Review: Dead Silence, by S.A. Barnes

Format: 352 pages, Paperback
Published: January 24, 2023 by Tor Trade
ISBN: 9781250778543

Titanic meets Event Horizon in this SF horror novel in which a woman and her crew board a decades-lost luxury cruiser and find the wreckage of a nightmare that hasn’t yet ended.

Claire Kovalik is days away from being unemployed―made obsolete―when her beacon repair crew picks up a strange distress signal. With nothing to lose and no desire to return to Earth, Claire and her team decide to investigate.

What they find is the Aurora, a famous luxury spaceliner that vanished on its maiden tour of the solar system more than twenty years ago. A salvage claim like this could set Claire and her crew up for life. But a quick search of the ship reveals something isn’t right.

Whispers in the dark. Flickers of movement. Messages scrawled in blood. Claire must fight to hold on to her sanity and find out what really happened on the Aurora before she and her crew meet the same ghastly fate.


My Review

I ordered this book after seeing it on one of the GoodReads challenge lists. I hadn’t heard of it before although the author’s name pinged something in my brain. I liked the description and thought it would be entertaining.

Oh boy! I read the hype at the beginning of the book when it arrived and thought it might be exaggeration, just a touch.

I was wrong! It’s really good!

I read this book in an evening. At one point I had to skip forward to find out what happened, and then I went back once I was reassured at least some people would be alright.

The story is told from the perspective of the traumatised and quite likely psychic Claire Kovalik, team lead for a maintenance crew. The five-person crew service the comms network that’s scattered across the solar system, they live for weeks at a time on a tiny space vessel, being picked up and dropped off by larger freighters. It’s Claire’s last rotation, at 33 she’s considered too old, and due to her history, too unstable, to carry on.

Then, they hear a beacon. After an argument, they head out into uncharted territory to find the source of the beacon. What they find is the first and only luxury space liner. Twenty years lost, the Aurora’s disappearance destroyed the company that built it, allowing Verux, the company Claire works for, to take over. It’s worth a fortune to those who find and salvage it. But there are secrets.

Claire and her crew go aboard the Aurora and find terrible things.

We swap to Claire in the mental hospital, some time after she boards the Aurora with her crew. She doesn’t remember much. Her old mentor, Max, and a bully from Verux, Reed, a nepo-hire, who is determined to prove she murdered her crew for money, are questioning her. Claire tells them everything she can remember, up to the point where her skull is fractured. The hallucinations, the violent deaths of her colleagues, the developing romantic relationship between her and Kane, her number two, and the plan to get the Aurora back to the comms network so they can call for help.

Reed fails and Max recruits Claire to go back to the Aurora with him – she’s the only person who survived. Her mental illness might actually have helped. When they get there, Claire finds the neatly wrapped bodies of three of her colleagues and the last hallucinating in a room padded with mattresses. She also finds a conspiracy that Verux really don’t want to get out.

There is madness. There are explosions.

I loved it!

Claire is a beautifully flawed character. She blames herself for everything when it’s clearly not her fault, she refuses to let people care for her and fears what will happen when they do – convinced she’ll cause their deaths somehow, and she’s severely traumatised by events of her childhood. Also, she can see ghosts.

The relationship between Claire and Kane is sweet and develops naturally as they go through difficult events. The resistance Claire feels about getting close to people is a response to her trauma, and Kane’s calming presence, knowing her past, slowly helps her build trust in herself and him.

The corporate evil of Varux is entirely believable – destroy a competitor and then try to clear up the mess by murdering people. I know this has happened in real life, although usually the firms involved distance themselves by saying it was rogue contractors – see VWs slave plantations in the Amazon during the 1980s, or mining companies that regularly allow their ‘security contractors’ to murder local activists – especially in the Amazon. Putting it in space makes it sound like fiction, but this shit is happening in the real world now. I direct you to Silent Coup: How Corporations Overthrew Democracy by Claire Provost and Matt Kennard ( I have a Left Book Club copy that I’m reading at the moment) for more information.

I was absolutely rivetted by this book, by the mystery of how the people went mad and what happened to Claire, allowing her to escape and return to rescue what was left of her crew. Definitely going on my favourites list for this year.

