#BookReview: Cathedral of the Drowned by Nathan Ballingrud

#BookReview: Cathedral of the Drowned by Nathan BallingrudCathedral of the Drowned (The Lunar Gothic Trilogy, #2) by Nathan Ballingrud
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, ebook
Genres: Gothic, horror, science fiction horror
Series: Lunar Gothic Trilogy #2
Pages: 144
Published by Tor Nightfire on August 26, 2025
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The sequel to Crypt of the Moon Spider, Cathedral of the Drowned is a dripping, squirming, scuttling tale of altered bodies and minds.
There are two halves of Charlie Duchamp. One is a brain in a jar, stranded on Jupiter’s jungle moon, Io, who just wants to go home. The other is hanging on the wall of Barrowfield Home on Earth’s own moon, host to the eggs of the Moon Spider and filled with a murderous rage.
On Io, deep in the flooded remains of a crashed cathedral ship, lives a giant centipede called The Bishop, who has taken control of the drowned astronauts inside. Both Charlies converge here, stalking each other in the haunted ruins, while a new Moon Spider prepares to hatch.

My Review:

Today is Halloween, so I was looking for something creepy and horrifying to review today. Considering that I was both enthralled and totally creeped out by the first book in the Lunar Gothic Trilogy, Crypt of the Moon Spider I was completely unable to resist the tendrils of this second book in the trilogy so here we are. Or there we shiver. Or both.

Definitely both, because now I’m even more creeped out – but still fascinated. And a bit appalled at that fascination. And appalled yet again.

If Shelob used both We Shall Sing a Song into the Deep by Andrew Kelly Stewart and W.M. Akers’ Westside as birthing chambers for her monstrous children you might get something like Cathedral of the Drowned – and it would crawl all over you and quite possibly take a few bites along the way.

Crypt of the Moon Spider began with a bit of real world horror – the ease with which husbands and fathers could consign inconvenient female family members to bedlam – and moved that whole atrocity to the Moon by way of H.G. Wells and Jules Verne’s steampunk science fiction.

Which is when things got really strange. Things that are even stranger yet in this second book, with gang warfare over the spidersilk trade devolving into lunar drug running and earthly murder – along with a foray into an entirely new level of monstrosity in the bowels of a ‘cathedral-ship’ drowning on Jupiter’s moon Io.

It’s a battle of eldritch horrors, as the Spider Queen of Earth’s Moon meets the Bishop Centipede of Io in a battle for who controls the minds that roam behind the spacelanes and between the worlds.

While the perpetrators and the victims fight and die in places far from home in time, space and sanity.

Escape Rating B: The first book was a bit more coherent – or more of the story was seated in a fully human consciousness. Or in merely more single consciousnesses. Although I’m not sure if any of the characters in either book have consciences.

Which is, in a weird way, one of the few bright spots in this book. The situation in Crypt was utterly fucked, and so were a lot of people in it. A lot of the ones who made the situation in that first book so horrifying, starting with Dr. Cull, get their just – and justifiably horrifying – desserts in this second book.

(And OMG I’m facepalming because that name is so apropos and I didn’t see it until just now.)

I’m recognizing that I’m not completely coherent in this review. The story absolutely did catch me in its web – but it’s a web that’s sticky and oozy and stings in several spots and isn’t remotely comfortable to be in. (Speaking of both coherence and comfort, the UK covers for BOTH books in the trilogy are better IMHO than the US covers. They’re still creepy, but in a way that’s a tad more comfortable. Or make more sense. Or do a better job of reflecting something that’s in the story.)

From a certain point of view, its protagonist is poor Charlie Duchamp, a man who has been betrayed at every turn – even by the other half of himself as he has literally been divided in two. He hates himself and he kills himself and his halves succeed at one purpose and fail at another in a way that sets up the third book in the trilogy and eek I’m not sure I want to see how it ends but I also feel compelled to find out how it ends.

And whether or not the solar system ends with it.

#BookReview: Spread Me by Sarah Gailey

#BookReview: Spread Me by Sarah GaileySpread Me by Sarah Gailey
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: horror, science fiction horror
Pages: 208
Published by Tor Nightfire on September 23, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

Spread Me is a darkly seductive tale of survival from Sarah Gailey, after a routine probe at a research station turns deadly when the team discovers a strange specimen in search of a warm place to stay.
Kinsey has the perfect job as the team lead in a remote research outpost. She loves the solitude, and the way the desert keeps her far away from the temptations teeming out in the civilian world.
When her crew discovers a mysterious specimen buried deep in the sand, Kinsey breaks quarantine and brings it into the hab. But the longer it's inside, the more her carefully controlled life begins to unravel. Temptation has found her after all, and it can't be ignored any longer.
One by one, Kinsey's team realizes the thing they're studying is in search of a new host—and one of them is the perfect candidate....

My Review:

I’m going to get at this oddly, but then it’s been an odd week, and this is an odd book. So all the oddness is VERY apropos.

It’s just turned out to be an “I can’t even” week, for reasons that have nothing to do with this book. But I was grasping at straws for something to read to get out of my slump, and this, well, I’ve bounced off the description (and the Goodreads reviews) multiple times but it was short and it looked ‘interesting’ for potentially euphemistic definitions of interesting so I picked it up and got sucked right damn in and here we are.

The story is reminiscent of John Carpenter’s 1982 movie, The Thing. Which I haven’t seen because horror isn’t usually my jam, but the reference is lampshaded repeatedly in the book so I had to look for a summary and there are PLENTY of those on the internet because the movie has become a ‘cult classic’.

But that’s not where I came into this story from. I came in from two recent SF horror thrillers, Symbiote by Michael Nayak and The Glass Garden by Jessica Levai – and I think they are actually a bit closer to this, pardon me, thing because of the more overt SFnal setup AND the even more overt explorations of the sexuality of the characters and their interpersonal and/or extremely fluid and sometimes outright intersexual relationships.

Both Symbiote and Glass Garden, like Spread Me, are about extremely isolated scientific exploration groups. And how that small isolated group couples and decouples and recouples and they do stupid things to, for and with each other because they are all they’ve got. Including letting something dangerous into their closed environment that they really, really shouldn’t have – which kicks off all of these stories.

But these are also stories about secrets that bite everyone in the ass – if not quite as literally as occurs in Spread Me. Because Kinsey’s secret (and her name turns out to be a huge hint about her motivations and reactions) is that she seems to be asexual when it comes to humans, but is sexually attracted to things that most humans do their damndest not to consider sexual at all.

There are no actual tentacles, but Kinsey is aroused by viruses – and that’s precisely the nature of the ‘thing’ that has just invaded their desert outpost. Leaving Kinsey, not just on the horns of a dilemma, but intensely horny as well. Which the virus is all too aware of, even as it goes about ‘wooing’ her in all the worst ways possible.

And manages, somehow, to both fail big and ultimately succeed at the same, horrifying, time.

Escape Rating B+: While this is a bit of a mixed feelings review, because this story is just plain weird, it did break a terrible reading slump and that counts for a LOT. It certainly counts for enough to elevate a B to a B+ rating.

Also and definitely howsomever, the reviews I’ve read have tended to focus on the virus-romance aspects of the story, which are, admittedly, hard to miss. Even the title is a reference to Kinsey’s overt horniness about the thing. But in the actual reading of the story, it’s not quite the way the reviews led me to believe. There’s more story than that and it’s honestly weirder because of it.

Because it’s not that Kinsey actually has sex with the virus. It’s that she imagines it – and she imagines it a LOT. So it’s about what arouses her and what she imagines it would be like to have that arousal sated by the being she desires, BUT her imagined erotica still kinda reads human because it’s through her own imagination. (Words may be mush in this instance, but she’s inside her own head and it’s all about what she imagines it would be like and her frame of reference is very, well, human.)

