John Scalzi's debut novel uses the military science fiction genre as a vehicle for a story deserving of its Hugo Award nomination.
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Book Review: The Places in Between by Rory Stewart
Anyone who calls Rory Stewart's tale of his walk across Afghanistan in the middle of winter simply a travelogue is as crazy as Stewart's idea.
Read More »Book Review: Londonstani by Gautam Malkani
Distinctive narration by a "rudeboy" helps drive a debut novel exploring life and conflict in multicultural London.
Read More »Book Review: Beyond Armageddon, edited by Walter M. Miller Jr. and Martin Greenberg
Twenty years after it was released, a collection of post-apocalyptic stories remains relevant today.
Read More »Book Review: Sunshine Assassins by John F. Miglio
A colorable premise of a near-future America controlled by huge conglomerates and fundamentalist Christians loses its way and its power in its execution.
Read More »Book Review: Hotel California by Barney Hoskyns
A British music journalist explores the rise of the counterculture-based "Southern California sound" of the late 1960s and its commercialization in the 1970s.
Read More »Book Reviews: The Game by Ken Dryden, and The Rebel League by Ed Willes
Exploring the "new NHL" through books documenting professional hockey's recent past.
Read More »Book Review: Indefensible by David Feige
Despite problems with flow and an occasional bent toward invective, a Bronx public defender gives insight into the world of indigent defense.
Read More »Book Review: New Light by Annette Gilson
Annette Gilsono's debut novel surprises with a blend of utopian literature, chaos theory and New Age concepts.
Read More »Book Review: Crazy by Pete Earley
Pete Earley uses a journalist's eye in a personal and compelling exploration of America's mentally ill and its mental health system.
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