Reviews by Steven

Review

The Ragged Man

Posted: October 27, 2010 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Tom Lloyd, Epic Fantasy
The Ragged Man

As you all are well aware, we reviewed the first three novels in Tom Lloyd‘s Twilight Reign series and basically said they were the best thing since sliced bread. So with the release of THE RAGGED MAN, the fourth book in the series, it really became a question of “What more can we say?”

As it turns out, quite a bit.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

Dexter is Delicious

Posted: October 13, 2010 by Steven in Books We Hate Meta: Jeff Lindsay, Horror
Dexter is Delicious

What a piece of garbage.

Sorry, usually we begin with a thought provoking introduction that has you pondering the world around you in a completely different light. Jeff Lindsay’s latest novel, DEXTER IS DELICIOUS (Amazon), is just awful. It really is as simple as that. Seriously, is there even any sense to this series of novels anymore? Rhetorical question. No.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

The Wolf Age

Posted: October 6, 2010 by Steven in Books We Like Meta: James Enge, Dark Fantasy
The Wolf Age

After reading a ridiculous number of novels, we’ve managed to glean a few morsels of wisdom. The key to reading and enjoying novels of different genres and sub-genres is to know what to expect. With Epic Fantasy you prepare for large novels, and slow-paced sections punctuated by sprawling battles. With Mystery/Thrillers, you expect contrived dialogue, and a mandatory twist. Hard SF? You have a dictionary handy for those unavoidable moments where the author makes you feel completely dumb. When it comes to Heroic Fantasy/Sword & Sorcery, however, you need to be prepared for something completely different.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

Monster Hunter Vendetta

Posted: September 27, 2010 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Larry Correia, Urban Fantasy
Monster Hunter Vendetta

We like our books with thought put into them. Characters in shades of gray. Plots that are epic, yet deeply personal. We like novels where the author challenges our minds, and makes us ponder humanity.

And after we have read all that, we LOVE to read books that involve explosions. And zombies. And exploding zombies. And zombie elephants. Did we already mention explosions? How about heavy gunfire?

Thank you, Larry Correia, for giving us another novel full of exploding monsters, and incredibly detailed gun-play: MONSTER HUNTER VENDETTA (Amazon).
Read the rest of this review »

Review

Labyrinth

Posted: September 20, 2010 by Steven in Books We Like Meta: Kat Richardson, Urban Fantasy
Labyrinth

There are very few female Urban Fantasy authors who are able to draw in male readers as Kat Richardson is able to. You see, she writes more like a guy than her female counterparts. For us, this is a good thing. Because we are guys. LABYRINTH (Amazon) marks the fifth entry into Richardson’s Urban Fantasy series following the adventures of Harper Blaine.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

A Star Shall Fall

Posted: September 17, 2010 by Steven in Books We Like Meta: Marie Brennan, Fantasy
A Star Shall Fall

By now all you readers have probably figured you have us all figured out. You know what books we will like before you even read the review. More importantly, you know what books we will hate. We aren’t going to argue much. We wear our taste in novels openly, and to be honest we have a good idea of whether a novel will be awesome/yucky before we even read it.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

Salute the Dark

Posted: September 8, 2010 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Adrian Tchaikovsky, Fantasy
Salute the Dark

Adrian Tchaikovsky, we hate you… but in that way that results from loving you too much, and being jealous of your skills. Let’s start by saying how worried we were about Tchaikovsky’s fourth novel in the Shadows of the Apt series, SALUTE THE DARK (Amazon). With three completely excellent novels released, isn’t it about time that Tchaikovsky had a misstep?

No. No it isn’t.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

The Black Lung Captain

Posted: September 1, 2010 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Chris Wooding, Science Fiction
The Black Lung Captain

Where to even begin? Chris Wooding‘s RETRIBUTION FALLS (EBR Review) is one of our favorite novels. The mixture of piracy, SF, and retro-future adventure won us over within the first five pages. The main character of that novel, Darian Frey (part Han Solo, part Malcolm Reynolds, all awesome) is the captain of the Ketty Jay. He is a pirate. A smuggler. A womanizer. We finished RETRIBUTION FALLS a few hours after it arrived in the mail. We needed more. Luckily, the sequel was already coming out fairly shortly. Wooding’s second Ketty Jay novel, THE BLACK LUNG CAPTAIN arrived in the mail (love you Book Depository!!!!), and everything else in life came to a screeching halt so we could read it.

It’s every bit as good as the first novel.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

The Way of Kings

Posted: August 31, 2010 by Steven in Books We Love Meta: Brandon Sanderson, Epic Fantasy
The Way of Kings

From the very beginning you know THE WAY OF KINGS (Amazon) is a novel by Brandon Sanderson — you would know it even if his name wasn’t imposed over a Michael Whelan cover. Sanderson has made a name for himself through his imaginative magic systems, and TWoK is no different.

He starts with the pacing set at a sprint. Following a series prelude (yeah, there is a prelude, then a prologue), we are put right into the action of things with a mysterious assassin, Szeth. Right from the onset of the novel we get hints of political intrigue, and of shadowy organizations pulling strings like puppeteers. What it seems to us is that Brandon is trying to start faster than his previous novels. His habit has been the slow burn in pacing followed by an explosion of craziness. Not so much here. Is this a good thing, or a bad thing? Really it will depend on your personal taste.

Ah but we get ahead of ourselves.
Read the rest of this review »

Review

Lesser Demons

Posted: August 16, 2010 by Steven in Books We Like Meta: Norman Partridge, Horror, Short Fiction
Lesser Demons

Since starting this review blog, we have noticed a huge increase in the amount of short fiction that has made its way onto our bookshelves. This is a good thing. We have held the opinion for a long time that short fiction was evil, and in many cases this is still true. However when Subterranean Press puts a collection together, the results are always (at least so far!) fantastic. We got our hands on the recent release of the collection LESSER DEMONS by Norman Partridge (Amazon), and absolutely loved the Horror stories inside.
Read the rest of this review »