Review: The Girl with a Thousand Faces, by Sunyi Dean

A haunting dark urban fantasy set in historical Hong Kong, where ancient myths and local legends combine in a story of ghosts, grief and women who will not forgive.

Mercy Chan is a triad exorcist with a mysterious past. After washing up on the shores of Hong Kong with no memory during World War II, she found a home in Kowloon Walled City, an infamous, ghost-infested slum full of lost and traumatised civilians. Since the war ended, Mercy has rebuilt her life and found work as a ghost-talker for the local triad, dealing with the angry and bitter spirits who haunt this place.

But the past she can’t remember won’t let her go. An unusually powerful ghost lurks in Kowloon’s waterways, drowning innocents and threatening the district. Unnervingly, it claims to know Mercy – and her forgotten childhood.

As Mercy is drawn into a deadly cat-and-mouse game with this malignant spirit, she begins to realise that the monster she fights within these walls may well be one of her own making.

My Review

Thanks to the author for my ARC of this book. I’m not sure how I got a copy, Sunyi Dean must have put something on social media, and I’ve got an email from her, so I assume we connected that way. Anyway, late last year I got a package from Sunyi with the book, a letter and a fu talisman for my front door.

This book is due out 7th May-ish, so I spent my Saturday reading. I actually planned to go for a walk to the shop yesterday afternoon but that would have meant stopping reading and I really couldn’t do that, so I ordered a Morrisons delivery for this morning and carried on reading until almost midnight, because I needed to know how Kwun Yam was going to resolve the problems between Chen Mei Chi/Mercy Chan and Sung Siu Yin.

The book is in four parts jumping between the 1920s, 1940s, and 1970s, and from three perspectives, Mercy Chan, Sung Siu Yin, and Kwum Yam, who narrates half the story while the other half is told in close third person from Mercy and the Siu Yin’s perspectives. It’s a really clever way of exploring the lives of the two main characters and how they got where they are.

In 1975 Mercy is a ghost talker in Kowloon, an old, dilapidated district of Hong Kong, a city that has sprouted shiny towers and wide roads after surviving the destruction of the Japanese invasion. Kowloon on the other hand is a slum in the grips of the triads and ghosts. Mercy, originally Chen Mei Chi, doesn’t remember her history or how she’s able to talk to ghosts, but she can, and accompanied by her ghost cat, Bao, she helps ghosts deal with their trauma and move on. She lives well, a comparatively wealthy life working for Cobra Lily, queen of the snakeskin triad.

In 1942, she arrived in Hong Kong with no memory and no money, and hid in Kowloon from the rampaging Japanese. Her Hakka origins and ability to go out at night make her useful to the resistance as a night time message runner. No one else will go out at night, because the ghosts are angry and they are hunting. There are a lot of ghosts in Kowloon – refugees from the city chased out by Japanese exorcist, refugees from the countryside and the victims of massacres. Angry ghosts are dangerous, but they listen to Mei Chi and if they don’t Bao eats them.

In the early 1920s a little girl, her sister, and their grandmother are chased from their village on a remote island by frightened villagers who believe the girl is bad luck. The escape and pray to the Lady of Compassion, Kwun Yan. The temple is hidden in a sea cave below their feet, and when the ground crumbles under them, the girl and her grandmother fall in. The sister runs for help, and the same men who chased them from the village eventually turn up. They condemn her to a slow death by drowning. A storm comes and kills everyone except the sister, who goes to Hong Kong. The sister grows up, marries, has a daughter of her own.

In 1942 the sister and her daughter, running from the Japanese invasion return to the island, and the ghosts are waiting for them. A few months later, both leave again, but to different fates.

And that is all I’m telling you about the story, because I don’t want to spoil it too much.

I really enjoyed this novel; as I said earlier, I spent a day reading it and couldn’t put it down. The characters are fascinating and the worldbuilding, drawing on real history and beliefs, is marvellous. The Chinese experience of WWII is often forgotten, but this book brings to life the times and places it covers, and draws on some of Sunyi Dean’s grandmother’s own experiences as a young woman who left her rural Shanghai community to live in Hong Kong between the world wars. She survived WWII in Hong Kong, which is very impressive. The depictions of life under Japanese military rule are graphic and powerful.

