Fractured Infinity by Nathan Tavares
(Titan Books, 2022)
Reviewed by Stuart Carter
What would you do if you had an evil other-dimensional twin? Worse, what if that same twin was the genius who first discovered how to skip between parallel worlds? You’d probably do what Hayes Figueiredo does in Fractured Infinity: grab the love of your life and run as fast and as far as you could across the multiverse.
Things didn’t start that way. The first Hayes knew of his evil twin, he was picked up by a top-secret research lab that had discovered a machine that could see the past and predict the future. So, why did they need Hayes? He’s nobody; the lab’s top scientist calls him ‘nondescript’, just a small-time documentary filmmaker. Or at least, that’s all he is in this universe. However, there’s a version of Hayes in one particular universe who’s very special; so special, in fact, that he’s invented a machine called an Envisioner, and has sent hundreds, maybe thousands of them, out across the multiverse. In Hayes’ universe a space probe on the edge of the solar system has found an Envisioner and brought it back to Earth for further investigation.
Continue reading…
Review from BSFA Review 19 - Download your copy here.
The Emergent by Nadia Afifi
(Flame Tree Press, 2022)
Reviewed by Steven French
This is the follow-up to The Sentient, in which Amira Valdez escaped from the fundamentalist religious compound in which she was born and raised and became a talented ‘holomentic’ reader, able to read peoples’ memories. Hoping to work on one of the orbital space stations, she was instead assigned to the Pandora Initiative, which aimed to produce a human clone by using three women as hosts for their own cloned embryos. After two of the women died, Amira was given the job of exploring the memories of the third, Rozene, in an effort to discover what went wrong. When she discovered that Rozene’s memories had been tampered with, Amira found herself caught between the machinations of the fundamentalist Elders and those of the Cosmics, a pseudo-religious group who believe in the ‘Conscious Plane’, a kind of web of consciousness that acts as the ‘binding glue’ of the multiverse.
The Calculations of Rational Men by Daniel Godfrey
(Self published, 2022)
It’s 1962, and the whole world is breathing a sigh of relief after the Cuban Missile Crisis ends peacefully—even the 500 inmates of HMP Queen’s Bench, an isolated prison in the north of England. But their relief is to be short-lived…
One December night, a thermonuclear attack is unleashed upon the UK, and the men are herded into an underground shelter beneath the prison, along with a small military detachment. The inmates are tense, the shelter is crowded, and their keepers are terrified. No one has any idea what’s happening above ground, only that the Geiger counters show deadly radioactive fallout has covered the prison and will swiftly finish anyone unlucky enough to be out there.
Are you terrified enough yet? Because things only go downhill from here in The Calculations of Rational Men.
HellSans by Ever Dundas
(Angry Robot Books, 2022)
Reviewed by Phil Nicholls
This is the second novel by Scottish writer Ever Dundas. HellSans features a vision of Britain as a brutal police state, reminding me of Moore’s V for Vendetta, although with a healthy mix of Orwellian propaganda.
The key feature of Dundas’ book is the font Hell Sans, a powerful tool keeping Prime Minister Caddick in control. Simply reading political slogans in Hell Sans gives loyal citizens a strong hit of bliss. However the HSAs, those unfortunates who are Hell Sans Allergic, form an impoverished underclass, scapegoated for all the ills of the dictatorship. Freedom fighters, known as Seraphs, fight back against Caddick’s rule. The Seraphs conduct terrorist attacks and add serifs to Hell Sans text, countering the bliss-inducing effects of the font.
Visions of Dystopia by George Orwell Foreword by D.J. Taylor, Edited and Introduced by Professor Richard Bradford
(Flametree Press, 2021)
Reviewed by L.J. Hurst
One day when Winston Smith went to work without his black shabby briefcase he was stopped in the street and given one. Later, he discovered that it contained a ‘heavy black volume, amateurishly bound, with no name or title on the cover’. That was ‘the book’. Visions of Dystopia in some ways disguises itself as well, as it has the appearance of a medieval grimoire, its impressed cover gleaming with red, black and silver ink, and a single eye staring out. It is actually a theme anthology: the publishers, Flametree, have republished four of Orwell’s other works individually, but this thick volume contains three of his books: Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty-Four, and the non-fiction Homage to Catalonia, all complete, along with extracts of two more of his earlier works. Following biographer D.J. Taylor’s Foreword, there is a longer Introduction by Richard Bradford, and finally extracts from two earlier dystopian works known to Orwell—Jack London’s The Iron Heel (which Orwell reviewed early in WWII as one of the ‘Prophecies of Fascism’), and Yevgeny Zamyatin’s We (which Orwell had also reviewed towards the end of the War).
