Answering the Questions of Modern Living in “Answer Only” by John Michael Flynn

Review by Tori Bissonette Answer Only opens with a bang—a gunshot to be precise. Our narrator, Ennis Railsback, a man as pretentious as his name would suggest, is murdered on the first page, in the first sentence even. The rest of the novel unfolds from beyond the mortal plane as Ennis reflects on the people … Continue reading Answering the Questions of Modern Living in “Answer Only” by John Michael Flynn

Find the Difference between Living and Surviving in Andrew Joseph White’s “The Spirit Bares Its Teeth”

I feel like it bears mentioning that I first read Andrew Joseph White's The Spirit Bares Its Teeth immediately following the completion of a queer horror fiction course I taught at university. So, I came to this book with all of the tropes, criticisms, and "perverse" forms of rebellion swirling in my head. Truth be … Continue reading Find the Difference between Living and Surviving in Andrew Joseph White’s “The Spirit Bares Its Teeth”

Soar into the Impossible in Indra Das’ “The Last Dragoners of Bowbazar”

Those who know me may know that I have long been a fan of Indra Das, whose debut novel The Devourers is always my go-to recommendation when the "what should I read?" question is posed. As such, when I heard that Das was releasing a new book, The Last Dragoners of Bowbazar, I jumped at … Continue reading Soar into the Impossible in Indra Das’ “The Last Dragoners of Bowbazar”

Old World Heroism in J.T.T. Ryder’s “Hag of the Hills”

J.T.T. Ryder’s first installment of The Bronze Sword Cycles: Hag of the Hills is what he terms as a work of "heroic prehistoric fantasy fiction" and I believe there is no better descriptor for it. The story follows Brennus son of Biturix through his fight to reclaim his ancestral homeland in the Isle of Skye … Continue reading Old World Heroism in J.T.T. Ryder’s “Hag of the Hills”