The history was interesting, especially the bits about the Chinese resistance. It was largely lead by Hakka, who also made up much of various Chinese armies. I looked up the Hakka because I hadn’t heard of them before. According to Wikipedia, the Hakka are a sub-division of the Han Chinese who were more nomadic and lived on marginal land. They live all over the world now and speak the Hakka dialect, which is different from Cantonese and other Chinese dialects. They had different cultural traditions to other Han Chinese in that they didn’t bind feet, because women worked in the fields and men often worked in towns or the military, and they built different communal housing structures to other Han Chinese communities. They were often subject to discrimination because they migrated into areas already settled by Han Chinese and were forced on to marginal land.

The central mystery of the novel is who is Sea Sister and why can’t Mercy remember anything before 1942. We follow Mei Chi and Sui Yin as they work out their trauma and their fates collide in a typhoon. There are multiple typhoons in this story, but it’s the South China Sea, I’d be worried if at least one wasn’t mentioned. Discovering the identities and complex relationship of the characters, the trauma they inflicted on each other and how they resolve that trauma, is gripping. The family dynamics, the cultural expectations and the environmental factors make this a complex, insightful tale.

The descriptions of Kowloon, the changing Hong Kong, the island, and swimming in the ocean are tactile; I don’t know if that makes sense, but I could almost see the places and feel the water. The emotional connection built between Mei Chi and Sui Yin, described by Kwam Yam as She narrates the latter half of the novel, is powerful and I cried at least twice.

The underlying theme of this novel is the long term trauma of war and the damage a war can do for generations, as well as the need to forgive, for ourselves as part of finding peace. I get that. There is a lot of pain in the world, if we carry it from one generation to the next, either through karma if you believe in reincarnation or through teaching children to hate in education and cultural contexts, we prolong the pain, we keep the wound open, infected and weeping the pus of hate. Clean it out, cauterize the wound, let it heal.

I wouldn’t dare tell the Chinese they have to find peace with Japanese, or the Indians they have to find peace with Britain; we really don’t deserve it after the fucked up things the Empire did, but if the various European countries could try to heal wounds that would be great, we got too much stuff to do to keep old grudges going. I speak especially to the English. Time to forget the arguments with France and the animosity; the living French ain’t the Normans, the source of our trauma; their descendants are here and we know where they are, what land they’re hoarding, what power they have, and we can deal with them without continuing the generational trauma aimed at the French or the Germans. The living ain’t our enemies and the dead are gone. A little bit of land redistribution and wealth taxes wouldn’t go amiss is all I’m saying…

The setting, a world like our own where spiritual beings, ghosts and gods, are real and treated as such, is interesting. I have heard this called magical realism in a South American context but I’m not sure we can transfer the genre name from there to here. The author uses her own heritage and cultural traditions to infuse the story, essentially an historical novel about two women surviving the massive events of the 20th century in China, into a fantastical, gothic tale of ghosts, spirits, demons and goddesses.

The background details of how to write fu talismans and the relative abilities of Daoist and Catholic priests in exorcisms adds something to the realism. Their joint efforts and contrasting methods of dealing with Resistance ghosts were detailed at one point and while the contrasts are fascinating, the similarities point to a human need, I think. Both use specific prayers, both recognise that an exorcism is forcing a spirit for a body that already has an inhabiting soul, both find ways to contain or release the spirit using incense. The attitude towards the occupying spirit displayed is interesting. The Daoist priests in the story are respectful and realise the ghost is a person, while the English Catholic priest is more dismissive. It reflects different cultural attitudes to death and ancestors.

In most parts of Europe we don’t really go in for ancestor worship anymore (I blame Christianity and the ‘Enlightenment’), and we’ve developed some violent ways of dealing with the unquiet dead (beheadings, mainly, which will deal with the unquiet living as well). We don’t really invite them to tea for a chat about why they’re hanging about, or leave out offerings, unless you count the annual wreathe on the grave stone? It’s probably not a healthy way to deal with grief.

