Madbond features a carnivorous horse that eats snakes, an amnesiac madman, and a bromance for the ages. What’s not to love? Find out!
All tagged out of physical print
Madbond features a carnivorous horse that eats snakes, an amnesiac madman, and a bromance for the ages. What’s not to love? Find out!
Look at that guy's bored-ass face. It's a warning: that expression will be mirrored on your own should you open the cover.
Hey there! Do not read this review unless you’ve read The Many Colored Land. As this is book two of The Saga of Pliocene Exile, it’s impossible to write a review that doesn’t spoil The Many Colored Land.
This book, no this whole series, destroyed me. Read it.
I just finished reading Sword-Dancer by Jennifer Roberson, and I am so dissatisfied.
After a few difficult books in a row, I decided it was time to dip back into Zindar and see what Kerish and Forollkin were up to.
Demon Drums is my least favorite sort of reading experience because there’s so much I wanted to like, so much potential, but, with one exception, I don’t think it ever got there.
Nightpool is an old school fantasy. This wasn’t a surprise. I mean, look at that cover. Look at it! It’s glorious beyond words, but also exceptionally old school.
If I had first read a bullet-point list of all the concepts in Pandora’s Genes, I would have responded with “Nope, nope, nope, I’m out!” However, I would’ve regretted missing out on this story.
Barbara Hambly is what started me down my Forgotten Female Fantasy path, so it only seems right that I read a book of hers that I didn’t know existed: a murder-mystery urban-fantasy set in Victorian London. [...]
Chance and Other Gestures of the Hand of Fate includes domestic violence, the murder of several horses, a surprising emphasis on phalluses, and other unpleasant and/or potentially uncomfortable topics. [...]
The Wizard’s Shadow is, both at its best and at its core, a story about a fantastical, medieval odd-couple. Except they have to share a lot more than living quarters.