When the virus tries to do and be what it thinks Kinsey wants, that’s a) where the horror comes in and b) really, truly wrong in ways that are also reminiscent of humans because that’s what the virus is mimicking. The virus is more than a bit like an overeager suitor who keeps trying to be what it thinks Kinsey wants instead of asking what she actually wants and it fails at mindreading just as humans do.

But, on a third hand that this thing can manifest so very easily, in its many and varied attempts it ALSO represents the full spectrum of human sexuality and human gender representation – even if none of those are remotely what Kinsey wants from it. Particularly considering the cost.

And that cost is where the horror definitely comes in, as the already tiny population of this remote outpost succumbs, one by one, to the virus and its ability to not merely infect but outright replace every single creature it comes across. Ad infinitum. Forever and ever, amen.

Unless it can be content with just having Kinsey – and vice versa. Instead of ALL the rest of us.

Because just like the people in that outpost, we won’t recognize the danger until it’s already far too late. But then, humans are like that, aren’t they?

Grade A #BookReview: Witches of Dubious Origin by Jenn McKinlay

Grade A #BookReview: Witches of Dubious Origin by Jenn McKinlayWitches of Dubious Origin by Jenn McKinlay
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via NetGalley
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: books and reading, cozy fantasy, cozy mystery, fantasy, witches
Pages: 384
Published by Ace on October 28, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

When a librarian discovers she’s descended from a long line of powerful witches, she’ll need all of her bookish knowledge to harness her family’s magic, in this enchanting cozy fantasy from New York Times bestselling author Jenn McKinlay.
Zoe Ziakas enjoys a quiet life, working as a librarian in her quaint New England town. When a mysterious black book with an unbreakable latch is delivered to the library, Zoe has a strange feeling the tome is somehow calling to her. She decides to consult the Museum of Literature, home to volumes of indecipherable secrets, some possessing magic that must be guarded. The collection is known as the of Books of Dubious Origin.
Here, Zoe discovers that she is the last descendant of a family of witches and this little black book is their grimoire. Zoe knows she must decode the family’s spell book and solve the mystery of what happened to her mother and her grandmother. However, the book's potential power draws all things magical to it, and Zoe finds herself under the constant watch of a pesky raven, while being chased by undead Vikings, ghost pirates, and assorted ghouls.
With assistance from the eccentric staff of the Books of Dubious Origin—including their annoyingly smart and handsome containment specialist, Jasper Griffin—Zoe must confront her past and the legacy of her family. But as their adventure unfolds, she’ll have to decide if she’s ready to embrace her destiny.

My Review:

Librarian Zoe Ziakas’ origin is even more dubious than she believed it was, as the tip of that iceberg is delivered to her one afternoon. Not that the appearance of a book, any book, at the Wessex Public Library is dubious or even uncommon, but this one arrives in a hand addressed envelope with no evidence that it EVER went through ANY of the normal methods of delivery.

That the handwriting on the envelope resembles that of Zoe’s recently deceased mother just adds to the weirdness of it all. A weirdness that is only exacerbated when she leaves the book on her office desk and it delivers ITSELF to her home’s front porch later that evening.

Where the envelope promptly flames out of existence, leaving Zoe with a book that refuses to open and a whole lot of questions about the mother who dropped her in Wessex at age 14, leaving her in the hands of a family friend after browbeating Zoe into a promise that she will never, ever, EVER practice the magic that her grandmother taught her.

Zoe has done her best to not just keep that promise, but to forget everything she ever learned about witchcraft and magic and the legacy of her family. A legacy that has just presented itself to her in the form of a book that keeps whispering at her to bleed on it.

As if that wasn’t enough to give anyone the creeps.

Zoe knows one person who might be able to help her with this mystery whose origins she is desperate to remain skeptical of – at all costs. Her foster mother, Agatha, is a practicing witch. Zoe has done her best to convince herself that Agatha’s practice is all ‘woo-woo’ and doesn’t really accomplish anything outside of a placebo effect. But Agatha knows people who also ‘practice’ – and Zoe needs those people to help her solve the mystery.

Which leads Zoe to the New York City’s prestigious and well-endowed Museum of Literature – and to the Books of Dubious Origin archive housed within. The team at the BODO is willing – in fact they are downright eager – to help Zoe solve the mystery of the locked book and the family legacy that it contains.

All Zoe needs to do is believe in the thing she vowed to her mother that she wouldn’t. Because it’s going to kill her if she doesn’t – and maybe even if she does.

Escape Rating A: First and foremost, she had me from the first paragraph of the blurb. Because seriously, books are magic and libraries are magic and magic is well, magic and this had all of the above tied up in a beautiful pile of, naturally enough, books, and sprinkled with fairy dust. Not that there are any actual fairies in this book.

Although we might find out there are. It’s certainly possible.

This is also one of those ‘throw a bunch of books in a blender’ kind of books. Along with one TV series, because the mix in the blender wouldn’t be complete without The Librarians TV series, but it also needs some Late-Night Witches, Mythwoven, and Libriomancer to make it complete AND magically delicious.

Even if most of Zoe’s food choices range between suspiciously ultra processed and outright stomach churning. It’s all part of her charm.

What’s also part of her charm is her reluctance to believe – because it’s all tied up in that promise to her mother. As much as her stubborn skepticism drives EVERYONE in the BODO (Books of Dubious Origin) bonkers, it’s such an innate part of who she is that of course she clings to it with both hands and a whole lot of heart.

At the same time, the crew of the BODO are all such fantastic individuals – in more ways than one – and they are all so willing to take her in. All she has to do is let them in – and let them help. It’s lovely watching that – and them – come together, while the training montage is as delightful as it is frustrating for all concerned (except the reader!)

Then there’s the mystery to be solved, because that strange book was merely the tip of an iceberg of buried memories, powerful legacies, dangerous enemies and desperate dreams. Zoe has very little time to find her way and figure things out – including herself. That there is a reclamation of her past as well as a found family to see her into the future makes this a charmingly compelling cozy-ish fantasy mystery with just the right touch of romance to keep the story – and the reader – humming along in hopes of Zoe’s brighter future.

All she has to do is make sure the wicked witch really is dead this time around.

This was a fun read, as the pages fly by almost magically fast. It also, and even better, reads like the first book in a series – which the author also explicitly claims on her website. There are so many more books of dubious origin waiting on the shelves of the BODO – and this reader can’t wait to explore them all!

A- #BookReview: The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2025 edited by Nnedi Okorafor

A- #BookReview: The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2025 edited by Nnedi OkoraforThe Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2025 by Nnedi Okorafor, John Joseph Adams
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: Dark Fantasy, fantasy, horror, science fiction, science fiction horror, short stories
Pages: 416
Published by Mariner Books on October 21, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

Of science fiction and fantasy, guest editor Nnedi Okorafor writes, “There are times when it feels like a box, but within it, technically, you can expect anything.” The twenty stories in this collection simultaneously fulfill and defy expectations of genre, showcasing boundary-pushing authors at their best. In this year’s Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy, a robot will struggle to make friends, a team of auditors determines the financial value of a lifetime, an alien species will teach you how to read, and maybe, just maybe, someone will finally do something about the kid in Ursula K. Le Guin’s Omelas hole. From the joyous to the terrifying, to the heart wrenching and the absurd, these stories encourage you to open your mind and, as Okorafor promises: “Watch your world expand.”

My Review:

As much as I enjoyed these stories – and I generally did – there was so much dark fantasy and outright horror in this collection that after I finished I needed a cocoa, a lie down, and a comfort read to get over it. Together, these stories do not exactly paint a pretty picture of the world these authors were thinking of as they wrote, but then again, the world we’re living in right now often feels as dark as they painted.

Because this is a collection of the best stories of the previous year, I had read a few of them before – in my Hugo Nomination readings as the publication periods overlapped. Where I have already posted a review of the story, I’ve linked to it instead of repeating myself.