I’m rambling, aren’t I? I found the cultural and historical context of this book absolutely fascinating and it triggered lots of thoughts. I really enjoyed the story and the author’s note was insightful, explaining how the author respectfully changed some things for the story but providing background information in the note. The ways Hinduism and Buddhism are related and change from India to China are interesting topics and I’ll probably go down a rabbit hole learning about it one day, but not today. My neighbour is playing terrible music really loudly, again, and I can’t really concentrate now. It’s a good thing I woke up early and read another book that’s scheduled for review 11th May, or that racket would have interfered in that as well.

No, seriously, the music is awful. I’ve had to put up with it on and off since Friday afternoon, because they’ve had visitors all weekend.

Enjoy your Sunday afternoon, I have another review to write and then I’m going listen to this week’s Small Town Murder bonus episode.

Also, Sunyi, it’s Rosemarie, not Rosemary. See you in Leeds sometime.

Review: Sentient, by Michael Nayak

Publisher: Angry Robot
Publication date: 24th February 2026
ISBN: 978-1-915998-44-6
Format: Paperback
Price: £9.99

Book Description

Extinction Horizon meets Contagion in this sequel to 2025’s sci-fi thriller Symbiote, where the biological threat has escaped the South Pole and is now wreaking havoc upon Antarctica. 


The survivors of the South Pole massacre will find that getting off the Antarctic continent may cost them their lives…

Months after the events of Symbiote, sunrise has come to the ice continent, bringing with it the beginning of the annual tourist season. where 1,500 summer visitors will soon call the coastal McMurdo Station home. With them are the architects of the classified CIA program that unleashed the deadly microbes, who are determined to uncover what happened with their experiment and harvest samples of the mutation to turn into a biological weapon.

However, when Ben Jacobs returns from an impossible journey to the Pole and is reunited with Penny – an asymptomatic carrier of the symbiotic microbes – all hell breaks loose. When the sea ice surrounding the station becomes a fertile breeding ground for a new and more dangerous infestation, Rajan Chariya and his friends will have to join forces with the CIA to fight the onslaught of infected “sea people” roving the streets. With tensions high and stakes even higher, the question becomes when will the group stop being useful, and start becoming targets who know too much?

Worse, there may be more than one asymptomatic carrier….

With a heart-stopping pace and twists that will leave readers breathless, Sentient is a thrilling sequel that brilliantly combines all the best horror tropes with real world scenarios.

Continue reading “Review: Sentient, by Michael Nayak”

Review: The Night Ship, by Alex Woodroe

Genre – horror > supernatural
● ISBN hardback – 978-1-78758-918-6
● ISBN ebook – 978-1-78758-919-3
● Pricing [USD] $26.95 (HB) / $4.99 (EB)
● Pricing [GBP] £20 (HB) / £4.95 (EB)
● Releases January 20 2026
● Published by Flame Tree Press
● Distributed by Hachette UK / Simon & Schuster US

SYNOPSIS

Driving a logging truck through the Romanian mountains, smuggler Rosi and her crew come across a radio signal that hints at impending doom. As the world goes completely dark, their truck becomes a vessel sailing across a sea of nothingness.

But they’re not alone: transmissions trickle in through the radio from similar isolated islands across the country, from amateur radio hobbyists and police cars and customs facilities. Attempting to rescue survivors and find a way out, the group save more lives, but soon discover that something hungry lurks below, and it’s sending up agents – and transmissions – of its own.


Comparison Titles: Pontypool Changes Everything by Tony Burgess, The Boats of the Glen Carrig by William Hope Hodgson, Void 1680 AM by Ken Lowery, The Vast of Night (2019 film directed by Andrew Patterson)

Continue reading “Review: The Night Ship, by Alex Woodroe”

Review: Ballad of the Bone Road, by A.C. Wise

ISBN: 9781835413784
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Published: 27th Jan 2026

Description

Port Astor is a city of ghosts. Once home to the beautiful, brutal courts of the fae, forty years ago they vanished without explanation – and Port Astor decided to forget.

