10/14/2019

Curt and the Green Penis



CurtStubbs passed away September 14, 2019. He’d been a friend to many, and to Hilde and me for over forty years. 

We didn’t see Curt as often after he moved to Tucson in the mid-1980s, but we always tried to have dinner with him at TusCon, the annual SF convention there. Curt struggled with a lot of health and financial issues through most of his life, but he seemed to have found a satisfying social niche in poetry, both his own and acting as a docent for the Poetry Center at the University of Arizona; he was also active in Tucson’s gay community. And he still enjoyed reading science fiction and attending an occasional convention. For years, he was the cook for the traditional Dead Dog Chile served on the last day of each year’s TusCon; there have been a lot of good bowls of chile served there over the years, but Curt’s (sorry, you later chile chefs) was the best.

When he was younger, and before some of his health issues surfaced, Curt tended to party hard. This led to some memorable anecdotes, and Curt’s fannish nickname of Captain Coors.

This is one of the stories from those early years:

---------

One morning, after a particularly hard night of partying and drinking, Curt woke up on the floor of the party apartment. He quickly realized two things:
  • He wasn’t wearing any clothes, and,
  • Sometime during the night, while Curt was unconscious, someone had decided to paint Curt’s penis green.
And then Curt looked at a clock, and realized a third thing:
  • He had an important job interview scheduled for that morning, and there were less than twenty minutes before it was supposed to take place.
A moment of wild mental panic ensued: My penis is green! Job interview! Green penis! Job interview!”

Curt had to make a choice. He found his scattered clothing, pulled pants on over his engreened penis, added shirt and shoes and a quick brush through his hair, and rushed out to make the job interview on time. Every minute on the way, the thoughts “I have a green penis. Someone painted my penis green. I have a green penis,looped through his head.

Curt arrived to the interview on time, barely, still thinking “My penis is green. I have a green penis,in the back of his mind

Somehow, he’s able to give coherent answers to the job interviewer. Things seem to be going well. But Curt’s mind is still repeating, “I have a green penis. I have a green penis. Oh, God-d-d-d-d-d, I have a green penis.

Well, that’s the end of the formal questions,” the interviewer finally says. He looks Curt straight in the eye, and asks:

Is there anything else about yourself you’d like to tell us, Mr. Stubbs?”

Curt did not get the job.





9/18/2019

ONE-BUCK BOOK REVIEW: This Strange Engine, by Philip Ligon

In the same vein as my occasional "The Brave Free Books", I'm hoping "One-Buck Book Review" will turn into an ongoing series reviewing books that I've bought for a dollar or less. A lot of these tend to be ebooks offered at 99 cents as a promotional sale, frequently for the first book in a series; I'll note the regular price when needed.

Fair warning: I try not to be overly negative, but when a book has flaws that lessen my reading experience, I'll point them out. (A lot of the 99-cent sales are from indie/self-published writers who tend to be at an early point in their writing careers. Sometimes this means their craft skills don't match up with their ambition or goals. Occupational hazard of writing.)

So, the first offering: THIS STRANGE ENGINE, by Philip Ligon. Ebook, regular price 3.99, I bought it on sale for 99 cents. Published by Silver Empire, 419 pages. Amazon link.

Steampunk fantasy mix. A portal to a fantasy world has introduced magic and magical creatures (elves, gnomes, cyclops, dragons, etc.) into Victorian England. Inevitably, some humans use the new resources and abilities to gather power and wealth for themselves. Ash, a disgraced cleric, is trapped under the thumb of the mysterious Misters, who coerce him into stealing magical objects. Aided by fellow friends in the criminal world (an invisible thief, a techno-gnome, and a barmaid with a hidden past). One of their opponents is Ash's ex-wife, who betrayed and tried to murder him, the start of the cascade failure that lead to his current dilemma and situation.

Adventures and disasters ensue. First in a series, this volume leaves many questions open, particularly regarding that portal to a fantasy world. I'll hazard a guess that in a later book, the portal will be traveled thru and adventures take place in the fae world.