The Entropy of Loss by Stewart Hotston
(NewCon Press, 2022)
Reviewed by John Dodd
It’s something humans don’t do, talking about death, because merely the discussion of it might invite it into our midst, and if we’re being honest, none of us really has a hankering to meet it. It’s not that we have a fear of death, it’s just that no one understands it, not really, and so all we can do is talk about the part leading up to it, and the feelings that that gives us.
The Entropy of Loss is the story of Sarah and Rhona. Rhona is dying and Sarah doesn’t really want to live without her, but the treacherous nature of being alive has caused her to have an affair with Akshai, a co-worker, while Rhona is still alive. This has led to Sarah questioning if she is a good person, if she’s doing what she’s doing because she’s trying to deal with her feelings over Rhona, or if she’s just messed up by everything that’s occurring.
New Brighton by Helen Trevorrow
(Red Dog Press, 2022)
The thing about unreliable narrators is that they lend a degree of uncertainty to the story that means that you can’t entirely throw yourself into the book because you don’t know if the story that’s being told is the right one, the wrong one, or not even the story. That said, stories with unreliable narrators can also take liberties with characters and increase the level of intrigue because you really don’t know who to focus on.
So it is here…
Million Eyes II: The Unraveller by C.R. Berry
(Elsewhen Press, 2021)
Reviewed by Ksenia Shcherbino
The Princes in the Tower escaping and fighting dinosaurs? Jesus Christ and Guy Fox in one bundle? C.R. Berry’s Million Eyes II: The Unraveller has it all. If that can’t pique your curiosity, nothing will.
The book is a second part of the trilogy and picks up straight after the events of the first part. Just a quick recap: ex-history teacher Gregory Ferro stumbles upon evidence that a mysterious time traveller is responsible for several key events in our history. He is murdered by a sinister and omnipresent Million Eyes corporation just as he shared his finds with Jennifer Larson. The latter barely escapes death and travels into the past.
What Not by Rose Macaulay
(MIT Press, 2022)
MIT Press has released What Not by Rose Macaulay as part of a series of Radium Age SF novels. The Radium Age is defined as 1903 to 1934, a period bookended by Marie Curie’s discovery of radium and her later death. Introductions from Joshua Glenn and Matthew De Abaitua put the MIT Press project into context, as well as describe the background and influence of What Not.
Originally published in 1919, What Not presents a satirical view of Britain after World War One. At its heart is the Ministry of Brains, which seeks to eradicate the stupidity which led the world into the great war. This seemingly sensible idea is portrayed satirically as the Ministry introduces increasingly draconic laws designed to prevent lower-intelligence people from having babies.
Expect Me Tomorrow by Christopher Priest
(Gollancz, 2022)
Reviewed by Nick Hubble
As reported on his blog, Christopher Priest wrote Expect Me Tomorrow, his seventeenth novel, over the course of the 2020 pandemic period, submitting the manuscript at the end of October at more-or-less the same time as his previous novel, The Evidence, was published. It has therefore taken nearly two years to come out in English, although a French edition, Rendez-vous demain, has already been published in April of this year. In the meantime, Priest has written another ‘new book’, which is due out next year. It’s not clear, but I presume this will also be a novel; at which point Priest will have published seven novels and a substantial collection of short stories since 2011. In other words, he has produced a major body of internationally respected work in the twenty-first century proper (understood as beginning after the financial crash of 2008) that deserves to be considered highly significant in terms of both artistic creation and (admittedly sometimes oblique) social commentary. In Expect Me Tomorrow, decades of writerly craft are honed to produce not the great British novel, but a deadpan, darkly comic anti-novel charting the attenuated social life of the island we live on against the backdrop of radical climate change across a period of nearly 200 years.
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