Review: Moojang and the Sloth Guardians, by N.E. McMorran

PublisherSpondylux Press
Publish Date10 December 2025
Pages208
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback
ISBN9781838097844

Moojag and Nema are back for a final roller coaster of an adventure, this time to save Box Hill from total destruction and rescue a bunch of mossy sloths from nasty Brix’s celebration feast.

But their new, slow-moving friends have a secret weapon
and together they’re all set to prove that saving the Real World
literally takes guts!


My Review

Moojag and Nema are back, the Conqip have invaded and are threatening to destroy Box Hill. With the help of various parents and grandparents (Adam’s dad and granddad reappear), a colony of sloths, the fruit-happy Pofs, and a gang of Gajooms, the evil plans of the Conqip are defeated and the island saved, although not without loss. We learn more of the history of the families, the secrets of the Conqips and how they came about, and see the responsible use of future technology in action.

This one was fun, and the cover is very colourful. There are bits of information sprinkled about and it ends with hope for a better future, even if Moojag does go off to live in the woods with the sloths. The families are reunited, and the danger to their world is removed. Some of them have gone to London Tops to help others surviving in London. There’s a future in sight.

There are also a lot of Beatles references, most of which I didn’t get because I don’t listen to the Beatles.

Reading the books one after the other, I might have got a few events mixed up; the stories follow straight on from the one before and I read them in quick succession. The overall arc is visible to me, and it’s a lovely story, but the details get a bit jumbled. There is a lot of to-ing and fro-ing for the characters, as they race across islands and Gajoomdom, and I got a little confused at times about who was doing what. It is the nature of children’s fiction that sometimes adults don’t quite get the story.

I actually really enjoyed this one, and the sloths digestive victory made me laugh. The development of the relationships over the course of the stories makes sense, as the reader learns with Nema about how things got the way they were and the reasons people act the way they do. There was something satisfying about the conclusion.

A lovely series of bonkers adventures for children, in a possible future world. Age recommendation for series 8+

Review: Moojag and the Lost Memories, by N.E. McMorran

The stand-alone sequel to ‘Moojag and the Auticode Secret’, endorsed by award-winning authors Patience Agbabi, Alex Falase-Koya, Ben Davis, and Daniel Aubrey.

A multigenerational story, featuring a neurodivergent cast and audhd, non-binary, POC, main characters, for readers 8 years and over.

When Nema returns to Gajoomdom, she discovers three forgetful grannies who have totally lost track of time. If she and Moojag can’t help them remember, everyone’s memories are in danger. But turns out not everyone is who they thought they were. Who will they rescue? Will they rescue them in time to save their perfect Real World from the nasty Conqip?

‘Lost Memories’, inspired by the author’s grandmother, and living with dementia and disability during the pandemic, shows us the impact of loss and the power of memory, as well as the importance of future technology when used for good.

Continue reading “Review: Moojag and the Lost Memories, by N.E. McMorran”

Review: Moojag and the Auticode Secret, by N.E, MacMorran

Format: 288 pages, Paperback
Published: November 9, 2020 by Spondylux Press
ISBN: 9781838097806 

Book description

When Nema and her friends discover a hidden sugar-hooked society holding lost kids, they find their perfect world in danger. The strange, sticky place hides the truth about Nema’s missing brother, and a plot to destroy the free world she knows. But only they can reverse a code to prevent a rock candy robot invasion and rescue the captives. Fail and they might never make it back home…

This dystopian, cli-fi mystery is a quirky adventure featuring a neurodivergent cast and autistic/dyslexic/adhd main characters, for readers 10 years and up. Highly recommended as a family read due to the thought-provoking concepts and subject matter introduced.

Set in the utopian world of post-catastrophe ‘Surrey Isles’, Britain 2054, where neurodivergents live in harmony with nature and technology, and the hidden dystopian ‘Gajoomdom’.

Anyone who has ever felt different or had trouble fitting in will identify with this story about finding the strength to be your true self. A fun, Alice-esque adventure revealing what it means to be neurodivergent, in a way that’s relatable to all.

