Reviews and Comments

Keith Stevenson

keithstevenson@books.theunseen.city

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

I'm the author of the sf thriller Horizon. I'm also publisher at coeur de lion publishing and a past editor of Aurealis - Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy Magazine from 2001 to 2004. I hosted 30 episodes of the Terra Incognita Speculative Fiction Podcast, and edited and published Dimension6 the free Australian speculative fiction electronic magazine from 2014 to 2020.

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John Lanchester: The Wall (Hardcover, 2019, W. W. Norton & Company) 3 stars

Review of 'The Wall' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The Wall is about Kavanagh, filling his national service on the coastal wall that girdles the UK to keep out the Others after the world has gone to pot from the Change, which saw sea levels rise around the world and, we guess, massive environmental damage and human displacement. I say 'we guess' because the world building is short on detail. So short I thought The Wall was going into allegorical territory but if it was it didn't have a lot to say other than 'it's complicated'. And if it wasn't an allegory, the world building was unconvincing. For example it's set a little in the future and they still have TV and mobile phones but the Wall is super low-tech and the guards don't even have night vision goggles or automated defences.

It's also been compared (incorrectly by some) to 1984. Kavanagh is no Winston Smith. He doesn't question …

Adrian Tchaikovsky, Adrian Tchaikovsky: Children of Ruin (Paperback, 2020, Pan Macmillan) 4 stars

The astonishing sequel to Children of Time, the award-winning novel of humanity’s battle for survival …

Review of 'Children of Ruin' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

If Children of Time was about survival, book 2 - The Children of Ruin - is about discovery. And Tchaikovsky shows discovery can be awe-inspiring, strange, bloody difficult, downright terrifying and deadly both on a personal and species-wide level. The book is filled with amazing feats of imagination and scientific extrapolation and - as with book 1 - Tchaikovsky creates a credible, alien mentality (not with spiders this time, but with octopuses and... something else) as well as keeping up the humour, terror and wonder that made Children of Time so enjoyable.

Mitchell Hogan: Shadow of the Exile (The Infernal Guardian) (2018, 47North) 4 stars

Review of 'Shadow of the Exile (The Infernal Guardian)' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

A brilliant read from start to finish. Tarrik Nal-Valim, a demon of the Thirty-Seventh Order, is ripped from his world by a summons from the secretive wizard Ren and plunged into a life and death struggle between powerful sorcerers aiming to free an evil demon to rule over the land. Because the story is told completely through Tarrik's point of view, we're not sure who's on whose side, who's evil and who should be trusted and Hogan builds sympathy beautifully for his beleaguered demon (even if he would rather tear Ren and all sorcerers limb from limb and feast on their flesh!)
I can't wait for book 2!