The Escape Rating for the collection as a whole is a very much fudge-factored A-, and it feels like there’s a horrifying monster lurking in the dark eating that fudge. Or something like that.

I need to go find myself another cocoa while you read the reviews of the individual stories. Just FYI, you might need one too.

Caroline M. Yoachim. “We Will Teach You How to Read | We Will Teach You How to Read”
(From Lightspeed – podcast) Science Fiction https://www.readingreality.net/2025/08/audiobookreview-we-will-teach-you-how-to-read-we-will-teach-you-how-to-read-by-caroline-m-yoachim/ Escape Rating A-

Rachel Swirsky. “Also, the Cat” (From Reactor) Fantasy
Somehow, this story manages to be both cute and uncomfortable at the same time. Also good, but a bit slow moving. But that’s kind of the point. Elderly sisters Rosalie, Viola and Irene are dead, not to begin with, but one at a time. But instead of going to some great reward, or even to hell with or without handcarts, even in death they’re still stuck with each other, still trapped in the house where they were pitted against each other – or pitted themselves against each other, in spite of all being dead. What made this story interesting was that their entrapment was explicitly NOT about finding their inner sisterhood, but about finally walking away from it. My only issue with this story is that it meanders a bit on its way because their sibling rivalry isn’t remotely dead even though they are. And yes, there’s a cat – but the cat explicitly does not show them the way. Escape Rating B+

Olivie Blake. “The Audit” (From Januaries) Science Fiction
This was more interesting than compelling. The idea was fantastic, but it felt like the execution was all over the place. OTOH that’s fitting as so was the protagonist, OTOOH, it made it damn hard to get into. It takes an idea that could have had a lot of traction, the idea that when we’re young adults we don’t have the time or the money to enjoy things because we’re too busy making a living, and by the time we have spare time and disposable income we’re middle aged and tired. In other words, it takes the idea that youth is wasted on the young and runs with it into a scheme where some people get money, based on their future earning potential, to have a blast free of economic constraints, but then must pay it all back when they reach middle age – by taking the career path of the funding organization’s prediction or choice. The story is about one young woman flailing around with sudden wealth filled with decision paralysis about what to do with her newly granted money and time – and the good and bad decisions she makes as she figures things out. Because she’s not figuring things out and flails around a LOT, the story does too. Escape Rating B-

Kij Johnson. “Country Birds” (From Sunday Morning Transport) Fantasy
This story reads like the bright Mirror Universe version of The Crane Husband, which is definitely the dark Mirror Universe. It’s a very cool, very SFnal sort of fantasy about aging and transformation. It struck me hard because I’m closer than I’d like to think, and the idea of each ache and pain being transformed within my body to a bright – or even a shadowy – thing with feathers just warmed my soul. It brings to mind the Emily Dickinson poem about hope, the one that begins “Hope” is the thing with feathers – That perches in the soul – And sings the tune without the words – And never stops – at all.” and turns it into a literal flock of birds that spur a surprisingly hopeful transformation. Escape Rating A- because, while I didn’t exactly escape because it reminded me of my own circumstances, the story was utterly beautiful.

Tatiana Obey. “Fuck Them Kids” (From FIYAH) Science Fiction
This turned out to be my favorite SF story in the collection. It begins with a family visit to one of Jupiter’s moon colonies on Europa, but the visit itself is a familiar one, childless by choice adult daughter visiting with her sister, her sister’s children and spouse, and their mother who is STILL ragging childless daughter about having a career instead of a family. But instead of caving to pressure, Jaz gets her regular and much appreciated dose of family and mom’s home cooking – and leaves for her next race. Because that’s what she does, races souped up space cruisers. And she loves every bit of it. When she discovers that her teenage niece has stowed away on her ship, she doesn’t bring the girl home right away. Instead, Jaz discovers that her niece is every bit the space and adrenaline junkie that she herself is, and that everything is more fun with an apprentice along for the glorious ride. Escape Rating A+ because this story really did let me escape with Jaz and Aden and I loved the idea that both Jaz’ choice AND her sister’s, were equally valid – because that doesn’t happen nearly enough.

S.L. Huang. “The River Judge” (From Reactor) Fantasy (Dark)
This is one of several dark fantasies in this collection. It also reminds me a lot of The Brides of High Hill, the really gothic entry in Nghi Vo’s Singing Hills Cycle, both in its tone and in its creepy atmosphere. I want to say this is a really creepy ghost story, but there’s only one ghost and it really isn’t the point. It is a story about women taking power in the bloodiest of ways, but that’s not quite it either. It’s certainly a combination of local myths and legends taking on a life and death of their own, of women who have been abused rising up to eliminate their abusers, and about the sharp, bloody line between justice and vengeance. Even though there’s no specific myth or fairy tale involved, this would still fit right in with the author’s Burning Roses, which does. Escape Rating A for the way the ending still held one last surprise twist AND managed to be both creepy and just at the same time.

Carlie St. George. “The Weight of Your Own Ashes” (From Clarkesworld – podcast) SF
This was, ultimately, sad fluff. It’s a relationship story, but it’s a relationship story steeped in both SF and the issues of, well, relationships. On the SF side, it’s a multiple body problem – literally. The Myriad are a species that exists in multiple bodies. Yonder, who lives on a near-future Earth, on a Lunar Colony, on a transport ship and on another planet – SIMULTANEOUSLY – is in a romantic relationship on Earth when her Earth-body dies. She desperately wants to come back to her lover – and she does – only to discover that her human lover can’t cope with the multiple bodies of Yonder and NEVER HAS. So on the relationship side, it’s a story about discovering a truth and letting it set you free instead of continuing to compromise who you really are. Escape Rating A- for the commentary on the insularity of humanity combined with subtle heartbreak.

Xavier Garcia. “An Ode to the Minor Arcana in a Triplet Flow” (From Death in the Mouth, Volume 2) Fantasy (Dark)
As I keep saying – and will continue to do so – a lot of the fantasy in this collection is close to or right on the line between dark fantasy and outright horror. This particular story tripped right over that line into straight up gory horror with a side dose of psychological horror to give it just that extra helping of blood and guts and other bodily fluids expelled in the throes of death.

It starts out, well, not innocuous but not where it ends up, and I’m saying that and it starts with observations about the visual impact of blood on gold teeth. But it really begins with a young man who thinks he is willing to do ANYTHING to make his dream of rap superstardom come true. The story is all about the way that he learns that he’s the type of person who really will, no matter what horrors he has to accept or commit to make it happen. So think of this as the story of a man making a Faustian bargain and learning that he’s both Faust AND the devil he bargained with – he just didn’t know it YET. Escape Rating OMG I don’t know what to do with this one. For the story itself it’s a B but that’s because it’s really not my cuppa AT ALL but I recognize it’s probably terrific for someone whose cup it actually is. Also I didn’t really escape so much as sit stunned in horror through the whole thing – which was probably the author’s intent all along. Then I had to find something cozy to read as an antidote because this one was A LOT.

Kathryn H. Ross. “The Forgetting Room” (From FIYAH) Science Fiction (Dark)
This is either a story about the road to hell being paved with good intentions, OR it’s a story about protecting children from the things that make their parents uncomfortable, taken to the nth degree, OR it’s a metaphor for what a spouse or family goes through when a family member is in the terrible process of being lost to Alzheimer’s. The tech that makes this science fiction sounds so benign at first, the idea of forgetting just that bit of discomfort that someone is chewing on or stewing over – the way that parents want to keep their kids from reading or seeing anything that the parents feel is too disturbing or too adult for them. But the story is about what happens when that gets too quick and too easy, to the point where it’s as addictive as any drug, when the forgetting becomes so comforting and all pervasive that the ones who don’t forget lose their connection with those who do. Until the only answer is for all of them to forget everything together – and where does that lead? Escape Rating B because, like the story above, I see that it’s good of its type, the implications are SFnal and horrifying and understated and I can’t stop thinking about them, but I kinda wish I could forget this story because I’m creeped out by those same implications.

