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Monday, July 13, 2026

COVER REVEAL: The Ashen Viper (The Forham Papers #1) by Joseph John Lee

 


Official Author Website

Joseph John Lee is an author with two finished series and he has been writing for the past couple of years to launch his epic fantasy debut. The Forham Papers is the new series and book 1 is titled The Ashen Viper. The book will be launched via kickstarter and you can click the "notify on launch" button over here.

Here's what the author had revealed about it so far: "This book—and series—will take you across three continents for a tale rich with lore, deep characters, political scheming, and a truly epic scale. In this absolute brick of a book, you'll find immortal demigods influencing the world's histories from the shadows, an order of undead assassins who were unleashed to appease a madman's grief, symbiotic magicks that grant power to a user just as much as they grant insanity . . . oh, and the central character has been described as a cross between Anomander Rake and Goku.

It is a story for those long enamored with grand and epic fantasies, for the fans of works like the Malazan Book of the Fallen and The Stormlight Archive."



Here's the artwork by Christopher Cant. The book cover can be seen below with design provided by Rachel St. Clair


Official Book Blurb: Were we not meant to know the truth?

It is by the hands of loresmen that heroes and villains are risen from history’s foundations, today’s stories that became yesterday’s histories that became the legends of yore. And from those legends emerge truths…of a sort. The truths that best serve a story when the facts have been lost to the decay of time.

The war that spelled the end of the Second Age was long mired in such murky truths, in these legends accepted as history, these fables and songs that served as the only surviving memory of those fateful days. Until now. Until these Forahm Papers, and whatever they may contain within.

For it is not the singular hero and villain who weave a story’s tapestry, but the many hands who break from the foundations and hold the truth aloft.

The ministry official who must investigate a sudden disappearance. The reluctant hero who saved a queen and doomed an entire people in the process. The exile whose very soul threatens the destruction of all around her. The son of a traitor who will stop at nothing to see honor restored to his name. The untested heiress faced with a long-dormant storm coming to rage over her land once more.

And the man whose name endured within the darker threads of history, cursed in the shadows as an assassin of kings, an arbiter of doom, a devil taken flesh. For if there is a truth hidden amongst these papers, it must begin here. It must begin with him: the Ashen Viper.


Review: The Eye of Leviathan by M.A. Carrick

 


Buy The Eye of Leviathan

FORMAT/INFO:  The Eye of Leviathan was published on July 14th, 2026. It is 499 pages and available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats.

OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: The Eye of Leviathan is a juxtaposition of whimsy and harsh reality that makes for a brutal examination of religious conversion and colonialism. Many readers will come to this having devoured the author duo's previous series, and I want to set the tone for what you're getting. The Rook & Rose trilogy (one of my all time favorites) is what I would call a "romantic adventure" fantasy. There's lavish balls, masked vigilantes, duels, con artists, crime lords with hearts of gold, all the trappings of a good old time. There's of course danger in it, but it's all a dashing affair.

The Eye of Leviathan, however, is darker in tone. It's a historical fantasy, grounded in an alternate version of our world where the Spanish have discovered a doorway to a faerie realm they call the Sea Beyond. In this history, Spain has given up its claim to the New World (the Americas) in favor of conquering this magical world instead.

The Sea Beyond is full of all the wonder you would expect. There's enchantments, strange creatures, terrible faeries who use the truth to lie to your face, and a whole ocean of moving islands. It's not perfect and it's not a utopia, but it's its own place and has its own culture and way of doing things. When the Spanish arrive, however, they immediately set about shaping the Sea Beyond into their view of how the world should be. Islands are literally pinned down, with some inhabitants slaughtered and others facing a cruel fate: baptism, which removes a faerie's immortality and makes them magically enslaved to those who hold their name. It's not a subtle metaphor, but it's certainly an effective one.

We see all this from two POVs: Estevan, a changeling masquerading as a human to infiltrate the Spanish colonization efforts to disrupt them from the inside, and the Hungry Girl, the mortal child Estevan replaced as a baby who has grown up in faerie and never seen another human until Spanish Conquistadors arrive. Estevan's POV is the more challenging of the two to get acclimated with, as we watch him assume the form of a child and grow over several years. It serves as an introduction to the world, but also required me to brush the cobwebs off my old history education as I tried to place the many names and places that get rattled off at the beginning of the story to establish this alternate history of events. I admit the early chapters were a little rough going because of that, as I struggled to remember what was factual in our world, and what changes had been made for this alternate history.

The Hungry Girl, meanwhile, was an easier character to get to know. Having grown up in wondrous faerie, she knows the ways in which the realm operates. But having never met another human, she is incredibly naive as to how they operate. When she meets the Spanish, she accepts everything they tell her must be true, because these are the only humans she's met and surely they must know the proper way of the world. But as she becomes complicit in their crimes, she starts to question and grow and start to unpack what her people are truly up to.