All this is a good set-up, with a lot of possibilities. Unfortunately, two things kept me from enjoying the book as much as I had expected and hoped.

1) Ostensibly set in Victorian England, it felt very much set in the generic pseudo-England common to so very, very many fantasy novels. Steampunk, in my experience, usually offers stronger references to the history and culture of actual Victorian times. The "Victorian" details seemed scant and tacked onto the narrative.

2) My biggest problem, though, was Ash. He is one of the most whiny, self-pitying "Woe is me, my life sucks" characters I've ever encountered. Spending 400+ pages with the guy felt like a long slog through sad, depressed mud. I wanted to smack him upside the head and and say, "Your ex-wife has tried to KILL you. REPEATEDLY. Get a CLUE, you DUMBSHIT." (Note: Other characters give basically that same advice, over and over again, to Ash in the course of the book. To no avail.). It's only near the very end of the book that Ash finally gets a glimmer of self-realization and hope for himself.

The other characters were a lot more enjoyable. If the thief, the gnome, and the barmaid were to ditch loser Ash and go off on their own adventures, I'd probably read *that* book. They're kinda fun, aside from their inexplicable decisions to repeatedly stick by Ash.. But I'm reluctant to spend more time with Ash.

Overall impression: Interesting setup, but I felt the "Victorian" setting should have either been stronger, or simply go with the Standard Fantasy Setting it seemed to mostly be. Action scenes are well done. I felt making Ash such a completely miserable, self-loathing character was a poor choice.

Three out of five stars. I can see Philip Ligon set himself some ambitious goals for the story, but I came away feeling he didn't fully succeed.


5/16/2019

Blast From The Past: 102 Great Novels, as of 1962-63


Among the papers of our friend Anne Braude, who passed away in 2009, I found a small pamphlet, a single folded sheet yellowed and brittle with age, that listed “102 Great Novels”. The pamphlet was distributed by the Scottsdale Public Library, and its list “COMPILED BY NELLENE SMITH, DIRECTOR”. Ms. Smith’s name dates the list to 1962 or 63 (thanks, Google!).

So, nearly sixty years ago, these were the books thought listing as “Great”. I thought it might be interesting to see how many still might be recognized as Great, or recognized at all after sixty years.

The list:

  • A Death In The Family, Agee
  • Moses, Asch
  • Sense and Sensibility, Austen
  • Pere Goriot, Balzac
  • The Old Wives’ Tale, Bennett
  • The Death of the Heart, Bowen
  • Jane Eyre, Bronte
  • Wuthering Heights, Bronte
  • The Good Earth, Buck
  • The Way of All Flesh, Butler
  • Plague, Camus
  • Death Comes For The Archbishop, Cather
  • The Horse’s Mouth, Cary
  • Don Quixote, Cervantes
  • Greenwillow, Chute
  • Lord Jim, Conrad
  • The Just and the Unjust, Cozzens
  • The Red Badge of Courage, Crane
  • David Copperfield, Dickens
  • U. S. A., Dos Passos
  • The Brothers Karamazov, Dostoevsky
  • An American Tragedy, Dreiser
  • Advise and Consent, Drury
  • The Three Musketeers, Dumas
  • Rebecca, du Maurier
  • Justine, Durrell
  • Middlemarch, Eliot
  • Light In August, Faulkner
  • The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald
  • Madame Bovary, Flaubert
  • A Passage To India, Forster
  • The Forsythe Saga, Galsworthy
  • The Cypresses Believe In God, Gironella
  • Vein of Iron, Glasgow
  • Dead Souls, Gogol
  • I, Claudius, Graves
  • Tess of the d’Urbervilles, Hardy
  • The Scarlet Letter, Hawthorne
  • The Old Man of the Sea, Hemingway
  • The Wall, Hershey
  • The Rise of Silas Lapham, Howells
  • Green Mansions, Hudson
  • The Fox In the Attic, Hughes
  • Les Miserables, Hugo
  • Brave New World, Huxley
  • The Wings of the Dove, James
  • Ulysses, Joyce
  • Trial, Kafka
  • Zorba the Greek, Kazantzakis
  • Darkness At Noon, Koestler
  • The Leopard, Lampedusa
  • Main Street, Lewis
  • The Call of the Wild, London
  • Epitaph For the Small Winner, Machado de Assis
  • The Ballad of the Sad Cafe, McCullers
  • The Watch That Ends the Night, McLennan
  • The Magic Mountain, Mann
  • Nectar In A Sieve, Markandaya
  • Point of No Return, Marquand
  • Of Human Bondage, Maugham
  • Therese, Mauriac
  • Moby Dick, Melville
  • Gone With the Wind, Mitchell
  • The Cruel Sea, Montsarrat
  • Two Women, Moravia
  • The Tale of the Genji, Murasaki
  • Nineteen Eighty Four, Orwell
  • Dr. Zhivago, Paternak
  • Cry, The Beloved Country, Paton
  • Ship of Fools, Porter
  • The Man On A Donkey, Prescott
  • Remembrance of Things Past, Proust
  • All Quiet On the Western Front, Remarque
  • The King Must Die, Renault
  • The Trees, Richter
  • Jean Christophe, Rolland
  • Giants In the Earth, Rolvaag
  • The Catcher In the Rye, Salinger
  • The Human Comedy, Saroyan
  • Ivanhoe, Scott
  • Fontamara, Silone
  • Strangers and Brothers, Snow
  • The Grapes of Wrath, Steinbeck
  • The Red and the Black, Stendahl
  • Treasure Island, Stevenson
  • The Travels of Jamie McPheeters, Taylor
  • Vanity Fair, Thanckeray
  • War and Peace, Tolstoy
  • Barchester Towers, Trollope
  • Dream of the Red Chamber, Tsao-Hsueh-Chin
  • Torrents of Spring, Turgenev
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain
  • Kristin Lavransdatter, Undset
  • Candide, Voltaire
  • The Egyptian, Waltari
  • All The King’s Men, Warren
  • Ethan Frome, Wharton
  • The Once and Future King, White
  • The Bridge of San Luis Rey, Wilder
  • Look Homeward, Angel, Wolfe
  • Memories of Hadrian, Yourcenar

The small pamphlet concludes with this statement from Nellene Smith: “There are so many fine novels that they all couldn’t be placed on a small list. However, I have presented a variety of classics and some works of contemporary authors whose writing is exceptional. –Nellene Smith”

1/10/2019

MY READING/LISTENING, 2018

2018 READING


(For some reason, the first line of each paragraph is longer than the rest. Looks okay on a desktop monitor, but on mobile that first line continues off-screen to the right. Attempts to correct it haven't succeeded. Other formatting glitches and idiosyncrasies have been cleaned up, I'm pretty sure.)

My reading in 2018 was as usual a mixed bag, mostly fiction and some non-fiction, ranging from works published in the last few years to work from decades ago. Some I read in printed editions, others in digital format on my smartphone. A fairly large number were listened to as audiobooks.

(My workplace allows listening to music or audiobooks so long as one ear is left unobstructed; so a Bluetooth earpiece lets me add an extra book to my “reading” about every one to two weeks.)


I also listen to a pretty large number of fiction podcasts, but that adds up to somewhere around 400-500 short stories a year, and read probably around half a dozen or so short story anthologies above and beyond that. I haven’t kept lists of those like I have longer works. If I manage to somehow get myself super-organized in the coming year, I might maintain a list of podcasts and stories I particularly enjoy.

Podcasts I listen to: Lightspeed, Clarkesworld, Nightmare, Strange Horizons, Uncanny, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Toasted Cake and (under the Escape Artists umbrella) EscapePod, PodCastle,and PseudoPod. 2018 also saw the return of Norm Sherman’s Drabblecast (“Strange stories by strange authors for strange listeners”), which I’ve found highly enjoyable. Outside the dedicated SF/F/H podcasts, I also listen to the mystery podcasts from Alfred Hitchcock and Ellery Queen magazines, the New Yorker’s The Writer’s Voice, the BBC’s Drama of the Week, and Levar Burton Reads. (Burton chooses a fairly large share of SF/F stories to read, but not exclusively.)