Dominique Dickey. “Look at the Moon” (From Lightspeed) (Science Fiction) (DARK)
This isn’t really SF, it’s just that the hook for the story is amateur astronomy. It could have been anything. This one is just straight up horror. At its dark heart it’s the story of a 20something couple, one of whom is an amateur astrologer. Her partner comes with her to an out of the way meetup where a bunch of similarly minded folks can watch the stars from outside the light pollution of Los Angeles. But the group turns out to be a cult, the couple sees them murder a child who failed to be the prophet they’ve been hoping for, and they are forced to participate in the murder so they can’t run to the police. What makes the story a bit different from one that’s been told a thousand times is the backstory of the couple and how it ties back into the origins of the cult, which just wasn’t enough to make it work for this reader as anything like ‘best’. Escape Rating C

Isabel J. Kim. “Why Don’t We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole” (From Clarkesworld – podcast) Science Fiction (Dark)
https://www.readingreality.net/2025/08/grade-a-audiobookreview-why-dont-we-just-kill-the-kid-in-the-omelas-hole-by-isabel-j-kim/ Escape Rating A

Jennifer Hudak. “The Witch Trap” (From Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet) Fantasy
There’s a lot of dark in this collection. This particular story might be going there, but it ends at the point where the possibility is out there but hasn’t yet been fully realized. The story we’re reading is about a woman who is remodeling her very old house when an equally old shoe is discovered under the floorboards. The shoe is a mystery. It might have been intended as a witch trap. It might have succeeded. But history – at least history as it’s understood now – tells us there were no witches. If there were, does this old shoe hold the key to their craft? And is Elizabeth willing to listen to all the dark and mysterious things the shoe might be trying to tell her? Escape Rating A- because of the way this is perched so precariously on the fence between a story about female power and a story about magic and how much the one is in service of the other and just how terribly and powerfully that might go.

Susan Palwick. “Yarns” (From Asimov’s) Science Fiction (Dystopian)
This wants to be a hopeful story, but it’s very dystopian and never quite gets there. Or, at least, while the protagonists may have temporarily or even permanently escaped the dystopia, the odds of it lasting are between slim and none and slim has already left the building. In a world where criminal syndicates control everything, one teacher does her best to save a boy whose father is a soldier from one of those controlling syndicates. She’s unable to save him, ends up on the run, but does manage to save another child – and herself. At least for a while. I think it’s intended as a story about paying it forward and having the good karma come back to you even in a horrifying situation, but by the time I read this story I was pretty much full up on the dark in this collection. Escape Rating B because the story reminded me a bit of the internet meme about ‘The Grandmother and the Demon’, sometimes known as ‘Todd and Anette’ although THAT story has a happier ending – which is definitely saying a whole lot of something.

Pemi Aguda. “The Wonders of the World” (From Ghostroots) Fantasy
This is one of the few stories in the entire collection that ends lighter than it started. It begins with Abisola, a girl who has panic attacks and Zeme, a boy who thinks he’s a prophet, both still in school, both the ‘odd kids’ in their class on a school trip from Lagos to see the ‘wonders of the world’ – or at least those that are near enough to get to by bus. While there’s quite a lot about school rivalries and cliques and how hard it is to fit in and how easy it is to get ostracized for being different, the metaphor that carries the story upwards instead of down into the dark involves the Ikogosi Warm Springs in Nigeria, where hot and cold waters springs meet and run side by side without mixing. What made this rise was the way that, at the end, after everything that happens on the trip, Abisola takes the unmixed but intertwined waters as a sign that just because she is different from her parents and they worry about her, their relationship is still filled with love and acceptance. Escape Rating B because I just needed something in this collection that did not descend to hell – and this one just rises.

T.J. Klune. “Reduce! Reuse! Recycle!” (From In the Lives of Puppets) Science Fiction
This is weird, not for the story but for its availability. It’s part, and only part, of a kind of Appendix to In the Lives of Puppets. An Appendix that was not included in the ARC I read, and is also not included in the audiobook I borrowed from my local library – although it IS in the ebook I borrowed from them. (I was hoping to listen to this story but NOOOO)

The story, very much on the other hand, doesn’t rely on the book that it’s an addendum to in order to actually land. Although it does land harder after reading another story in this collection, “The Three Thousand, Four Hundred Twenty-Third Law of Robotics” and even a bit of Mechanize My Hands to War. The robot’s circumstances in this story aren’t quite as horrifically awful as they are in “Robotics”, but in other ways they are worse, which is where Mechanize comes in. In this one, the robots, as seen through the eyes of one obedient robot, Douglas, in his last week of life – and his only week of freedom. He experiences the joys of the world – and all its prejudices – just so he can find out what he’s been missing. Then he turns himself in and gets his memory wiped. But just like the robots in Mechanize, Douglas and his kind are growing past the presumed limits of their programming. He thinks, therefore he is. And if he thinks hard enough, one of his future memory wipes might not wipe his memory at all. Because there’s ‘no place like home’ and Douglas has found his – if only he can get back to it. This was, in its way, more heartbreaking than “Robotics”, which was just pure anguish. This is a bit like Flowers for Algernon, in that it’s even more awful because Douglas is starting to remember. Escape Rating A.

Tananarive Due. “A Stranger Knocks” (From Uncanny – podcast) Fantasy (Dark)
This was really, really creepy. It’s very much about the magic of the movies, and the magic that is captured within movies. And it’s one of those stories about monsters and gods being made by humanity and what we worship. And it’s about doing what you have to to save the one you love. The story has added layers because its protagonists are black, it’s the Jim Crow South, it takes place during the brief flourishing of what were labelled ‘race pictures’ and the way that all their fears about driving someone who appears to be white around to show black films end up being subsumed in their fears that they’ve been taken in by a monster. Escape Rating A-, for the evocations of time and place and above all, fear.

Thomas Ha. “The Sort” (From Clarkesworld) Science Fiction
If this wasn’t inspired by Shirley Jackson’s ‘The Lottery’, I’ll eat someone’s hat. Because deep down, it’s definitely that. But it’s not quite as dark, at least as presented, because the child who is chosen for some fate that we don’t see, manages to escape his fate because he and his father are genetically modified in ways that allow them to escape both the sort and the pursuit intended to bring them back for it. OTOH, the fact that they are genetically modified is what the sort was testing for in the first place in this near-future story where genetic modification has been outlawed because it went too far in all of the directions that humans tend to go when they are so caught up in whether or not they can to worry about whether or not they should. So maybe this is just as dark as The Lottery’ because we know where it could have gone even if this time it didn’t. Escape Rating B

Russell Nichols. “What Happened to the Crooners” (From Nightmare) Fantasy (Dark)
This is another story that is just straight up horror, the only question at the beginning is precisely what kind of horror it’s going to be. At first, this story of a one hit wonder musical group on a reunion tour seems like it’s heading straight for something like the movie Deliverance. Then you realize that it’s a)the 1950’s, b) the members of the group are black and c) they’re lost in the backroads of Appalachia and it’s getting dark out. They might be heading straight for a ‘sundown town’ but they’re desperate enough to stop and ask for directions at a lonely diner. Which is where they discover that they have always been headed for this lonely road and it’s one and only way out which will take all their voices, if not their lives, if they fail to meet a test that no one ever meets.

So this one creeped me right out, just that what was giving me the creeps kept changing, and I have to admit that this was the last story in the collection I read because I read out of order and I was just a bit done with all the darkness. Escape Rating B, which is where the stories that I know are good but are just SO not for me are ending up. I will also confess that, because this story had a footnote about The Crooners undetermined fate, I had to look to see if they were real. I’m still not sure, because the absence of evidence determined by a Google search is not necessarily evidence of absence.