And that truly is the harshest part of the book, seeing all the beauty and wonder slowly be enslaved and corrupted. Through it all, the Hungry Girl has to wrestle with the hypocrisies and confused messaging of her people, as they tell her the proper way to be, the proper people to hate, the proper religion to follow. I do wish the Hungry Girl had questioned things a little more instead of taking what humans say at face value. After all, she's spent her whole life amongst fae creatures who know how to twist their words to hide their motivations.

The story cuts back and forth between alternating timelines that slowly converge, as Estevan goes through adulthood and embarks upon his present day career. This was where the story started to pick up for me, as the journeys of these two people drew together. Up to that point, I struggled a bit sometimes with feeling a real drive to Estevan's story, as he pursues his career without a real end goal in sight. This book was definitely on the slower side at times, and while I appreciated the magical metaphors, I didn't fully see where the climax was going.

The Eye of Leviathan excels as a condemnation of colonialism while struggling a bit with the overall story. The ending didn't quite catapult me to the sequel; it simply closes one chapter with the promise of a part two. And it felt slower than the ROOK & ROSE books; while those books took me a while to get to, I was so enraptured with the world and the characters I didn't care. This just felt slow overall, especially with some extremely lengthy chapters. It is still a good book overall, but it didn't hit the heights I was hoping of the authors' previous work. 

 
Thursday, July 9, 2026

Review: Sunsplitter by S.A. MacLean

 


FORMAT/INFO: Sunsplitter will be published by Orbit Books on August 4th, 2026. It is 608 pages long and available in ebook, paperback, and audiobook formats.

OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: Sunsplitter is the spicy action-packed follow-up to Voidwalker and it manages to deftly balance romance, action, and character in one fantastic finale. What I especially appreciated about this sequel was that it managed to find conflict between the couple of Fi and Antal (human and monstrous daeyari respectively) that felt natural and earned and not forced to create drama. Antal may have found the love of his life in Fi, but he's grappling with the fact that he has been isolated from his own people for decades, and he may have to continue that isolation to protect the human-friendly community he and Fi are building. There's a real exploration of how being cut off from your own culture is a devastating loss of connection - even if you have mixed feelings about the individual people in that culture. Fi in return struggles to figure out if she's "enough" for Antal - if she can fill the void that lost connection creates.

This conflict felt like a natural rough patch in a relationship, especially one where family members don't approve of the match. And eventually, they do call each other out and work through their issues, becoming even stronger for it. If I had one area where I had a complaint, it's that I wish Antal had had a little more initiative towards the end of the book, instead of letting old patterns continue to rule.

Aside from the romance, there's an engaging action-packed plot with a splash of politics as a dangerous foe threatens not just Antal's territory, but daeyari rule everywhere. I was fully invested in this new enemy, though I could have stood to learn a little more about them than we did. Either way, this new threat gives us the excuse to peek behind the curtain at the council that rules how daeyari live and govern on their home turf, and I welcomed the addition of new characters from Antal's past. They provide their own complications as Antal tries to figure out who - if any - of his former friends and relatives he can trust.

I'll also just give a quick mention to the fact that this is a spicier book than Voidwalker. While there was definitely spice in the first book, the author here leans full-tilt into the "monster smut" aspect of the book. There is plenty of non-spice plot in here too, but if those kinds of scenes aren't your cup of tea, you might be better off with another book.

Sunsplitter was a fantastic sequel to a book I really enjoyed. Voidwalker was one of my favorite reads of 2025 and I have a feeling Sunsplitter is going to end the year with the same glowing honor.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

EXCLUSIVE COVER REVEAL: To Dream a Darker Realm by Angela Boord

 



To Dream a Darker Realm began life as Part One of my 2022 Cold War portal fantasy Through Dreams So Dark.  Originally, I only wanted to make the 385,000 word Through Dreams So Dark more accessible to readers by re-packaging it in shorter chunks. But when I started getting my hands dirty, I realized a shorter Book One wouldn't be satisfying without its own arc. In the end, I added about 50% new material, including new subplots and complications, which will be carried into the new Book 2 I’m revising out of the rest of Through Dreams So Dark. 

The new cover by Rena Violet also reflects changes I’ve made to the manuscript, especially the dash of dark academia that shows up in the Gothic purple (I love the purple!) frame. I chose Rena as the cover artist because I loved the drama of her graphic covers, and I felt from the beginning that she really got what I wanted to do. With this cover, I think she’s really captured the book’s vibe—kind of dark, with that tantalizing view of the Lake just out of reach.


