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June 1, 2017
Running Strictly to Timetable: The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead: a review by Nina Allan
June 1, 2017By Nina Allan The Underground Railroad — Colson Whitehead (Fleet) I could tell by the way they pulled her arms into...
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May 18, 2017
The Thriller’s Chilling Grip: Occupy Me by Tricia Sullivan – a review by Nina Allan
May 18, 2017By Nina Allan Occupy Me — Tricia Sullivan (Gollancz) And then came 72B. There was something almost poetic about the way...
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May 11, 2017
The Ones that Got Away: by Nina Allan
May 11, 2017By Nina Allan With both the Sharke Six and the official Clarke shortlist now out of the bag, I...
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April 21, 2017
Now You See Me: Infinite Ground by Martin MacInnes: a review by Nina Allan
April 21, 2017By Nina Allan Infinite Ground — Martin MacInnes (Atlantic Books) This is a difficult, intractable, Gordian knot of a novel, the...
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April 12, 2017
Dispatches from the sofa: some half-time analysis
April 12, 2017By Nina Allan Having read the six novels on my personal shortlist, and with the announcement of the official...
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April 10, 2017
Light My Fire — The Core of the Sun by Johanna Sinisalo: a review by Nina Allan
April 10, 2017By Nina Allan The Core of the Sun — Johanna Sinisalo (Grove Press UK) * Night after night I lie awake,...
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March 31, 2017
Comfortably Numb: a review of Zero K (Don DeLillo) by Nina Allan
March 31, 2017By Nina Allan Zero K — Don DeLillo (Picador) The guide explained the meaning of the term Zero K. This was...
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March 21, 2017
Trouble in Paradise: a review by Nina Allan
March 21, 2017By Nina Allan Fair Rebel — Steph Swainston (Gollancz) When discussing Steph Swainston’s fiction within the context of the Clarke Award,...
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March 14, 2017
For Dust thou Art, and Unto Dust shalt thou Return: a review by Nina Allan
March 14, 2017By Nina Allan A Field Guide to Reality — Joanna Kavenna (Riverrun) They went to look at the scraps. The broken...
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March 7, 2017
Watching The Destructives: a review by Nina Allan
March 7, 2017By Nina Allan The Destructives — Matthew De Abaitua (Angry Robot) “Emergence occurs when a complex system self-organises in such a...
Posts tagged with ‘Nina Allan’
Anglia Ruskin Centre for Science Fiction & Fantasy > Nina Allan
About The Centre
The Centre for Science Fiction and Fantasy connects two major strengths within Anglia Ruskin University: writing and publishing alongside literary criticism. It is comprised of Faculty members, associate lecturers and postgraduate and undergraduate students.