Continue reading “Review: Moojag and the Auticode Secret, by N.E, MacMorran”

Blog tour review: Daughters of Nicnevin, by Shona Kinsella

Blurb

Mairead and Constance, two powerful witches, meet in the early days of
the 1745 Jacobite uprising. While the men of the village are away fighting,
the villagers face threats from both the Black Watch and raiders, and the
women are confronted with their vulnerability. They enlist the help of
Nicnevin, fae queen of witches, to bring men made of earth to life to help
protect their village. But just who do they need protection from? And what
will happen when the village men return?

Continue reading “Blog tour review: Daughters of Nicnevin, by Shona Kinsella”

Books delivered this week

I’ve had some good post this week.

This morning I received an ARC of The Girl With A Thousand Faces from Sunyi Dean, that came with a letter about the book, a ghost talisman and a flyer about the official book launch in May.

Earlier in the week I received a book I ordered after seeing it on a Good Reads list and liking the sound of it, Dead Silence, by S.A. Barnes. I think I had to get it from the Netherlands.

And I’ve also received two of the books I’m reviewing in January for Random Things Tours.

  • The Girl In The Tower, by Harrison Murphy, 13th January 2026 – stand alone novel
  • The Hope, by Paul E. Hardest, 26th January 2026 – final book in a trilogy

And of course, BFS Horizons #18 has arrived from the BFS!

I can’t wait to read them all!

Review: Silence of the Dead, by Marks Ewington

Publisher Independently published
Publication date 5 Aug. 2025
Language ‎English
Print length 284 pages
ISBN-13 979-8284534489

BOOK DESCRIPTION

Murder has come to the city of Tronte…

Holtar didn’t become a necromancer for the prestige—he did it because talking to the dead is marginally easier than dealing with the living. Unfortunately, his latest case has given him a fresh problem: the corpses aren’t talking.

Continue reading “Review: Silence of the Dead, by Marks Ewington”

Review: Fantasy Fiction – A Writer’s Guide and Anthology, by Jennifer Pullen

About the book

The first fantasy-writing textbook to combine a historical genre overview with an anthology and comprehensive craft guide, this book explores the blue prints of one of the most popular forms of genre fiction. The first section will acquaint readers with the vast canon of existing fantasy fiction and outline the many sub-genres encompassed within it before examining the important relationship between fantasy and creative writing, the academy and publishing. A craft guide follows which equips students with the key concepts of storytelling as they are impacted by writing through a fantastical lens. These

– Character and dialogue
– Point of view
– Plot and structure
– Worldbuilding settings, ideologies and cultures
– Style and revision

The third section guides students through the spectrum of styles as they are classified in fantasy fiction from Epic and high fantasy, through Lovecraftian and Weird fiction, to magical realism and hybrid fantasy. An accompanying anthology will provide students with a greater awareness of the range of possibilities open to them as fantasy writers and will feature such writers as Ursula Le Guin, China Miéville, Theodora Goss, Emrys Donaldson, Ken Liu, C.S.E. Cooney, Vandana Singh, Sofia Samatar, Rebecca Roanhorse, Jessie Ulmer, Yxta Maya Murray, and Rachael K. Jones. With writing exercises, prompts, additional online resources and cues for further reading throughout, this is an essential resource for anyone wanting to write fantastical fiction.

Format 344 pages, Paperback
Published January 11, 2024 by Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN 978135016692

Continue reading “Review: Fantasy Fiction – A Writer’s Guide and Anthology, by Jennifer Pullen”

Review: The Raven Scholar, by Antonia Hodgson

About the book


From an electrifying new voice in epic fantasy comes The Raven Scholar, a masterfully woven and playfully inventive tale of imperial intrigue, cutthroat competition, and one scholar’s quest to uncover the truth.

Let us fly now to the empire of Orrun, where after twenty-four years of peace, Bersun the Brusque must end his reign. In the dizzying heat of mid-summer, seven contenders compete to replace him. They are exceptional warriors, thinkers, strategists—the best of the best.

Then one of them is murdered.

It falls to Neema Kraa, the emperor’s brilliant, idiosyncratic High Scholar, to find the killer before the trials end. To do so, she must untangle a web of deadly secrets that stretches back generations, all while competing against six warriors with their own dark histories and fierce ambitions. Neema believes she is alone. But we are here to help; all she has to do is let us in.

If she succeeds, she will win the throne. If she fails, death awaits her. But we won’t let that happen.

We are the Raven, and we are magnificent.