Official Book Blurb: Stranger Things meets Robin Hobb in this Cold War portal fantasy series set in a world of dark conspiracies and quantum magic, where reality can’t be trusted but family means everything.

Sergei relives his mother’s tragic death in nightmares every night… but he’s the only one who believes she’s still alive.

Sergei lives an ordinary 1980’s American life… but every night he travels back to the frozen Russian lake where his mother made the ultimate sacrifice for her children’s freedom. So when a mysterious woman tells him his mother is alive, he jumps at the chance to find her.

The problem? The only clue to her whereabouts is an otherworldly book written in a language no one has ever seen before.

Lured into a risky game of cloak and dagger with a shadowy government cabal that wants his mother as badly as he does, Sergei will risk everything to find the truth. But when his nightmares start bleeding into reality, his double life might tear his family completely apart before he has a chance to bring them back together.

The clock is ticking. With one last chance to save his mother from the ruthless forces plotting to use her, can Sergei make it in time... Or will everyone he loves suffer the consequences?




Book review: A Murder Most Fungal by Adrian M. Gibson

 


Book links: Amazon, Goodreads

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Adrian M. Gibson is an award-winning Canadian SFF author, podcaster, book designer, and tattoo artist. He is the creator of the SFF Addicts podcast, which he co-hosts with fellow authors M.J. Kuhn and Greta Kelly. The three host in-depth interviews with an array of science fiction and fantasy authors, as well as writing masterclasses. And, as of May 2026, he is the Publishing Project Manager for Grimdark Magazine, heading up their line of fantasy and sci-fi novellas. He lives in Quito, Ecuador with his family.

For the latest updates, follow Adrian on social media @adrianmgibson. You can also stream/watch new episodes of SFF Addicts every Tuesday on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and more.

Publisher: The Kinoko Book Co. (June 16, 2026) Page count: 291 pages Formats: ebook, pp, hc

Monday, July 6, 2026

Book review: Sister Svangerd and the Devil You Know by K.J. Parker (The Loyal Opposition #2)


Book links: Goodreads / Amazon

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: K.J. Parker is a pseudonym for Tom Holt.

According to the biographical notes in some of Parker's books, Parker has previously worked in law, journalism, and numismatics, and now writes and makes things out of wood and metal. It is also claimed that Parker is married to a solicitor and now lives in southern England. According to an autobiographical note, Parker was raised in rural Vermont, a lifestyle which influenced Parker's work.

Publisher: Orbit (May 12, 2026) Page count: 336 Formats: audio, ebook, pp

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

SPFBO XI Finalists - our approach

SPFBO XI Finalists - our approach

As avid fantasy readers, we love discovering new voices and hidden gems. SPFBO contest gives us such a possibility, and we're thrilled to participate in it for the tenth time.

The first stage of the contest has just ended, and ten blogs have picked their champions. We're excited to read all of them and would love to encourage you to do the same.

Here's GR LIST with all finalists. We encourage you to add them all to your Want to Read shelf.

Friday, June 26, 2026

Book review: The World We Make by N.K. Jemisin (The Great Cities #2)

 


Book links: Amazon, Goodreads

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: N. K. Jemisin is a Brooklyn author who won the Hugo Award for Best Novel for The Fifth Season, which was also a New York Times Notable Book of 2015. She previously won the Locus Award for her first novel, The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, and her short fiction and novels have been nominated multiple times for Hugo, World Fantasy, and Nebula awards, and shortlisted for the Crawford and the James Tiptree, Jr. awards. She is a science fiction and fantasy reviewer for the New York Times, and you can find her online at nkjemisin.com.

Publisher: Orbit Page count: 368 Formats: audiobook, ebook, paperback

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Book review: Canon by Paige Lewis

 


Book links: Amazon, Goodreads

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Paige Lewis is an American poet and the author of the collection Space Struck, which was named one of the Best Books of 2019 by Entropy and Book Riot. Lewis's debut novel, Canon, was published by Viking Press / Penguin in May 2026.

Publisher: Viking (May 19, 2026) Page count: 480 Formats: audiobook, ebook, HC

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Book review: Palaces of the Crow by Ray Nayler



Book links: Amazon, Goodreads

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Hugo and Locus Award winning author Ray Nayler was born in Quebec and raised in California. He lived and worked abroad for two decades in Russia, Central Asia, the Caucasus, the Balkans, and in Vietnam.

​Ray most recently served as international advisor to the Office of National Marine Sanctuaries at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and as visiting scholar at the George Washington University's Institute for International Science and Technology Policy.

Ray lives in Washington, DC with his wife Anna, their daughter Lydia, and two rescued cats.

Publisher: MCD (May 19, 2026) Page count: 384 pages Formats: audiobook, ebook, paperback

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