-
April 24, 2017
The Underground Railroad by Colson Whitehead: a review by Jonathan McCalmont
April 24, 2017By Jonathan McCalmont The Underground Railroad — Colson Whitehead (Fleet) The Underground Railroad is about as significant a novel as American...
80 -
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...
-
April 20, 2017
Central Station by Lavie Tidhar: a review by Megan AM
April 20, 2017By Megan AM Central Station — Lavie Tidhar (PS Publishing) As one of the more popular Clarke-eligible novels among the shadow...
-
April 19, 2017
Empire V by Victor Pelevin, translated by Anthony Phillips: a review by Vajra Chandrasekera
April 19, 2017By Vajra Chandrasekera Empire V — Victor Pelevin (Gollancz) Empire V is about vampires, which is probably guaranteed to turn away...
-
April 18, 2017
Hunters & Collectors by M. Suddain: a review by Jonathan McCalmont
April 18, 2017By Jonathan McCalmont Hunters & Collectors — M. Suddain (Jonathan Cape) Suddain’s second novel Hunters & Collectors is an intimidating object....
-
April 11, 2017
The Lost Time Accidents by John Wray: a review by Megan AM
April 11, 2017By Megan AM The Lost Time Accidents — John Wray (Canongate) This is the first novel I’ve read from my shortlist...
-
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,...
-
April 7, 2017
Central Station by Lavie Tidhar: a review by Jonathan McCalmont
April 7, 2017By Jonathan McCalmont Central Station — Lavie Tidhar (PS Publishing) Nowadays, when people talk about science fiction being socially relevant, they...
-
April 6, 2017
Europe in Winter by Dave Hutchinson: a review by Paul Kincaid
April 6, 2017By Paul Kincaid Europe in Winter — Dave Hutchinson (Solaris) In 2014, when Europe in Autumn was published, long standing tensions...
-
April 5, 2017
The Man Who Spoke Snakish by Andrus Kivirähk, translated by Christopher Moseley: a review by Vajra Chandrasekera
April 5, 2017By Vajra Chandrasekera The Man Who Spoke Snakish — Andrus Kivirähk (Grove Press UK), translated by Christopher Moseley The Man Who...
Posts tagged with ‘shortlist’
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.