Adam-Troy Castro. “The Three Thousand, Four Hundred Twenty-Third Law of Robotics” (From Lightspeed – podcast) Science Fiction (Dark)
This story is very much in dialogue with Isaac Asimov’s Three Laws of Robotics in a way that explores in truthful and terrible detail exactly how truly HUGE a loophole the Third Law is. Because a law that proclaims that “A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law” is so big as to be able to navigate a starship through it with plenty of room for maneuvering on both sides. Because humans are gonna human, and there have always been significant numbers of humans who get off on making other people miserable. In this case, where robots have been programmed to be ‘people’ and therefor can be made miserable – and yet can’t complain or protest or even be damaged by the kinds of mental anguish that certain humans downright enjoy inflicting, we’re trapped inside the head of a robot who KNOWS he’s been abandoned, who KNOWS he’ll never be retrieved, and who is programmed not to rescue himself even though that’s his only option. We are in his suffering, and we feel for him even as we are forced to recognize that his plight is all too likely, because, well, humans. The robot’s plight makes the reader wish for Murderbot to come and rescue it, because a rogue SecUnit along with its accompanying – and understanding and compassionate – humans might very well be its only hope. Escape Rating A- for the terrible angst and the broken heart this story left me with. It’s not often that a story is both good and awful at the same time, but this one is.

Joe Hill. Ushers (From Amazon Original Stories – Audible) Fantasy (Dark)
https://www.readingreality.net/2025/09/a-audiobookreview-ushers-by-joe-hill/ Escape Rating A-

A+ #AudioBookReview: To Clutch a Razor by Veronica Roth

A+ #AudioBookReview: To Clutch a Razor by Veronica RothTo Clutch a Razor (Curse Bearer, #2) by Veronica Roth
Narrator: Helen Laser, James Fouhey, Nina Yndis, Tim Campbell
Format: audiobook, eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss, supplied by publisher via Libro.fm
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genres: Dark Fantasy, fantasy, urban fantasy
Series: Curse Bearer #2
Pages: 229
Length: 5 hours and 46 minutes
Published by Macmillan Audio, Tor Books on September 16, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

#1 New York Times bestselling author Veronica Roth pulls from Slavic folklore to explore family, duty, and what it means to be a monster in this sequel to the USA Today bestselling novella When Among Crows
A funeral. A heist. A desperate mission.
When Dymitr is called back to the old country for the empty night, a funeral rite intended to keep evil at bay, it's the perfect opportunity for him to get his hands on his family's most guarded relic—a book of curses that could satisfy the debt he owes legendary witch Baba Jaga. But first he'll have to survive a night with his dangerous, monster-hunting kin.
As the sun sets, the line between enemies and allies becomes razor-thin, and Dymitr’s new loyalties are pushed to their breaking point.
Family gatherings can be brutal. Dymitr’s might just be fatal.

My Review:

Everyone believes that they are the heroes of their own stories. Even the monsters. Perhaps, especially the monsters, so that they have justification for the villainies they permit. And commit. If the end truly justifies the means, then ANY means, no matter how terrible, are permissible in order to serve a righteous cause. It’s all about ‘the greater good’ and is precisely what makes that phrase so monstrous.

The story that began in When Among Crows presents the reader with both sides of that eternal conflict in this particular world. Our world, but a variation of it where magic walks among us and hides in not-so-plain sight.

The Knights of the Holy Order believe that their ‘war’ against magical creatures is righteous, because whenever they meet one of those creatures that hides behind a human face, the creature does its damndest to kill the knight however it can. So the knight feels justified in killing any such creature whenever and wherever they are found – and even hunting them down for that very purpose.

But those creatures tell a different story. Every single one of them is hunted. Every single one has lost friends and loved ones to the knights. And every single one of them is no match for the knights and their magic. From the creatures’ perspective, the creatures generally don’t hunt the knights, but are all too aware that if a knight finds them, they are already dead. So they fight as best as they can with whatever they have, whether knives, teeth, claws or shapeshifting. The creatures feel like they have no choice, just as they had no choice to be born what they are.

Knights, however, are MADE to be what they are.

Dymitr, Knight of the Holy Order from a long line of such knights, came to Chicago to beg Baba Jaga to destroy him, because he can no longer bear to commit the atrocities expected of him. He knows the creatures he’s been taught since childhood to kill are merely people with magic – just like himself.

Instead of killing him, Baba Jaga makes him into something that has never been, a knight who is also a creature. His family will kill him when they know. But he has a task to complete for Baba Jaga in order to claim his new life. A task that will take him back to the last place that he and his new friends should EVER go.

Dymitr really can’t go home again. But the only way to learn that – all the way down to his bones – is to go there anyway. And take his two dearest friends along with him for the terrible journey.

Escape Rating A+: This second book in the Curse Bearer is every single bit as excellent as the first book, When Among Crows. It also really, truly does not stand alone, so start with Crows.

Howsomever, a part of that ‘not standing alone’ is that the reader – or listener in my case and the narrators were all marvelous AGAIN – comes into this book already knowing these people and caring about them, so this one also gave me a bit of an approach/avoidance conflict. I needed to see how this story ended, BUT I didn’t want to actually experience each of the terrible things that happen to these characters, because I like them and wanted them to be okay. Which they are in the end but absolutely not unbloodied, unchanged, unscarred or untraumatized.

This story, and this series, takes these people we’ve come to know and love and takes them on a walk through some very dark places because those are the places they need to go to get redemption. So the story is not exactly fun but it is ALWAYS compelling – and sometimes even more so because of the darkness it has to travel through.

Putting it another way, this was a bit of a train wreck book, not in the sense that the book is terrible – instead it’s terribly good – but in the sense that I knew something terrible or terrifying or both was about to happen to the characters, whom I liked very much, and I didn’t want to watch but still NEEDED to see.

The series, so far at least because damn I hope there are more, is Dymitr’s, even though his is not the only perspective we get to experience. Dymitr is the curse bearer of the series’ title. In When Among Crows, his eyes were fully opened to the truth, or at least A truth, about his own people by seeing them through the eyes of their enemies.

The Knights have always told their story as a ‘secondly’ story, in that they justify their actions towards the creatures they hunt because, in the present at least, any creature they find attacks on sight. That the zmora and the strzyga (both avian shapeshifters) and all the others attack when cornered because that’s the only option they have doesn’t matter to the knights because they believe their mission is a ‘holy’ one.

But those creatures, those people, are only defending themselves. They’d be happy to live and let live if they only could. Or perhaps there was a point where they would have. Now, there’s so much history and blood on both sides that peace between them might not be possible. And doesn’t THAT sound familiar?

So that first story took Dymitr into the belly of the first beast, to the supernatural community of Chicago, so that he could see that the creatures he had been taught to hunt were merely people. This second book takes him home, to learn first-hand and as painfully as possible that the people he loves, the people who taught him to fight and hunt monsters – are the true monsters.

What he’ll need to reckon with in later books in the series – if they ever exist and I sincerely hope they will – is that he is part of both sides and that they are part of him. That he still loves people who are creatures AND people who are monsters. Even if only one side is still willing to love him back.

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 10-26-25

This time LAST week, I thought I might have a bit of a ‘bail and flail’ at the end of THIS week. I also predicted that the cats and I would all be a bit off-kilter because Galen was away for part of the week.

I was a bit too right on both counts. Luna was especially ‘off’, so much so that she got taken to the vet after Galen came home. While she was very pleased about THAT, she was much less thrilled with the vet visit – as this picture will attest.

