exit by Michael Kaufman review
- Q&A with Phil Williams, the author of Kept From Ca...
- Kept from Cages by Phil WIlliams review
- SPFBO Finalist: Last Memoria by Rachel Emma Shaw r...
- SPFBO: Interview with Rachel Emma Shaw (by Lukasz ...
- Exclusive Cover Reveal & Chapter Excerpt: Oh, That...
- Blood Heir by Ilona Andrews (reviewed by Mihir Wan...
- The Loosening Skin by Aliya Whiteley review
- Mihir's Top Reads of 2020 (by Mihir Wanchoo)
- Daughter of Flood and Fury by Levi Jacobs Cover Re...
- Cover Reveal: Songs Of Insurrection (new edition) ...
- The Silvered Serpents by Roshani Chokshi (reviewed...
- 2020 Review/2021 Preview - Caitlin Grieve
- 2020 Review / 2021 Preview - Łukasz Przywóski
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January
(14)

AUTHOR INFORMATION: Rachel Emma Shaw is a London based author. She started writing as an escape from her PhD in neuroscience and has never stopped. She lives in a house slowly being consumed by plants and loves being outdoors. She will frequently attempt to write her books in local parks, only to inevitably end up falling asleep in the sun. If you want her to hurry up and write more books then wish for rain. Her best work is done when it's stormy outside.
Exclusive Cover Reveal & Chapter Excerpt: Oh, That Shotgun Sky (A Novella of The Songs of Sefate) by Sarah Chorn (by Mihir Wanchoo)
As a reader and a fan, I can certainly say it’s an extraordinary amount of pleasure to be able to interact with authors and to hear them talk about their craft, their books and what plans they have for the future. During one such recent chat with Sarah Chorn, I happened to mention how much I had enjoyed her prose and worldbuilding skills in Of Honey And Wildfires.
Official Author Website
Pre-order Blood Heir over HERE
AUTHOR INFORMATION: Ilona Andrews is the pseudonym for the husband-and-wife writing team of Ilona Gordon & Andrew Gordon. Together, Andrew and Ilona are the co-authors of the New York Times bestselling Kate Daniels urban fantasy series and several other series. They live in Texas with their children.
2020 was a year that almost all of us would like to put
behind us for good. A global pandemic and working from home while trying to
manage young-uns, made more me than a tad morose. I only managed to read
to about 60-odd books (still need to update my GR account about many of them). This isn’t counting the re-reads as I found myself
jumping back a lot to my comfort reads when certain events occurred. Overall I
wasn’t able to read as many debuts as I have done in the past years. Hence I’m
listing only the top 5 this year. So here we go:
1) Kings
Of Heaven by Richard Nell – Richard Nell has rapidly made strides with each
book of his debut trilogy and with this trilogy, he did something spectacular.
He wrote a book that’s smaller than its predecessors in word count but easily
had more epic story and magic. It was an ending that David Gemmell would be
proud of. This easily made it the best book I’ve read in the entire year.
2) Black
Tie Required by Craig Schaefer – Craig Schaefer’s reinvention of his
spinoff series has been nothing short of incredible. When the books were being
published by 47North, they were dark & thrilling but after Craig got the rights back. The series has become a marvelous amalgamation of thriller, fantasy &
spycraft. Black Tie Required is also one of the best thriller stories that
I’ve read in my life and easily takes the silver medal.
3) Paternus:
War Of Gods by Dyrk Ashton – This last year was one for some great indie
trilogies. We got to see what Dyrk Ashton had planned for his immortals and man
what a climax it was. Stupendous in a single world, War Of Gods does have it all
epic magical battles, one of one fights between immortals and an ending that
outdoes everything that has come before. Dyrk Ashton proves himself to be the
Tolkien for the 21st century with his debut trilogy.
4) The
Shadow Saint by Gareth Hanrahan – The Shadow Saint takes all the amazing magical stuff introduced in The Gutter Prayer and takes it to another level altogether.
I loved Gareth’s imagination in his debut and this book further solidifies his
reputation as an imaginative storyteller. I can’t wait to read the future entries of the Black Iron Legacy which will be must reads whenever they release.