A complete reading list for 2018 will be below, but the following were books I particularly enjoyed:

DAUGHTER OF MYSTERY by Heather Rose Jones was probably my favorite of 2018. Some books and writers get buzz and reputation by emphasizing one particular aspect of storytelling; plot, setting, characters, worldbuilding. What particularly struck me about DOM was how well balanced all those aspects were. Every page of this swords-and-manners (with Fantasy Lite aspects) story ran smoothly; it allowed me to fall fully into the story, to not be aware there was a writer pulling strings behind everything. Excellently done, and I have several more of Jones’ books in my TBR pile now.

A pair of outstanding novellas, THE ARMORED SAINT and THE QUEEN OF CROWS, came from Myke Cole in 2018, the first two parts of a trilogy. Medieval-style setting with a brutal theocracy that will straight up murder individuals or entire towns suspected of  being tainted with deviltry. A young woman, Heloise, comes into possession of a suit of powered (via a steam-engine-like technology) armor and is reluctantly forced into revolt against the theocracy. Cole pulls no punches about the costs involved in such a revolt; lives are upended, homes destroyed, friendships betrayed, loved ones lost, even many who survive still suffer injury and maiming. The mental and emotional toll on Heloise and others is also brought out. One aspect of Heloise’s world that Cole hasn’t focused on so far is that the “devils” are real, ripping into our world (literally, through the bodies of the possessed) and wreaking murderous havoc; so the theocracy, despite its brutality and corruption, actually is protecting the world from chaos. If Heloise’ revolt is successful, what would replace the theocracy and its protection? Perhaps that question will be one of the complications in the forthcoming final part of the trilogy.


  • Some other books I read with notably grim, violent settings and situations included:TRAIL OF LIGHTNING by Rebecca Roanhorse. In an altered America where gods and magic have returned to Native American lands, monsters have returned as well. A young woman raised by a demigod to hunt and kill monsters has to deal with outsider and abandonment issues, plus past trauma. She serves the People, but is not fully one of them.
  • THE STARS ARE LEGION by Kameron Hurley. I will confess, I found the cosmology of Hurley’s universe in TSAL difficult to grasp. But it seems in the far, far future when much of the natural universe has gone cold and dark, there are enclaves of created systems and planets, with almost continuous war between planets for scarce and dwindling resources. Life is struggle on both larger and smaller scales, and ruthlessness is a virtue and a necessity. I found the book engrossing regardless, in part because the society and background were so mysterious and disturbing.
  • UNDER THE PENDULUM SUN by Jeanette Ng was another book where the background and society were uncertain, but in this case that uncertainty is an integral and deliberate part of the book. The lands of Fae are real, reachable by ships that have found themselves lost upon the sea. Ways to become deliberately lost enable a measure of trade and commerce with the Fae. In addition to such commercial interests, missionaries travel to the Faelands to try to convert the heathen Fae to Christianity, with exceedingly rare success. The sister of one such missionary follows him to Fae, where she finds the “reality” of Fae lands is very flexible indeed, an uncertainty matched only by the (malicious?) fickleness and mystery of the Fae themselves. This is a grimness of the mind, and both brother and sister find their own weaknesses, exacerbated by the strange and uncertain land and beings around them, lead them into unwise actions and decisions.
  • Another work of psychological grimness is FORTRESS AT THE END OF TIME by J.M. McDermott. “Travel” between stars is accomplished by sending data to duplicates a person’s body and mind at the receiving end; from the original’s viewpoint nothing has happened but the duplicate will spend the rest of its life at the destination point. FATEOT takes place in a military space station orbiting a harsh planet at the ass-end of nowhere, listening for signs of an alien enemy that may never come. I caught notes of Dostoevsky, Kafka and Joseph Conrad in the style and narrative, though McDermott cites THE TARTAR STEPPE by Dino Buzzati and THE OPPOSING SHORE by Julian Graq as the major influences.

If you haven’t guessed by now, I don’t mind grim in my reading. (Though I don’t really like the term “grimdark”; somehow, for me, the term seems just a bit coy and… twee?)