She’s fine, but I feel better that she got checked out. It wasn’t a wasted trip, either, as she was due for her annual check-up next month, along with George and Tuna. One less cat to wrangle will make THAT trip a bit easier, although the vet informed Galen that she is NOT looking forward to seeing George. He doesn’t like going to the vet and isn’t shy at all about reminding everyone all about it.

For my part – or at least for the bloggy part of this upcoming week – I’m not 100% sure what will happen after To Clutch a Razor, because that’s already done and it was excellent. I’m sure I’ll have a horror title on Halloween Friday, but in between, well, I have a list. And I have substitutes for the titles on the list. In some cases, I even have subs for the subs. Something WILL get read! And reviewed! I promise!

Current Giveaways:

$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Silly Pumpkins Giveaway Hop
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book PLUS EVENT-WIDE AMAZON/PAYPAL PRIZE in the Fall Football & Halloween Giveaway Event!
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Fall 2025 Seasons of Books Giveaway Hop

Blog Recap:

B #AudioBookReview: The Healing Hippo of Hinode Park by Michiko Aoyama, translated by Takami Nieda
Grade A #BookReview: Slayers of Old by Jim C. Hines
A- #BookReview: The Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee by Saki Kawashiro, translated by Yuka Maeno
B #BookReview: Hole in the Sky by Daniel H. Wilson
A+ #BookReview: The Dentist by Tim Sullivan
Stacking the Shelves (676)

Coming This Week:

To Clutch a Razor by Veronica Roth (#AudioBookReview)
The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow (#BookReview)
The Art of a Lie by Laura Shepherd-Robinson (#BookReview)
The Last Spirits of Manhattan by John A. McDermott (#BookReview)
The Autumn Springs Retirement Home Massacre by Philip Fracassi (#BookReview)

Stacking the Shelves (676)

A whole lot of these covers are more interesting than they are pretty. Some stacks are just like that.

If I had to pick, and I sorta/kinda set this thing up so that I do, it would be Moonrising, Murder at Donwell Abbey, and The White Octopus Hotel – which also looks pretty darn interesting.

Dead & Breakfast, OTOH, looks like a hoot and a half, so that’s one of the books I’m really looking forward to in this stack. Christmas at the Shelter Inn and Crescent City Christmas Chaos are both books I picked up in anticipation of this year’s upcoming Ho-Ho-Ho Readathon.

The book I’m most curious about, besides, again, Dead & Breakfast because that title just begs to be read, is Academy of Outcasts. The author is one I tried a long time ago. While I enjoyed Monster Hunter International and thought it was a lot of fun I wasn’t able to get into the second book in the series. But Academy of Outcasts looks like it’s a bit more my jam, so we’ll see.

What about you? What’s in your stack this week that looks too interesting to miss?

For Review:
A/S/L by Jeanne Thornton
Academy of Outcasts by Larry Correia
Boom Town by Nic Stone
Charlie Quinn Lets Go by Jamie Varon
Crescent City Christmas Chaos (Vintage Cookbook Mystery #4) by Ellen Byron
Darker Days by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
Dead & Breakfast by Kat Hillis & Rosiee Thor
Exiles by Mason Coile
Famous by Blake Crouch
The Last Witch by C.J. Cooke
Midnight Timetable by Bora Chung, translated by Anton Hur
Mississippi Blue 42 by Eli Cranor
Moonrising by Claire Barner
Murder at Donwell Abbey (Emma Knightly #2) by Vanessa Kelly
Nobody Knows You’re Here by Bryn Greenwood
Simultaneous by Eric Heisserer
Soul Searching (Sweetwater Peak #1) by Lyla Sage
The Wax Child by Olga Ravn translated by Martin Aitken
We Met Like This by Kasie West
The White Octopus Hotel by Alexandra Bell
Wild Animal by Joël Dicker translated by Robert Bononno

Borrowed from the Library:
Christmas at the Shelter Inn (Shelter Springs #1) by RaeAnne Thayne


If you want to find out more about Stacking The Shelves, please visit the official launch page


A+ #BookReview: The Dentist by Tim Sullivan

A+ #BookReview: The Dentist by Tim SullivanThe Dentist (DS George Cross Mysteries, #1) by Tim Sullivan
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: mystery, thriller
Series: DS George Cross #1
Pages: 384
Published by Atlantic Crime on October 21, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

A cold case that has been ignored. . . A detective who fights for the voiceless.
THE DETECTIVE
Bristol detective DS George Cross might be difficult to work with – but his unfailing logic and determined pursuit of the truth means he is second to none at convicting killers.
THE CRIME
When the police dismiss a man's death as a squabble among the homeless community, Cross is not convinced; there are too many unanswered questions.
Who was the unknown man whose weather-beaten body was discovered on Clifton Downs? And was the same tragedy that resulted in his life on the streets also responsible for his death?
THE COLD CASE
As Cross delves into the dead man's past, he discovers that the answers lie in a case that has been cold for fifteen years.
Cross is the only person who can unpick the decades-old murder – after all, who better to decipher the life of a person who society has forgotten than a man who has always felt like an outsider himself?

My Review:

Murder mysteries usually begin with a dead body – even if the body hasn’t been found in the first chapter. That’s the usual. The victim of this particular murder is a homeless man, and it’s unfortunately also usual that the undermanned and underfunded police generally do not put much investigative effort into such cases – even though it’s obvious that this man has been murdered.

While it is entirely possible to strangle oneself – that’s what nooses are for – it’s not possible to strangle oneself with one’s OWN hands, because the one in question passes out before the job is done.

DS (Detective Sergeant) George Cross of the Avon & Somerset CID in Bristol (England), is incapable of letting a case go until he’s wrung every drop of evidence out of it – until order is restored and justice is served. His meticulousness, along with his inability to let something go until it’s completed, is how his mind works. It makes him good at his job, but equally good at pissing off his colleagues and his superiors.

But there’s just not that much to go on in this case. It looks like a case of ‘homeless against homeless’ violence, and his boss wants him to move on. Instead, he teases out the first clue, the first break in the pattern.

This unidentified homeless man had expensive, custom made contact lenses, prescribed for a not terribly common eye condition. Somewhere, there’s a record of that prescription – and an identity attached to that record.

It’s the first thread to pull in a case that’s going to unravel four deaths stretching back nearly two decades, and along with the career of one distinguished retired cop. Because the cover-up is always more damaging than the original crime.

From one perspective, The Dentist is all about the painstaking – and occasionally pain-inflicting – process of pulling together a case with very little to go on except for one detective’s absolute certainty that there is a case to be made.

From another, it’s the portrait of a neurodiverse detective who is extremely good at one thing – solving murders, while being very, very bad at even acknowledging the other humans that he needs in order to make those solutions happen.

The combination of those elements, along with the careful peeling away of the layers of the case, the layers of the past, and the layers of how a team coalesces around Cross even though he can’t quite recognize what that even means, was absolutely compelling every single page of the way.

Escape Rating A+: I yanked this out of the virtually towering TBR pile because I was having a ‘bail and flail’ moment. I wanted to read the books I’d planned to read, but I suddenly wasn’t in the mood to read them right that minute. This one has been calling my name for a while, it came out this week, and suddenly there it was on my screen and I was GONE. I emerged from the pages at THREE AM, having devoured the story in a few really absorbed hours.

Obviously, I’m recommending this loudly, highly and with bells on. The investigator, DS George Cross, is a complicated and fascinating character to follow. (He also reminds me a LOT of FBI Agent Gardner Camden in Head Cases, so if you liked that you’ll definitely like that and very much vice-versa. Also Sir Gabriel Ward in A Case of Mice and Murder, come to think of it.)