5) The
Fires Of Vengeance by Evan Winter – This was another sequel that really
really expanded on the world and characters while never comprising on the prose
and action sequences. Evan Winter’s epic fantasy series gives us a taste of
tropes which we have loved but packaged in a new non-European world and with
Dragons because you know fantasy is always that much more exciting with
dragons. Evan Winter’s the Burning
Quartet promises to be a future epic fantasy classic.
6) The
Stone Knife by Anna Stephens – The Stone Knife is the start of a new epic
fantasy saga that is styled on a world that’s drawn from Mesoamerican culture
and topography. Combined with Anna Stephens’ vivid characterization, this dark
fantasy epic was one hell of a read and promised a saga that I can’t wait to
read more about.
7) We
Ride The Storm by Devin Madson – Devin Madson’s traditional publishing
debut was first self-published and we at FBC count ourselves lucky that we were
able to recognize its magnificence early on in SPFBO. Combining a Spartan
approach in prose and a quick-paced plot, We Ride The Storm is one hell of a ride
and should be on everybody’s radar (if it isn't already).
8) Race
The Sands by Sarah Beth Durst – I must confess this book originally wasn’t
on my radar but thanks to my blogmate Caitlin & her effusive praise, I was
drawn in. Telling a standalone story is something of a novelty in the epic
fantasy and Sarah Beth Durst does it with aplomb. Writing a story about bonds
between a mother & her daughter, a master & an apprentice, a racer
& her beast, she manages to combine all these old tropes in a fresh way
that made me love this story a lot.
9) From
Cold Ashes Risen by Rob J. Hayes – From Cold Ashes Risen was a fascinating
end to an experimental trilogy by one of my favourite authors. It focused on an
anxiety ridden, self-loathing protagonist who was the exact opposite of Kvothe.
This book brought things full circle and made realize what an intricately
planned ride it was.
10) Of
Honey And Wildfires by Sarah Chorn – Of Honey And Wildfire is Sarah Chorn’s
sophomore effort and a completely different story than her debut. It still has
her gorgeous prose, three dimensional characters and a story that combines
aspects of a western with financial colonialism. It is a dark story but an
important one and highlighted what a terrific storyteller Sarah is.
There were three other titles that almost made the list, hence I have to give them a shoutout:
Top 5 Debuts:
1) The
Combat Codes by Alexander Darwin – This was genuinely one of the best
debuts I’ve read in the last couple of years. It combined dystopian SF elements
with martial arts and a very light touch of fantasy. With echoes of Ender’s
Game and Red Rising mixed in with regular martial art tropes, this debut by Alexander Darwin
was easily the top choice amidst all the debuts I read.
2) The
Bone Shard Daughter by Andrea Stewart – The Bone Shard Daughter was a book
that narrowly missed out of top spot. It had some of the creepiest and most
detailed magic system which I have had the pleasure to read in recent years.
Andrea Stewart’s prose skills as well as the plot shine amidst a bit of uneven
pacing and made the sequels a must read for me.
3) The
Sin In The Steel by Ryan Van Loan – The Sin In The Steel is a wonderful mix
of gender-flipped Sherlockian tropes, high fantasy & loads of action
sequences. This debut was so much fun in a year filled with darkness that I was
genuinely sad when it ended. However I can’t wait to read the sequel and to see
where Buc and Eld end up in a world filled with dead (& resurrected) gods,
pirates & shapeshifting mages.
4) The
Boy Who Walked Too Far by Dom Watson – I must confess this is another title
which I was privileged to read earlier thanks to SPFBO. However this past year,
Dom Watson was able to re-release it with a smashing new cover as well a much
more streamlined plot thanks to a cracking edit. The first volume of the Xindii
chronicles showcases a world and story unlike any other out there. Remember the
name as this is another future classic.
5) The Unspoken Name by A.K.
Larkwood – The Unspoken Name came with a lot of hype and it did justify
most (if not all) of it. This debut gave us magical races, a magical academy
settings and an epic fantasy plot. However the amalgamation of these elements
wasn’t entirely smooth (eg. the uneven pace & anti-climatic ending) but I’m still excited for the sequel and I hope the author can improve upon some of the book’s
minor deficiencies.
Today, we have the immense pleasure of hosting the cover reveal for Levi Jacobs’s Daughter of the Flood, the first book of Tidecaller Chronicles.
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