Less grim, but with plenty of more traditional action and political maneuvering:
  • MEDUSA UPLOADED by Emily Devenport
  • THE TIGER’S DAUGHTER by K. Arsenault Rivera
  • BEHIND THE THRONE by K.B. Wagers
  • A DARKER SHADE OF MAGIC, by V.E. Schwab
  • BINTI by Nnedi Okorafor
  • THE ACCIDENTAL WAR, by Walter Jon Williams

In a lighter tone, I enjoyed Marshall Ryan Maresca’s LADY HENTERMAN’S WARDROBE, second in his “Streets of Maradaine” series. Think the tv series LEVERAGE set in a well-developed fantasy world and city. (Maresca has several other series, with different characters and premises, set in Maradaine.) When their neighborhood is burned out by arson (in the first volume, THE HOVER ALLEY CREW), a group of criminals and former criminals join together to try and find out the reasons and perpetrators behind the devastating fire. Break-ins, chases, disguises and deceptions ensue. As is common for breakneck caper stories, the clever plans only work until Something Goes Wrong, with a mad scramble to improvise their way out of disaster quickly following. Very enjoyable and well-written.


Among the stories in THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, a collection by Nick Mamatas, I particularly enjoyed the short novel “Under My Roof”. wherein a suburban father builds a DIY nuclear bomb, then declares his house and the lot it stands on a separate country. The absurdity is further heightened by the family’s young son, secretly a powerful mind-reader whose wry sardonic commentary on the real thoughts and motives of other characters adds much to the comedy.


Among the older books I read or re-read in 2018 was Walter M. Miller Jr.’s A CANTICLE FOR LEIBOWITZ. There’ve been a number of online discussion and essays the last decade or so over how many of the “Classic” SF or fantasy works are still exemplary or at least satisfying, and how many have been visited by the Suck Fairy upon reading in the present day. (Heinlein’s name and works tends to be mentioned a lot in those discussions.) Re-reading CANTICLE after about fifty years, I found it held up very well. Basic premise, for any I’d-lose-at-Jeopardy people reading this: Three linked novellas, roughly 600, 1200 and 1800 years after a nuclear war (the “Flame Deluge”) devastates Earth, followed by social upheaval among survivors that destroys most remaining knowledge and technology. Each story centers around the monastery of the Blessed (later Saint) Leibowitz, where a relative few salvaged shreds of knowledge, documents and books have been preserved and copied and re-copied for centuries.  Each section deals with how the monastery, and the beliefs and faith of the monks doing its work, react to game-changing developments: a trove of pre-nuclear documents, some relating directly to the life of Leibowitz, is discovered; six centuries later, science and technology are making a comeback, but threatened by the return of large nation-states and large-scale war; and, in the final section, science has advanced past the level existing before the Flame Deluge, making space travel a possibility, but also enabling the return of nuclear weapons which may destroy the Earth a second and final time before generation ships can establish new human footholds on other planets. Miller’s characters deal with doubt and uncertainty about their choices and beliefs in a dangerous and risky world. No Suck Fairy here.

Most of my reading is in the SF or Fantasy genres, but I also read occasionally in other genres, particularly mysteries and suspense. An older mystery I enjoyed was Philip Kerr’s 1989 MARCH VIOLETS. Set in 1930’s Germany when the Nazi party was consolidating its hold over German society, a private detective has to navigate corrupt bureaucracies and police, and the criminal underworld, in the course of investigating a murder and theft. Reading about the gradual normalization and acceptance of Nazi programs and atrocities was disturbing, not least because the events and history portrayed in Kerr’s novel parallel in many ways the actions of America’s own Trump administration.

