The TTA Press website
2 Apr
ELRIC by MICHAEL MOORCOCK
Gollancz/Millenium Masterworks paperback, 432pp, RRP GB£7.99
Reviewed by David McWilliam
26 Mar
FUTURES FROM NATURE edited by HENRY GEE
Tor Books hardback, 320pp, RRP US$24.95
Reviewed by Shaun C Green
Packed with a numeric century of sf yarns from as many writers, Futures From Nature is a book ideal for dipping into for a quick reading session. All the stories contained within first appeared in the pages of the British science journal Nature, and the consistent theme is the titular future.
19 Mar
AIRMAN by EOIN COLFER
Puffin hardback, 432pp, RRP £10.99
Reviewed by Iain Emsley
Eoin Colfer’s Airman is a wonderful novel which is greater than the sum of its parts, half quasi-historical novel and half steampunk fantasy. Set on the Saltee Islands off the Atlantic coast of Ireland, Colfer creates an alternate history of derring-do and great invention.
12 Mar
THE RIVER KNOWS ITS OWN by JAY LAKE
Wheatland Press paperback, pp263, RRP $19.95.
Reviewed by PENNY HILL
“Tommy “Leviathan” Hobbes was short, nasty and reeked of Brut.”
This is my favourite opening line in The River Knows Its Own, Jay Lake’s bohemian collection of short stories; simultaneously an homage to a cliché and a swift character sketch.
5 Mar
WINTER WOOD by STEVE AUGARDE
David Fickling Books hardback, 512pp, £12.99 RRP
Reviewed by Iain Emsley
Winter Wood, the final part of Steve Augarde’s trilogy about the Various, is a bitter-sweet read. In the previous two books, The Various and Celandine, he has created a wonderfully deep and very English mythological landscape.
13 Feb
AXIS by ROBERT CHARLES WILSON
Tor Books hardback, 304pp, $25.95
Reviewed by Chris Hill
Starting with 1986’s A Hidden Place, Robert Charles Wilson has written a sequence of solid, competent sf novels (not to mention a fine short story collection, The Perseids and other stories) which contrast small human stories with big science fictional concepts, often involving an outside agency imposing change on a community. Some critics have pointed out a resemblance (particularly in the early novels) to the works of Clifford D. Simak, which does not seem unreasonable. Spin finally won Wilson the Hugo Award for Best Novel.
28 Nov
RUNEMARKS by JOANNE HARRIS
Doubleday hardback, 500pp, £14.99
Reviewed by Iain Emsley
Joanne Harris’s d?©but children’s novel is a fantastic romp which is eminently readable. Her adult fiction flirts with the fantastic, delivering it gently, while Runemarks is a retelling of Norse myths which also sets up a mythical - almost ‘asterisk fantastic’ ‚Äì world within which she finds some very human characters.
12 Nov
COWBOY ANGELS by PAUL McAULEY
Gollancz paperback, 400pp, £12.99
Reviewed by Dr Ian Hocking
By page two of Cowboy Angels, the new book by Paul McAuley, I couldn’t help but pause, glance at the list of novels inside the front cover, and make a ‘hmm’ noise. (more…)
No tag for this post.5 Nov
STARSHIP SUMMER by ERIC BROWN
PS Publishing, 119pp, £10
Reviewed by Kevin Stone
Eric Brown continues his refreshing direction in British sf with a new novella to follow his recently published novel Helix. Starship Summer sticks to the tradition of writing about people rather than delving too deeply into the technological aspects of the setting, being in essence a very traditional story about friendship, and how the bonds between mankind can elevate us beyond our wildest dreams. (more…)
No tag for this post.16 Oct
IN WAR TIMES by KATHLEEN ANN GOONAN
Tor Books, 348 pp, US$25.95
Reviewed by Duncan Lawie
We are in war times. It is our duty to work towards peace.
No tag for this post.