Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Rabbit Test and Other Stories by Samantha Mills

 


I first encountered Samantha Mills when her story, Rabbit Test, was nominated for a Hugo Award. I read it along side the other nominees and I loved that story so much - it was incredibly well written and was number one on my ballot. (Regardless of what we later learned about how the 2023 Hugo nominations were hijacked, that story was amazing and it will always be a Hugo winner in my mind.)


After reading that story, I was excited when I found out that Ms. Mills had a first novel, The Wings Upon Her Back coming out, and I was even more excited when NetGalley and the publisher gave me an eARC in exchange for an honest review. I really enjoyed it and said that I was excited to read more of Ms. Mills’s work in the future. So I was thrilled when the publisher gave me an ARC of Rabbit Test and Other Stories, what I hope is the first of many short story collections by this author, in exchange for an honest review.


I loved this book! I often said that I much prefer single offer short story collections to anthologies because, among other things, the quality of the work is usually more consistent and there’s less tonal whiplash. But even in the best collections, there are often stories that are weaker or don’t work as well for an individual reader.  In this collection, however, every story slapped.  There was not a single dud in the bunch that I kept getting wowed over and over again.  My only complaint about this book was that it was too short.  When I got to the end, I just wished that there was more.  This was wonderful from beginning to end.  

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Platform Decay by Martha Wells



We all love Murderbot, right? Murderbot is one of the absolute best characters to come out of SF in years. I remember when I read the description of Martha Wells’s All Systems Red and thought to myself “I’ve got to put that on hold at the library!”  And I was right - it was excellent. I have eagerly awaited each new Murderbot book and also have been reading some of Ms. Wells’s other fantasy books. I was thrilled to be able to meet Ms Wells at Worldcon last year and got her to sign my daughter’s copies of the first six Murderbot books. 


So I was overjoyed when NetGalley and tordotcom gave me an eARC of Platform Decay, the new Murderbot book, in exchange for an honest review. 


This was stupendous! Before this, Fugitive Telemetry and System collapse were my favorite Murderbot books, but this one now claims the top spot.  I love getting more Mensah family dynamics and this book did not disappoint. It was a road trip rescue mission in a fascinating space station environment and was a total page turner that I could not put down. 


This book is a must buy!!

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

River of Bones and Other Stories by Rebecca Roanhorse

 


I first discovered Rebecca Roanhorse when her short story "Welcome to Your Authentic Indian Experience™”, was nominated for a Hugo Award.  I loved it and her! Her writing style is crisp and it pulled me in right away.  When Trail of Lightning, her first novel, was nominated for awards the next year, I read it and thoroughly enjoyed it.  I felt like it had some “first novel” roughness but was altogether enjoyable.  The sequel, Storm of Locusts, was even better! I enjoyed Black Sun, and I was excited to be at the Hugo Awards last year when she won best series. 


So I was thrilled when NetGalley and Saga Press gave me an eARC of her new short story collection, River of Bones, in exchange for an honest review. As I’ve said several times before on this blog, I love a single author short story collection very much, and this one was no exception! It was wonderful to revisit "Welcome to Your Authentic Indian Experience™” which was just as enjoyable and haunting as it was the first time I read it. “The Boys From Blood River” was great and “Falling Bodies” was heartbreaking. The title story, “River of Bones” was a new entry in the series started in Trail of Lightning and I really enjoyed it too. This is an excellent collection!

Monday, February 2, 2026

The Lost Daughter of Sparta by Felicia Day


Who doesn’t love Felicia Day? From Buffy to Dr Horrible to MST3K, she has been a part of nerdom for a long time. So when I saw that she had an upcoming graphic novel based on Greek mythology, I got very excited. (Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an eARC in exchange for an honest review. )


This book tells the story of a sister of Helen of Troy and Clytemnestra who seeks to break the curse on her family that she will betray her future husband. The art style is very evocative, with only red being used a an accent color - and also for the protagonist’s facial birthmark. This is a lovely love story that sometimes feels simple but always feels powerful. An enjoyable read. 

Friday, January 23, 2026

To Ride a Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose

 


When I reviewed the first book in this series, To Shape a Dragon's Breath, I was angry at myself for waiting so long to read it. 


I never heard of this author until the 2024 Hugo Award nominations came out, and when the author won the Astounding Award in 2025, I finally got around to reading it and really enjoyed it.  I was excited for the sequel and quite pleased when NetGalley and the publisher gave me an eARC in exchange for an honest review. 


I also really enjoyed this sequel, but the pacing felt a bit off. I wanted to get back to school right away, not spend the whole summer on the protagonist Anequs’s island. This book kind of felt like middle book of trilogy setup stuff without a big plot of its own, but that’s a minor quibble since what it was setting up was very interesting. I liked the political stuff and I really enjoyed most of the new characters. I was a little miffed at the cliffhanger ending, but I’ll keep reading this series because I have to find out what happens next!

Sunday, January 18, 2026

The Poet Empress by Shen Tao

 


Sometimes it pays to just say “why the heck!”


I have been reviewing books I get from NetGalley on this blog for several years, but it is still rare that I get offered a book I did not request. So I was startled last month to get an email offering me an audio eARC of The Poet Empress, a book by a debut author with an interesting magic system - poetry could create magical effects and in order to craft a death spell you would have to live the target. Intrigued, I accepted the advanced copy in exchange for an honest review. 


I really enjoyed this book. Don’t get me wrong, it is super grim, starting off with starved babies and moving on to ripped out tongues and torture,  but I really liked the voice of the protagonist and how she learns how to handle herself as a concubine striving to be empress. This was an engrossing audio book. I listened at 2x speed. 

Monday, January 12, 2026

There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm


I am very lucky- my wife’s sister married an awesome guy that I really enjoy hanging out with. We play D&D  weekly and talk books all the time. My brother-in-law suggested I read There Is No Antimemetics Division this book years ago when it was self published because he really enjoyed it, but I never got around to reading it because I was busy with other books. When it got picked up by a traditional publisher, I requested an eARC from the publisher and NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 


This book was interesting. It was in essence about a shadowy government organization fighting Eldritch horrors that cannot be perceived. Although it felt very well written on the sentence and paragraph level, with some delightful and haunting language, the characters all fell flat for me, and since I didn’t care about them, it was hard to care about or follow what was happening. I can see why my brother-in-law liked this, but it just wasn’t really for me.