Jordan Harper’s debut suspense novel SHE RIDES SHOTGUN was a thrill ride of a story. A somewhat ambivalent member of a white power prison gang, days before his scheduled release, has to kill one of the other members in self-defense. (Harper doesn’t go deeply how much his protagonist really buys into the white supremacist mindset -- in large part because for most of the book simple survival is the top and only priority --  but it seems he signed on primarily because in prison you either belong to a gang or you’re prey.) In result, a “kill order” is issued (including to members outside the prison) not only on him, but also on his entire family, the ex-wife and daughter left behind when he entered prison. He walks out of prison barely in time to avoid dying there, isn’t able to save his ex-wife but swoops up his pre-teen daughter just as she gets out of school. It’s a race to stay ahead of an entire gang focused on murdering them. When it becomes clear the pursuit will not stop until he and his daughter are dead, the decision is made to stop running away and fight back. To do that, he had to teach his daughter how to fight, how to shoot, how to kill. The bond between father and daughter, negligible at first, grows throughout the process and training. But what is that training doing to the girl’s bonds and relationship with society at large?

Two non-fiction books I particularly enjoyed:

ASSASSINATION VACATION by Sarah Vowell. I actually listened to the audiobook by mistake, having borrowed it from Overdrive having somehow thought it was a theme anthology of crime stories. No, actually it’s Vowell’s travelogue of sites relating to Presidential assassinations, with lots of interesting history and trivia along the way. But it’s also at times hilariously funny, because of Vowell’s self-deprecating humor. (She recognizes being obsessed with assassinations is a Pretty Freaking Weird hobby.)

UNDER THE RED SEA SUN by Edward Ellsberg. In 1942, the essential port of Massawa in Eritrea on the Red Sea was taken from the Italian forces that had occupied it, but not before the Italians blocked the port’s use by scuttling and booby-trapping numerous ships and the on-shore shops and facilities. Ellsberg, a maritime salvage expert was given the “impossible” task of reclaiming the port for use by the Allies, but with virtually no men, no equipment and no money, further complicated by corruption and incompetence in the military and civilian bureaucracies. A fascinating memoir of resourcefulness and ingenuity in the face of nearly overwhelming obstacles.


Full list for 2018:


JANUARY
Company of Lies, Karen Maitland
The Great West Detective Agency, Jackson Lowry (Robert Vardeman)
The Stars Are Legion, Kameron Hurley
Jane Steele, Lindsay Faye
The Wrong Stars, Tim Pratt


FEBRUARY
The Darkest Part of the Forest, Holly Black
Artemis, Andy Weir
Daughter of Mystery, Heather Rose Jones
Fortress At the End of Time, J.M. McDermott
Voyage of the Basilisk, Marie Brennan


MARCH
Rosemary and Rue, Seanan McGuire
Bitter Greens, Kate Forsyth
The Moving Target, Ross MacDonald
Lady Henterman's Wardrobe, Marshall Ryan Maresca
Altered America, Cat Rambo
Station Eleven, Emily St. John Mandel
Quillifer, Walter Jon Williams


APRIL
Assassination Vacation, Sarah Vowell
Before I Fall, Lauren Oliver
Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn
The Starlit Wood, Ed. Wolfe & ???


MAY
Beneath the Sugar Sky, Seanan McGuire
Hunger Makes The Wolf, Alex Wells
Aegypt, John Crowley
Alternate Routes, Tim Powers
Matchup, ed. Lee Child
She Rides Shotgun, Jordan Harper
The Armored Saint, Myke Cole


JUNE
The Serpent of Venice, Christopher Moore
Dogs Don't Lie, Clea Simon
March Violets, Philip Kerr
Medusa Uploaded, Emily Devenport
Hall of Heroes, ed. Fellowship of Fantasy


JULY
A Fierce Radiance, Lauren Belfer
The Tiger's Daughter, K Arsenault Rivera
Last Hope Island, Lynne Olson


AUGUST
The Paper Menagerie, Ken Liu
Behind the Throne, K.B. Wagers
Binti, Nnedi Okorafor
SPQR, Mary Beard
The City Stained Red, Sam Sykes
Stone Mad, Elizabeth Bear


SEPTEMBER
Night Has A Thousand Eyes, Cornell Woolrich
Sparrow Hill Road, Seanan McGuire
Trail of Lightning, Rebecca Roanhorse
A Darker Shade of Magic, V. E. Schwab
The Accidental War, Walter Jon Williams