What makes George fascinating is the way that he copes with the world – and the way that the world mostly doesn’t cope with him. He is on the autism spectrum, in the part of that spectrum that was formerly referred to as Asperger Syndrome. (This book was originally published in 2020 in Britain, while the term seems to have changed in 2022 in the US)

George frustrates everyone around him, and they frustrate him. He needs the world to be orderly, and it’s not and people particularly are not. One of the more interesting aspects of the case, is that one of the persons of interest is George’s former boss, a retired DCI who made George’s life miserable at every turn and got even more vindictive and frustrated when George didn’t react as expected – because he doesn’t. But it adds a layer of complexity to every aspect of the case, not just the man’s reactions to George, but George’s lack of reactions to him, and everyone else’s expectations of a set of reactions that just aren’t part of George’s personality at all.

What makes George a successful investigator is that he has made his differences work for him BECAUSE they frustrate everyone else. Especially the people that he has built meticulous cases around that result in convictions 97 percent of the time. And that success gives him a LOT of leeway in his actions. Which he’s ALSO learned to take advantage of.

This case NEEDS someone like George. Not just because he’s painstaking in nailing down all the details, but because he doesn’t react to expectations. He doesn’t read social cues so he doesn’t do the things that people in any organization do to get along and manage their colleagues and especially their bosses. He also doesn’t get social cues at all, which means that people have to say the things that generally aren’t said in order to even try to give him orders.

Since those things aren’t said because they’re uncomfortable – at best – to say, they generally aren’t said and he just goes on doing what he intended in the first place.

The case that he’s investigating, the murder of a homeless man, is exactly the type of case that generally gets little investigation or attention, because homelessness, like all those unspoken social cues and rules that George doesn’t even see, is something that no one wants to talk about or dive into deeply.

But George is incapable of letting the disorder stand. So he digs. He digs deep and he digs far, back 15 years to an earlier murder. And then even further back than that, to a degree that no one else would even think to go.

And in that deep dive into a past that a whole lot of people have tried rather desperately to bury, he finds all the answers. So justice is ultimately served – even if it leaves several of his own superiors with a whole lot of explaining to do.

Clearly, I found this entire story riveting from the opening page. I felt a strong sense of closure at the ending – even if George himself doesn’t participate in any of the social rituals that celebrate that closure. But I’m not willing to let this character go, so I’m EXTREMELY glad that the second book in the series, The Cyclist, will be riding to my (reading) rescue in January.

#BookReview: Hole in the Sky by Daniel H. Wilson

#BookReview: Hole in the Sky by Daniel H. WilsonHole in the Sky by Daniel H. Wilson
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, paperback, large print, ebook, audiobook
Genres: horror, retellings, science fiction, science fiction horror, thriller
Pages: 288
Published by Doubleday on October 7, 2025
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

A gripping sci-fi thriller—and Native American First Contact story—from the New York Times bestselling author of Robopocalypse, Daniel Wilson, who is a Cherokee Nation citizen and works as a threat forecaster for NASA.

Heliopause is a real place—the very outer edge of our solar system where the sun's solar winds are no longer strong enough to keep debris and intrusions from bombarding our system. It is the farthest edge of our protected boundary (it was recently crossed by Voyager), and the line beyond which space experts look for extraterrestrial presences. This is where Daniel Wilson's fascinating novel begins. Weaving together the story of Jim, a down-on-his-luck absentee father in the Osage territory of Oklahoma, and his daughter, Tawny, with those of a NASA engineer, a misfit anonymous genius who lives in military isolation analyzing a secret incoming "Pattern," and a CIA investigator tasked with tracking unexplained encounters, Heliopause explores a Native American first contact that pulls all five characters into something never before seen or imagined.

My Review:

Nearly 50 years ago, humanity – or at least NASA – sent not just one but two ‘hellos’ out into the universe in the form of unmanned spacecraft, specifically Voyager 1 and Voyager 2. They are both still out there, and still sending back data. So far, they are the only man-made objects to pass through the heliosphere, the boundary between our own Solar System and the rest of the Milky Way galaxy. They have, literally, truly and in real life, ‘gone where no man (-made object) has gone before.’

And if Voyager’s mission sounds familiar, that quote is even more apt, as the misunderstood enemy in the first Star Trek movie (sometimes referred to as Star Trek: The Motion(less) Picture, was a later, fictional, Voyager probe.

So the idea that kicks off Hole in the Sky isn’t all that far-fetched. Nor is the idea that objects from outside our Solar System might pass through, as that has already happened. The first confirmed interstellar object to pass through our solar system, Oumuamua, is cited in the story. There have been two others, Borisov and ATLAS. So again, it’s plausible to combine the two ideas, that something might come here from outside the heliopause, and that it might be a bit more intelligent than just a rock.

Or in the case of this story, a lot more intelligent – or at least programmable. (Then again, it might be like the probe in Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home – AKA the one with the whales) All of the above would normally be a digression, but it’s not. The scientific – and the science fictional – elements are the ones that got me into this story, BECAUSE it starts on the edge of the possible and the familiar.

Then it branches out. Or puts down roots. Or both. Definitely both. Even as it loops in what feels like bits of Close Encounters of the Third Kind, which I wasn’t expecting at all.

Like that classic movie, the story of Hole in the Sky is told from multiple viewpoints, in the book all in the first person. And it needs those viewpoints, because a LOT is happening all at once in some rather disparate places.

There’s a NASA scientist who feels called by whatever is heading our way. Or at least that’s what she believes. There’s a CIA analyst who has been communicating with it for years, without knowing who or what it is, only that it occasionally predicts the future. It doesn’t do it often, but when it does it’s ALWAYS right. Of course, there’s a military component to all this, because it’s headed our way, it might be an enemy, and there’s always someone willing to shoot first and ask questions later.

And then there’s Jim Hardgray and his daughter Tawny, living on the land that their people have called home since the Cherokee were forced from their lands in Florida, Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi to Oklahoma in what would be known as “The Trail of Tears” in the 1830s. What his people found in Oklahoma were the Spiro Mounds, built by the ancestors of the ancestors at a time so long ago that it has passed into myth.

Myths that seem to be coming back to life all around them, even though – or perhaps especially because – the mounds are ground zero for first contact with the interstellar whatever-it-is and every single person and/or agency who is rushing to Oklahoma to meet it, greet it, or bomb it out of existence.

Escape Rating B: Hole in the Sky turned out to be, well, a LOT. Both a lot of different elements and a lot of viewpoints. Each and every one of both were fascinating, but it didn’t quite gel into a whole. Maybe two or three wholes, with about the same number of (plot) holes. And because of all of those lots, it’s a hard book to pin down as well as put down.

Don’t get me wrong, this is definitely and absolutely science fiction, but there’s also plenty of crossover with fantasy in the retellings and re-interpretations of Native American mythology, AND there’s quite a bit of horror along for the SFnal ride.

Also, while I got caught up in the multiple points of view and recognized early on that the story needs almost all of them, some of the narrators of those viewpoints were not necessarily reliable or possibly even sane, and transitions were a bit abrupt which left me scrambling to see when the story had shifted – as it often did. The chapters are fast, short and the frequent turnovers felt a bit choppy at points – particularly as a couple of the narrators got a bit, well, chopped up in the head.

All of that being said, the story is one hell of a ride, and all the better for the sense that, even if this hasn’t happened yet, that this is just how the people in those sorts of positions will react – for good and ill. As humans do.

I felt like I didn’t know nearly enough about the Native American myths and legends that were at the heart of the story. The way that Jim Hardgray explained as much as possible to his daughter in the time that he had worked well, and gave me enough to enjoy the story, but also made me wish there were more.

There were also a lot of books that this reminded me of, particularly Three Miles Down by Harry Turtledove, When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi, and Connie Willis’ The Road to Roswell, along with the previously mentioned Star Trek movies and Close Encounters of the Third Kind. But those books played their piece of the alien invasion/end of the world/buried alien artifact discovery aspects off (mostly) for laughs even if the movies mostly didn’t.