Brix and Bellefeather are paranormal investigators, working to keep Port Astor’s wraiths and spectres from consuming the city. Both have hauntings of their own: Belle shares her body with a demon, Belizial; Brix has trapped the soul of his dead fiancée in the world of the living, unwilling to let her go.

While investigating the glamorous and notoriously haunted Peony Hotel, Brix and Belle come across a young couple tangled up in one of the city’s most infamous tales. Jimmy Valentine, silver screen idol and one-time favorite of a fae queen, has returned to haunt the Peony. But Jimmy is no mere ghost, and Brix and Belle soon realize his return is more intimately tied to their own hauntings than they could ever have imagined.

The fae have not forgotten that Port Astor once belonged to them. And their Hollow Queen won’t give up her kingdom so easily.


My Review

Brix is dealing with losing his beloved Abby, Belle is dealing with her childhood trauma. They work together as investigators of the supernatural in a haunted city. One day they investigate a haunted hotel, and the next they’re dealing with the Hollow Queen, a powerful fae.

Brix discovers that a ghost has been called, a ghost so powerful that it’s drawing others to the hotel. He sets about rescuing the two young people who caused the problem, only to realise that the ghost, famed singer and actor, Jimmy Valentine, was once the amour of the Hollow Queen, and she’s never forgiven him for loving her.

Belle’s sister Dee comes to call, desperately looking for help. Her husband Clarence, a priest, has been behaving strangely: he’s cheating on her with a parishioner, he doesn’t go to church anymore, and he’s spending an awful lot of time in the old barn. When Dee takes herself back to the family farm, Belle, and her demon Beliziel, follow, because something is clearly not right.

It’s very not right. And the two cases are linked. Between them, Brix and Belle work on either end of the case, lay ghosts to rest, and banish the fae, while fighting their own internal wars. Belle and Beliziel have to find a way to live equally, while Brix has to find the courage to let Abby go. And they both have to rescue/protect the two young people, Virgil and Leonie, and Dee, from themselves, Clarence, and the Hollow Queen.

Wow, this was…

Overwhelming melancholy

Longing for a lost love

Demon sex

Ghost threesomes

Pyres and gallows

A bullet to the brain

Strangely enough, it ends with hope, and I can see this being the first in a series following Brix and Belle, as they mentor Virgil and Leonie, and Belle builds a new relationship with her sister, while they hunt down the rest of the doors, and work out why the fae retreated from Arcadia in the first place.

The story starts strong, and I was intrigued by the going’s on at the hotel. That strand was definitely the strongest of the novel, exploring Brix’s angst about losing Abby, and the strong connection of people to places. The young lovers, Virgil and Leonie, who carelessly summon the spirit of Jimmy Valentine, are bound up in each other. This is where the ghost threesomes come in. Yeah, that was weird, but fine I suppose. It makes sense in the plot.

Brix, with Virgil, and then Jimmy, unwind the bonds, discover the cause, and fight the Hollow Queen, in the confines of a hotel room that keeps disappearing. It’s beautifully described, and the four characters feel full, rounded, even the ghost.

There’s the echo of the Hollow Queen permeating the whole narrative, too, becoming solid when Jimmy leaves, helped by Brix and Virgil. The other haunting here is love and heartbreak. Jimmy was in love with everyone, and broke hearts, including his own every day, always seeking a home and never finding it. His love is so deep, he might even sate the Hollow Queen. And that’s a problem for her. Their complicated relationship drives the hauntings and the religious fervour, as the Hollow Queen hungers to devour everyone and everything, and Jimmy hungers for a place where he can stop running.

Belle’s strand was weaker, and there could have been more focus on her past with Clarence. Why does Clarence hate her? He’s a priest and he knows about Beliziel, but how? The reader knows Belle’s parents abused her – they were religious and delusional believing her to be possessed long before she actual met Beliziel, but she left home before Dee met Clarence. Did her parents tell him about their wicked, demonic daughter? Did Dee?