OCTOBER
Trouble Is My Business, Raymond Chandler
Akata Witch, Nnedi Okorafor
Selections from Dreamsongs, Vol. 1 (audio), George RR Martin
The Cobbler's Boy, Elizabeth Bear & Katherine Addison
The Lucky Stiff, Craig Rice
The Ballad of Black Tom, Victor Lavalle
Under the Red Sea Sun, Edward Ellsberg
The Queen of Crows, Myke Cole


NOVEMBER
Space Opera, Cat Valente
Wayward Saint, J.S. Morning
Penric's Demon, Lois McMaster Bujold
The People's Republic of Everything, Nick Mamatas
How To Stop Time, Matt Haig
Gallows View, Peter Dickinson


DECEMBER
Dreadnought, Cherie Priest
Amberlough, Lara Elena Donnelly
Under the Pendulum Sun, Jeanette Ng
A Canticle For Leibowitz, Walter M. Miller Jr.
Forty Thieves, Thomas Perry
The Anubis Gates, Tim Powers


And by author:


The Cobbler's Boy, Elizabeth Bear & Katherine Addison
Stone Mad, Elizabeth Bear
SPQR, Mary Beard
A Fierce Radiance, Lauren Belfer
The Darkest Part of the Forest, Holly Black
Voyage of the Basilisk, Marie Brennan
Penric's Demon, Lois McMaster Bujold
Trouble Is My Business, Raymond Chandler
Matchup, ed. Lee Child
The Armored Saint, Myke Cole
The Queen of Crows, Myke Cole
Aegypt, John Crowley
Medusa Uploaded, Emily Devenport
Gallows View, Peter Dickinson
Amberlough, Lara Elena Donnelly
Under the Red Sea Sun, Edward Ellsberg
Jane Steele, Lindsay Faye
Hall of Heroes, ed. Fellowship of Fantasy
Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn
Bitter Greens, Kate Forsyth
How To Stop Time, Matt Haig
She Rides Shotgun, Jordan Harper
The Stars Are Legion, Kameron Hurley
Daughter of Mystery, Heather Rose Jones
March Violets, Philip Kerr
The Ballad of Black Tom, Victor Lavalle
The Paper Menagerie, Ken Liu
The Great West Detective Agency, Jackson Lowry (Robert Vardeman)
The Moving Target, Ross MacDonald
Company of Lies, Karen Maitland
The People's Republic of Everything, Nick Mamatas
Lady Henterman's Wardrobe, Marshall Ryan Maresca
Selections from Dreamsongs, Vol. 1 (audio), George RR Martin
Fortress At the End of Time, J.M. McDermott
Beneath the Sugar Sky, Seanan McGuire
Rosemary and Rue, Seanan McGuire
Sparrow Hill Road, Seanan McGuire
A Canticle For Leibowitz, Walter M. Miller Jr.
The Serpent of Venice, Christopher Moore
Wayward Saint, J.S. Morning
Under the Pendulum Sun, Jeanette Ng
Akata Witch, Nnedi Okorafor
Binti, Nnedi Okorafor
Before I Fall, Lauren Oliver
Last Hope Island, Lynne Olson
The Starlit Wood, ed. Dominik Parisien & Navah Wolfe
Forty Thieves, Thomas Perry
Alternate Routes, Tim Powers
The Anubis Gates, Tim Powers
The Wrong Stars, Tim Pratt
Dreadnought, Cherie Priest
Altered America, Cat Rambo
The Lucky Stiff, Craig Rice
The Tiger's Daughter, K Arsenault Rivera
Trail of Lightning, Rebecca Roanhorse
A Darker Shade of Magic, V. E. Schwab
Dogs Don't Lie, Clea Simon
Station Eleven, Emily St. John Mandel
The City Stained Red, Sam Sykes
Space Opera, Cat Valente
Assassination Vacation, Sarah Vowell
Behind the Throne, K.B. Wagers
Artemis, Andy Weir
Hunger Makes The Wolf, Alex Wells
The Accidental War, Walter Jon Williams
Quillifer, Walter Jon Williams
Night Has A Thousand Eyes, Cornell Woolrich