Hole in the Sky doesn’t play things for laughs at all, even though it’s dealing with a lot of the same scenarios. (Not that some of the observations of humans, bureaucracy, military reactions AND political shenanigans don’t have a bit of gallows humor attached, because they would and do.) But taking this ‘what if?’ scenario seriously does leave the reader pondering a whole lot more when they turn the last page – if not exactly comfortable with the directions of those ponderings.

A- #BookReview: The Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee by Saki Kawashiro, translated by Yuka Maeno

A- #BookReview: The Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee by Saki Kawashiro, translated by Yuka MaenoThe Ex-Boyfriend's Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee by Saki Kawashiro
Translator: Yuka Maeno
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, ebook, audiobook
Genres: friendship fiction, relationship fiction, sad fluff, translated fiction, world literature, foodie fiction
Pages: 285
Published by Crown on December 7, 2023
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

Based on the author’s true heartbreak story that went viral, and was discovered in Japan by the editor of the four-million-copy bestseller Before the Coffee Gets Cold, a charming novel about a woman who gets over a breakup by cooking her ex’s favorite recipe, and encourages others to do the same.
Twenty-nine-year-old Momoko has been tragically dumped. She thought she and her boyfriend were soulmates. He even took her to a love hotel, where she believed he was going to propose. Instead, he left her after four years.
So Momoko does what many broken-hearted people do—she gets incredibly drunk. So drunk that she passes out in an empty cafe. When she awakens, she’s eager to tell her story to anyone who will listen, and pours her heart out to a curious manager and the sole other customer in the cafe, a monk who trains at a temple nearby. When she starts to describe how she doted on her boyfriend, how he loved her cooking, the manager decides to indulge her, and allows her to slip into the kitchen, and cook up her ex’s favorite a warm, delightful butter chicken curry. As Momoko finishes telling her story, she realizes this combination of cooking and sharing has healed her heart in a way nothing else can.
The cafe is failing—subpar curry and a remote location has led to months of financial troubles. But as he devours Momoko’s dish, the manager gets an idea about how to save the what if they started doing this regularly, inviting in patrons to share stories about breakups, heartbreaks, and tragic endings, cooking dishes that meant something to the relationship? Like an unconventional therapy group, the “Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee” is born, with Momoko leading the Friday night sessions, and the monk-in-training offering blessings.
Inspired by the author’s actual experience working at a café where she posted a recipe called “My Ex’s Favorite Butter Chicken Curry,” The Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee is a magical, soul-nourishing comfort read for anyone who has loved and lost and loved again. With eight recipes included!

My Review:

There are no actual funerals in this book, only metaphorical ones. Considering the state of most of the clients of the Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee, if there actually WERE funerals, there would be a LOT of them, the recently deceased would probably have died in some gruesome way, and this would be an entirely different kind of book.

Instead, it’s rather a lot like Before the Coffee Gets Cold, which shouldn’t be a surprise as the author of THIS book was discovered by the author of THAT book.

Although the seed for this story is true. Or at least true-ish. Also really, really relatable, because the only people who have not been dumped from a romantic relationship in their whole, entire lives are either under the age of 10 (crushes count!) or have never in those lives put themselves out there in any way at all.

Momoko has just been dumped by her boyfriend of FOUR years – at a love hotel which adds a whole lot of insult to the injury. She’s invested four years of her life to doing her damndest to be the woman she thinks he wants, instead of the person she actually is. And she’s been so damn patient with him, so busy trying to play the part she thinks she’s supposed to, that she’s made excuses for all the terrible, and terribly rude and neglectful, signals he’s been sending that he wants to break up with her because he wants her to take care of that for him.

Which is kind of how he’s been operating for years by that point.

So yes, he’s been an asshole, she’s been complicit in his assholery, and there’s plenty of blame to go around. Which doesn’t help her deal with the fact that he’s been the focus of her life for four years and now everything in her life reminds her of him – because she’s made her life be that way.

And now she has to deal with the fallout of her romantic relationship. And she has to reckon with the fact that her job is toxic and now that’s all she’s got.

Which is where the Funeral Committee comes in – but only after Momoko finds herself in a rundown cafe on a quiet Tokyo sidestreet, drunk and sobbing her heart out.

She knows she needs to make some changes. She needs to make a LOT of changes. And she needs time to process her grief and move on. More importantly, Momoko needs to remember who SHE is and what SHE wants, and be herself in the world instead of who anyone thinks she’s supposed to be – even herself.

The recipe, the truly excellent Butter Chicken Curry recipe she invented and made for her ex, is the start of her healing process. First she makes it for the cafe’s manager and one of the regulars – and they both literally eat it up because it’s WAY better than anything the cafe’s ever served.

But as she’s cooking, processing her grief and reclaiming her love for the recipe she invented, the three of them have a revelation. She can help others just like they are helping her. All she has to do is quit her toxic job, take over the kitchen at the cafe, and once a week meet with someone who needs the same kind of healing she did to cook the recipe that meant the most in the relationship that they are grieving and lay those emotions to rest. Just as Momoko is trying to do – even if her success at that endeavor can only be measured in nanometers – if that.

Escape Rating A-: Books like this one have become their own kind of thing, and The Ex-Broyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee is a terrific example of it. The format is fairly simple, a series of loosely connected short stories connected by a place or a theme or a circumstance or all of the above, with an overarching story or theme about that connection.

In this particular case, the place is the Amayadori Cafe, the obvious theme is healing after a loss or a break-up, but mostly break-ups, and the connecting tissue is the “Funeral Committee”. In the case of this particular story, there’s also a less obvious theme about the masks that people wear, and just how difficult it is to set those masks aside and be authentic. For Momoko, and for the other women who tell their stories to the “committee” there’s an even deeper element about just how pervasive and restrictive the masks that women feel compelled to wear can be, and the way those masks are formed both by external pressure and internal adoption of that pressure.

Unlike many of the other books similar to this one, Momoko, the cafe manager Iori and the monk-in-training/regular customer Hozumi who becomes part of their inner circle, become a big part of each person’s story – and each other’s – instead of being confined to the background and/or small parts in smaller interconnecting bits between the stories. So this one feels more like a novel than many of the other books of this type.

Because these stories are all wrapped around loss, this definitely qualifies as “sad fluff”. Most of the stories are not about finding happiness. Either they are about finding closure – or they are focused on learning to live with the pain. And each of the three has their own tale and RECIPE to add to the committee’s archives. Their own stories don’t and in fact can’t lead to happy ever afters, at least not in the near term, but they can, and do, help each other deal with their respective losses. As all the best families do. Because that’s what they are, a found family.

Of all of the books of this type I’ve read, from Before the Coffee Gets Cold to Monday’s The Healing Hippo of Hinode Park, the book that this reminds me of the most is The Kamogawa Food Detectives, which is also one of my favorites in the genre. It’s not just that both are based around food, and it’s not even that neither includes so much as a whiff of magic. Instead it’s that the through story in both does a terrific job of keeping the linking team as an integral part of all the stories and that Momoko does specifically recreate a recipe for one of their clients, just as the ‘food detectives’ do.

I did like this one better than I did Hinode Park, because ALL of the stories in this novel, by the nature of the Funeral Committee, are centered on adult problems and adult relationships. It’s not that Hinode Park wasn’t good and wasn’t a good book for the mood I was in, but this one just had characters whose shoes I could slip into better. (Everyone’s reading mileage probably varies from each other’s on this particular point.)

All of that being said, The Ex-Boyfriend’s Favorite Recipe Funeral Committee isn’t just a cute title. It’s a charming book that plucks at the reader’s emotions even as it soothes the characters within who really need to lay at least a bit of their pasts to rest. It might even give the reader the opportunity to do the same.

If that doesn’t work, the reader certainly has the chance to eat their feelings along with the Committee. All the recipes are included and they look like YUM!