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Blog Archive
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2025
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October
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- Book review: The Feeding by Anthony Ryan
- SPFBO Champions' League: Murder at Spindle Manor b...
- COVER REVEAL: The Book Of Spores Anthology (edited...
- Book review: Colin Gets Promoted and Dooms the Wor...
- Review: The Entanglement of Rival Wizards by Sara ...
- Review: The Lost Reliquary by Lyndsay Ely
- Review: To Bargain with Mortals by R.A. Basu
- SPFBO Champions' League: Grey Bastards by Jonathan...
- SPFBO Champions' League Interview: Olivia Atwater
- Book review: Exiles by Mason Coile
- Podcast Reveal: Nerdy Nebula Podcast Nicholas W Fu...
- SPFBO Champions' League: Reign & Ruin by J.D. Evans
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October
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Book links: Amazon, Goodreads
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Anthony Ryan is the New York Times best selling author of the Raven's Shadow epic fantasy novels as well as the Slab City Blues science fiction series. He was born in Scotland in 1970 but spent much of his adult life living and working in London. After a long career in the British Civil Service he took up writing full time after the success of his first novel Blood Song, Book One of the Raven's Shadow trilogy. He has a degree in history, and his interests include art, science and the unending quest for the perfect pint of real ale. For news and general wittering about stuff he likes, check out Anthony's blog at: anthonyryan.net.
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing, Inc (August 12, 2025) Page count: 288 pages, Paperback
COVER REVEAL: The Book Of Spores Anthology (edited by Frasier Armitage, Eleni Argyró, Adrian M. Gibson & Ed Crocker)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Originally from Calgary, Alberta, Mark grew up on the cold, windswept Prairies of western Canada. Fleeing southward, he earned a Ph.D. in the history of science, medicine, and technology from the Johns Hopkins University and then enjoyed fifteen years of non-stop excitement as a humanities professor. Finally yearning for greener pastures, he persuaded his amazing husband to move to Vancouver Island, where they now live.
When not writing stories about murderous Canadians, he plays the viola in a local orchestra, walks his dogs along the seashore, and thinks up interesting ways to kill people.
Publisher: Ace (October 7, 2025) Page count: 384 Formats: audiobook, ebook, paperback
Buy The Entanglement of Rival Wizards
OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: After years of exile, Poppy Sutherland is coming home. The adopted brown daughter of the white Viceroy of colonized Viryana, she was sent to a boarding school to learn how to behave like a proper Welkish woman. Now, faced with her father's ailing health, Poppy must use all that tutelage to successfully court the likely successor to her father's position in order to secure her own future Unfortunately, a Viryan crime lord known as the Jackal has decided that Poppy is the perfect bargaining chip in his efforts to free his imprisoned brother. When the kidnapped heiress and crime lord come face to face, however, they realize that Poppy might be the key to a free Viryana.
To Bargain with Mortals is an anti-colonization fantasy that digs into the political complexities that hamper revolution. I've read a number of fantasy books with anti-colonization themes in recent years, and I appreciated that To Bargain with Mortals grappled with an issue not often tackled in those books: the fact that the oppressed people are not a monolith. It is not as simple as colonists bad, the colonized good. Instead, To Bargain with Mortals explores the fact that colonized cultures can have their own flaws to contend with. In this instance, the people of the island had their own caste culture before the white people arrived. It treated those with magical gifts as more pure and holy than people without; it caused a stratification where non-magical people were considered lesser than, unacceptable marriage partners and not worthy of higher positions in life.
As a result, this divide makes the non-magical parts of Viryan culture less willing to jump into a revolution, as they feel they've just swapped one oppressor for another. Their life won't get better with the magic users back in control, so why should they make an effort? This division forces some of the characters to reckon with their own subconscious prejudices as they try to unite their people to take back their home.
And even after that, there's a divide in how the Virians believe they should go about trying to get back equality. Some want bloody revolution; others believe there's no way to oust the colonizers, and instead they need to make compromises to get representation in the government. These differing paths often put characters against each other when they should be working with each other, a fact that feels all too reflective of the real world.
While To Bargain with Mortals has multiple POV characters, the central one to the story is Poppy. A brown orphan adopted by the white governor of the island, she has been raised to believe that her island culture is something to be ashamed of. She had the old traditions literally beaten out of her, which makes her entirely unfamiliar with her own people and their way of being.
Her journey to reconnect with her culture is the central grounding point of the story, and overall a good one. In this world, while people are inherently born with magic, their ability to wield it effectively is tied to the offerings they make to the gods. Which means that Poppy's magical strength literally comes from learning more about her people, how to relate to them, and how to worship like them. Watching her grow in confidence in both her magic and her understanding of her culture was a highlight of the book.
But it also felt like Poppy was a stand-in to be everybody's emotional punching bag. Her white father blames her when she goes outside of white conventions. Her Viryan childhood friends are quick to discount her own sufferings (including being beaten) because she didn't have it as bad as them. White society dismisses her as a mongrel who has stepped above her station. While Poppy does indeed have growth to do (and does accomplish growth over the course of the story), there were many points where it felt like she simply could not win. And again, perhaps this is all too indicative of real life and the experiences of those who are caught between cultures, not white enough for one and not brown enough for another.
But given Poppy's struggles and her own naivete about the world, I struggled a bit to believe in Poppy's political journey towards the end of the book. There comes a point where she needs to find a way to gather political power from across the groups of the island; given how disregarded she was by many groups, I found it a bit hard to buy into her having a chance at success at successfully uniting any kind of resistance.
To Bargain with Mortals excels at grappling with political struggles of revolution, at how internal struggles in a movement can undercut their ability to succeed. But while I loved Poppy's overall journey of rediscovering her heritage, I wish I believed in her slightly more as a leader.
AUTHOR INFO: Jonathan French is the author of the Autumn’s Fall Saga and The Grey Bastards. His debut novel, The Exiled Heir, was nominated for Best First Novel at the Georgia Author of the Year Awards in 2012. His second book, The Errantry of Bantam Flyn, rose to #6 on the Kindle Norse/Viking Fantasy bestseller list, proudly sharing the top ten with Neil Gaiman. His newest work, The Grey Bastards, is best described as “Sons of Anarchy…with half-orcs” and is poised to be his biggest seller to date. The book is currently a finalist in The Self-Published Fantasy Blog-Off #SPFBO. An outspoken advocate on the merits and future of independent publishing, Jonathan has led panel discussions at conventions such as DragonCon, TimeGate, and CONjuration. Recently, Jonathan had the pleasure of being featured in an episode of the web-series Retroblasting as a consultant on the cultural impact of the Dungeons & Dragons franchise. You can find out more at www.jonathanfrenchbooks.com.
Publication Date: November 16, 2015 Publisher: Ballymalis Press Page Count: 442 Formats: audiobook, ebook, paperback
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Mason Coile is the pen name of bestselling author, Andrew Pyper. Mason writes books that are distinct from Andrew's: short, twisty thrillers with a sci-fi bent and a strand of horror in their DNA.
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons (September 16, 2025) Length: 224 pages Formats: audio, ebook, paperback
Podcast Reveal: Nerdy Nebula Podcast Nicholas W Fuller, Dana Lindamood, Dante Romero, Julian Grajales, ZB Steele, and Jeff Brown
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If you've ever been called a nerd for reading books or watching sci-fi/fantasy movies or spending your time with a game controller or math rocks, you're our people and you're definitely going to find something to like in our chats. Episodes will air weekly on Thursdays starting on October 16th.
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