The relationship between Belle and Beliziel is complex, and it’s only after they accidentally kill Ada, Clarence’s mistress and the host to whatever is causing the blinding light in the barn, that there is a reckoning between them. Belle must face her pain, as must Beliziel, instead of holding it back and hurting each other. They also have sex a lot. I’m not sure why, other than as a bonding exercise? It wasn’t particularly explicit so I am not going to object.

I think if the author writes a sequel, focusing on Belle and Dee’s relationship will be an important strand, maybe answering some of the questions I have about their childhood and Clarence.

The setting is pseudo-1950s U.S. There’s cars and movies, industrialists and robber barons, a Gilded Age hotel past its prime, and Belle is clearly considered to be eccentric, someone out of time, but there’s an otherness to it. Some of the dialogue feels psuedo-working class English, not American. Arcadia could be anywhere, a floating place, unattached to any known map, and yet has a definite USian vibe.

Honestly, an enjoyable read that kept my attention and the way the two separate mysteries are brought together is clever. I found the ending a little abrupt, but I can see what they author was doing. I think it would make a good film. There’s a theatrical quality to the novel that would translate well.

It’s a bit gothic, with a dark undertone and terrifying highlights. Hardly anyone dies. There are no explosions.

Other than the lack of explosions (the hotel could definitely have blown up from the energy of fighting the Hollow Queen, surely? Or the barn?), I recommend this novel to lovers of gothic horror who wants to shake things up and read something lightly dark, and to the urban fantasy or paranormal romance lover looking for something slightly less romantic and slightly darker.

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: The Cat Bride, by Charlotte Tierney

PUBLICATION DATE: 7 APRIL 2025 | SALT PUBLISHING | £10.99 | PAPERBACK ORIGINAL

The heatwave of 1995.

Sixteen years since an infamous tiger-lynx hybrid escaped a small moorland zoo and killed a man.

Sixteen years since the animal was euthanised.

Sixteen years for the zoo to fall into disrepair.

Lowdy’s Mumma grew up in the zoo and when Lowdy falls ill, they’re forced to move to the old zoo for her to recover, still inhabited by her dying grandmother. As soon as they arrive, rumours surface of a big cat stalking the moors again.

Vengeful locals blame the three women for an apex predator on the loose and invade the estate, searching for proof.

Mumma insists all the cats are dead. Grandma whispers that the ‘tynx’ needs to be fed. Lowdy, still recovering from her own mysterious illness, has no idea what to believe. Can she even trust herself when she wakes up covered in ticks with no recollection of the night before?

As Lowdy searches for the truth – the truth of her childhood, what it means
to be a woman, and the truth about the cats – she realizes something catlike runs in the blood, something she cannot ignore.

Continue reading “Review: The Cat Bride, by Charlotte Tierney”

TBR Pile Review: Into The Drowning Deep, by Mira Grant

Published: Nov 16 2017
Pages: 496

Publisher: Orbit
ISBN: 9780356508108

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR MIRA GRANT RETURNS WITH A RAZOR-SHARP TALE OF THE HORRORS THAT LIE BENEATH . . .

Seven years ago the Atargatis set off on a voyage to the Mariana Trench to film a mockumentary, bringing to life ancient sea creatures of legend.

It was lost at sea with all hands. Some have called it a tragedy; others have called it a hoax.

Now, a new crew has been assembled to investigate. And they’ll discover that whatever is down there is definitely no joke . . .

Continue reading “TBR Pile Review: Into The Drowning Deep, by Mira Grant”

TBR Pile Review: Spec Fic for Newbies Vol. 2, by Tiffani Angus and Val Nolan

Beam aboard your own Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror classroom with the next volume of the BSFA-shortlisted writing-guide series!

Join Tiffani Angus (Ph.D.) and Val Nolan (Ph.D.) for a whirlwind introduction to the storytelling basics of 30 more subgenres and major tropes from across the limitless realms of Speculative Fiction.