Format 672 pages, Paperback
Published April 15, 2025 by Orbit
ISBN 9780316577229

Continue reading “Review: The Raven Scholar, by Antonia Hodgson”

Review: Stone & Sky, by Ben Aaronovitch

I’ve got the WordPress app on my phone now, so instead of copy/paste I photograph!

My Review

I’ve been listening to the audiobook of Stone & Sky, but I needed to go into town today so I visited Waterstones and got their only copy. It’s a signed special edition and I rather like the cover and end papers.

The fish scale pattern is rather subtle on the paper cover but you can just about see it in the photo. It’s mirrored on the end papers.

I’ve got a few Rivers of London books, and I’ve read every novel, novella and graphic novel. I’ve read quite a few of the short stories too. It’s getting to the point that my collection may need it’s own shelf in the library. When I get another bookshelf. I’m running out of space.

On this installment of Peter’s adventures, the gang go on a holiday to Aberdeenshire. Thomas, Abi, and the foxes are hunting a mysterious panther; Abdul is visiting his old friend and fellow weird creature hobbyist, Brian; Beverly decided it was time for a holiday for her, Peter and their twins, while Peter’s mum was supposed to be their babysitter. Since Peter’s dad can’t be left unsupervised, he came along, with his jazz band and their dodgy manager.

Peter gets dragged into a murder case, which becomes a missing person case, while Abi deals with her grief for her brother by hiding in trees photographing magic panthers from other worlds, until she falls in love with a mermaid. At which point she gets dragged into the same case Peted is investigating from a different angle.

Turns out, if you kidnap selkies and force them to work, and the local mermaids are involved, it gets dangerous for everyone. There’s a kraken in the North Sea, apparently.  No one actually blows up an oil platform, but it gets close.

Peter doesn’t have any legal status as a copper in Scotland, so he’s got a new mate, DS Blansheil, who gets to learn all about the weird stuff on the job. Between then they attempt to capture a giant gull with teeth, intimidate oil industry execs, and taser an American practitioner, before heading to an oil platform to find a missing person. There’s a couple of wyvern attacks, too.

The story is told by Peter and Abigail as they go about their parallel investigations and adventures. The voice actors who play them in the audiobook do convincing Aberdonian and other Scottish accents, as well as London accents. As far as I can tell. I’m unfamiliar with both but the vernacular seems correct, and Aaronovitch does name a lot of local experts who advised him.

I do like the sound of a macaroni cheese pie, although I think my blood vessels would object (heavy pastry gives me a headache and too many carbs hurt my abdomen), so if I ever make it to Aberdeen I’ll avoid that particular local delicacy.

The story starts out fairly simply – what Peter did on his summer holidays – and becomes increasingly complex until there are multiple investigations and lots of new characters. Even the foxes get in on the act. The ones in Scotland apparently own a car, driven by a merman (well, mermaid teenager, Duncan isn’t technically legal to drive).

I followed the thread of the story quite well and I enjoyed the developments in familial relationships and friendships. Also, the twins are adorable. They are going to run Peter ragged.

Abi is becoming more of a main character with her foxes and her new girlfriend; her grief for her brother Paul dominates until she is distracted by Ione, who offers her support and a release, which allows her to cry as much as she needs to. By the end of the novel she has started to process her pain and, although she still has suicidal ideation, she is looking towards the future.

Aaronovitch draws on all sorts of folklore and mythology to people his stories, often with a new twist – mermaids who live on land and transform in the sea, selkies who can’t shed their skin and wouldn’t survive long out of the water. Although they do bark like seals. Kraken who guard baby selkies. River gods who try to act tough but look a bit daft. I enjoyed his takes on the folklore he draws on and it takes his stories to interesting places.

I am also amused by Peter’s Discworld and Lord of the Rings references. I picked up several, but the one from GUARDS! GUARDS! was particularly good. I may have missed references to other worlds, but I definitely got those.

There were bits of the story that seemed not to flow, like Ione suddenly coming back into the narrative as Abi runs down the tunnel or Beverly reappearing on the diving platform. Since the narrative is written in first person it adds to the feeling of confusion that the characters are narrating, but I had to reread a couple of times to work out what was going on.

Other than minor confusions at the climax of their individual investigations,  I found this book an excellent addition to the Rivers of London universe.