F&SF Book Reviews
The Agony Column reviews Ibrahim S. Amin’s The Monster Hunter’s Handbook.
Fantasybookspot reviews David Bilsborough’s first novel, the epic fantasy The Wanderer’s Tale.
Fantasybookspot also reviews Julie E. Czerneda’s Survival.
SFF World reviews The Dark River by John Twelve Hawks.
SciFi UK Review also covers the June issue of Hub magazine.
Strange Horizons reviews Scarlet Thomas’s The End of Mr. Y.
SF Signal reviews The Children of Hurin, by J.R.R. Tolkien and edited by Christopher Tolkien.
Strange Horizons reviews Ysabeau S. Wilce’s Flora Segunda.
Graeme’s Fantasy Book Review looks at Steve Cockayne’s The Good People.
Book Fetish reviews David Anthony Durham’s Acacia.
Bookgasm liked Tobias S. Buckell’s Ragamuffin.
The Times (of London) reviews Adam Robert’s Land of the Headless, John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War, and Steph Swainston’s The Modern World.
Lou Anders reviews Scott Lynch’s The Lies of Locke Lamora and Tobias S. Buckell’s Ragamuffin.
Martin McGrath reviews Ken MacLeod’s The Execution Channel. [via Velcro City Tourist Board]
Graeme’s Fantasy Book Review looks at Laurell K. Hamilton’s The Harlequin.
Blogcritics reviews Adam Robert’s Gradisil.
Maureen McHugh reviews Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, which she calls a “Not Science Fiction” book.
SF Diplomat reviews Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policemen’s Union.
But Wouldn’t It Be Cool? loved Emma Bull’s new old-West fantasy novel, Territory. (Kate Nepveu also liked it, but thinks readers should know that it’s the first of two books.)
The Agony Column reviews Camille DeAngelis’s Mary Modern.
Monsters & Critics reviews Jennifer Roberson’s Deepwood.
Neth Space reviews The Traveler by John Twelve Hawks.
SciFi UK Review looks at the second issue of Fiction magazine.
Book Fetish reviews Ray Garton’s Night Life.
Clark Perry insists that everyone read Philip K. Dick’s classic novel The Three Sitgmata of Palmer Eldrich. I can’t disagree, since I published it twice myself – once by itself, and once in a snazzy omnibus edition.