Learn about Space Opera, Folk Horror, Climate Fiction, Werewolves, Astronauts, Mythic Fantasy, Goblin Markets, Dragons, and many more with deep dives into each subgenre’s history and development, spotter’s guides to typical examples, pitfalls to watch out for in your own writing, and activities to help you get started! All derived from a combined two decades of university-level practices and experience!

Spec Fic for Newbies breaks genres into bite-sized pieces for students or for any budding writer. It offers a welcoming introduction to how writers, filmmakers, and other creatives can begin to explore the infinite potential of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror to create new stories beyond the boundaries of the ordinary.

This is not another dusty rulebook. This is a portal to endless other worlds!

Continue reading “TBR Pile Review: Spec Fic for Newbies Vol. 2, by Tiffani Angus and Val Nolan”

Review: October, by Gregory Bastianelli

Fiction: FICTION / Thrillers / Suspense
Product format: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1-78758-923-0
Pages: 384 pp
Imprint: FLAME TREE PRESS

Description

In 1970, four boys on the cusp of becoming teenagers notice strange events occurring in Maplewood, NH, timed with the late-night arrival of an old magician who has taken up residence in a boarding house in their neighbourhood where one of the tenants is a reclusive pulp horror writer. The writer’s fears have kept him from venturing outside in over forty years, fears linked to the magician’s previous visit. As children go missing in town, the four boys try to piece together seemingly unrelated phenomena and realize dark forces are at work, but no one will believe them.

Continue reading “Review: October, by Gregory Bastianelli”

British Fantasy Awards 2024

Last night I attended the BFS Awards, and thought I’d share the winners. I am sure there are already lists out there and the ceremony was live streamed.

The awards were hosted by Stew Hotston. The awards aren’t ready yet (supply chain issues) so the are replaced by framed prints and will be delivered eventually.

The first award was the BFS Short Story competition.

Presented by Stew Hotston

  1. Catherine Rose Davis
  2. P = f/A, by Hannah ?
  3. Samuel, by Very Bruce

Art Competition

Presented by Jenni Coutts

  1. Fungus Night, by ?
  2. Night Witch, by Sophie Hill
  3. Survival, by Tara Bush

Best Collection

Presented by Shona Bond

Jackel, Jackel: Tales if the Dark and Fantastic, by Tobi Ogundiran (Undertow Publications)

Best Novella

Presented by Nick Wells

The Last Dragoners of Bowbazar, by Indra Das (Subterranean Press)

Best Non-Fiction

Presented by Pete Sutton

Writing the Future, eds. Dan Coxon and Richard V Hirst (Dead Ink)

Best short fiction

Presented by Priya Sharma

The Brazen Head of Westinghouse, by Tim Major (IZ Digital)

Best Anthology

Presented by Robin Duncan

Out There Screaming: An Anthology of New Black Horror, ed. Jordan Peele (Picador)

Best Artist

Presented by David Moore

Asya Yordonova

Best Audio

Presented by Neil Bond

The Tiny Bookcase, by Nico Rogers and Ben Holroyd-Dell

(Nico’s speech was very funny!)

Best Independent Press

Presented by Bella Pagan

Flame Tree Press, collected by Nick Wells on behalf of everyone at Flame Tree

Sydney J Bounds Award for Best Newcomer

Presented by Anna Smith Spark

Teika Marija Smits, for “Umbiblical” (Newcon Press), and “Waterlore” (Black Shuck Books)

Best Magazine/Periodical

Presented by Jenni Coutts

Shoreline of Infinity

The August Derleth Award for Best Horror Novel

Presented by Ramsey Campbell

Don’t Fear the Reaper, by Stephen Graham Jones (Titan)

Robert Holdstock Award for Best Fantasy Novel

Presented by Stephan Aryan

Talonsister, by Jen Williams (Titan)

Charles Edward Wagner Award

Presented to Shona Kinsella

Ramsey Campbell

Legends of FantasyCon

Presented by Karen Fishwick

Debbie Bennett


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