Showing posts with label Fantasy-Urban. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fantasy-Urban. Show all posts

Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Review: King Sorrow

 

King Sorrow by Joe Hill is, quite simply, one of the most extraordinary reading experiences I have had in years. It is a novel of memory, imagination, grief and creative obsession, wrapped in prose so rich and immersive that it seems to breathe. Long after finishing it, I found myself returning to its images and ideas, replaying certain passages in my mind. It has become one of my all time favourites.

At its heart, King Sorrow is a story about childhood invention and the dangerous power of stories themselves. Hill takes what could have been a familiar premise and transforms it into something unsettlingly original. The narrative moves between past and present with assurance, gradually revealing how a game born in youthful imagination acquires a terrible weight in adulthood. The depth of the storytelling is remarkable. Every thread feels deliberate, every character carefully drawn. There is a sense that nothing is incidental, that even the smallest detail may carry a quiet, accumulating dread.

Central to the novel’s power is its antagonist. King Sorrow himself stands among the most chilling figures I have encountered in fiction. He is not frightening merely because of what he does, but because of what he represents. He embodies the persistence of old fears, the way stories can outgrow their creators, and the unsettling possibility that imagination has teeth. Hill resists the urge to overexplain him, which makes him all the more disturbing. King Sorrow feels mythic and intimate at once, a presence that seeps into the margins of the narrative and waits patiently. The tension he generates is sustained and at times almost unbearable.

Hill’s language plays a crucial role in this effect. His prose is lush without being indulgent, textured yet precise. There are passages that feel almost dreamlike, lulling the reader into a false sense of calm. The rhythms of the sentences slow, the imagery softens, and it is easy to drift along, absorbed in nostalgia or reflection. Then, with unnerving control, Hill tightens the screws. The tension ramps up swiftly, often within the space of a paragraph, transforming a quiet moment into something sharp and threatening. That interplay between comfort and menace is handled with consummate skill.

The audiobook production elevates an already exceptional novel into something truly special. The stellar voice cast brings distinct perspectives and emotional nuance to the narrative. Each performer inhabits their character fully, lending authenticity to shifting viewpoints and timelines. The differentiation between voices is clear without ever feeling theatrical. Instead, it feels intimate, as though each character is confiding directly in the listener.

What makes this ensemble performance so effective is the way the voices complement Hill’s prose. When the language drifts into its more lyrical passages, the narrators lean into the softness, allowing the words to wash over the listener. When dread begins to gather, subtle changes in tone and pacing signal the shift before the text makes it explicit. The moments of confrontation, particularly those involving King Sorrow, are delivered with a restraint that heightens their impact. The horror is allowed to unfold naturally, without exaggeration.

Beyond its scares, King Sorrow succeeds because of its emotional honesty. It understands the bonds of childhood friendship, the way shared imagination can create both refuge and risk. It acknowledges the cost of growing up, of leaving parts of oneself behind, and the temptation to revisit old stories in search of comfort. That emotional grounding ensures that the horror never feels gratuitous. It matters because the characters matter.

In the end, this is a novel that feels both expansive and deeply personal. Its world is fully realised, its antagonist unforgettable, and its prose beautifully controlled. Combined with a superb multi voice narration that enriches every scene, King Sorrow stands as a landmark achievement. It is unsettling, poignant and masterfully told, and it has secured a permanent place among my most treasured reads.

Buy your copy here

Tuesday, 3 February 2026

Review: Desperate Measures

 

Convergence: Desperate Measures as an audiobook is a familiar, comfortable listen for fans of Craig Alanson, even if it doesn’t push the overall story forward as much as some might hope. The standout, once again, is the narration by R.C. Bray. Bray’s performance is polished, energetic, and full of personality; he nails the comedic timing, differentiates characters clearly, and injects just enough attitude and warmth to keep the listening experience engaging even during slower stretches.

Alanson’s trademark humour is very much on display. The banter, dry observations, and absurd situations land well in audio form, often earning genuine laughs thanks to Bray’s delivery. That said, the story itself can feel like it’s treading water at times. There’s a noticeable sense that events are being stretched out, with plot developments that circle rather than surge ahead. Because of this, the book often feels like a side-quest—entertaining and thematically consistent, but not essential to the main narrative arc.

Still, “side-quest” doesn’t mean “bad.” The characters remain fun to spend time with, the world-building continues to charm, and the pacing is smooth enough to make it an easy, enjoyable listen. Overall, Desperate Measures is a broadly positive audiobook experience, elevated significantly by excellent narration, even if it feels more like a detour than a major step forward.

buy your copy here

Review: Twelve Months

 

Twelve Months on Audible feels like a necessary pause and a gift. Jim Butcher steps back from apocalyptic momentum to let Harry Dresden breathe—and grieve—and that choice lands especially well in audio. James Marsters continues to be the gold standard for the series. His performance has matured alongside Dresden, and here he brings a quieter, more fragile register without ever losing the bite or humor that defines the character.

In the wake of Murphy’s death, you can hear the weight Dresden carries in every line. Marsters doesn’t oversell the pain; he lets silences, hesitations, and softened sarcasm do the work. As the months pass, that grief slowly reshapes into resolve, and the narration tracks that recovery with impressive emotional precision. It feels earned, not rushed.

Structurally, Twelve Months widens the lens. Rather than one central crisis, we get a mosaic of relationships, obligations, and consequences. It’s a deep breath before the plunge, a chance to take stock of where everyone stands before the endgame accelerates. That broader scope could feel unwieldy, but Butcher handles the ensemble cast with confidence. Familiar voices and new faces each get distinct moments, and Marsters differentiates them cleanly, making even crowded scenes easy to follow.

The result is an audiobook that’s reflective without being slow, intimate without being small. Twelve Months reminds you why this series matters.

Buy your copy here

Thursday, 13 May 2021

Review: Locke & Key

Locke & Key
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

Based on the best-selling, award-winning graphic novel series Locke & Key - written by acclaimed suspense novelist Joe Hill (NOS4A2, Horns) and illustrated by Gabriel Rodriguez - this multi-cast, fully dramatized audio production brings the images and words to life.

A brutal and tragic event drives the Locke family from their home in California to the relative safety of their ancestral estate in Lovecraft, Massachusetts, an old house with powerful keys and fantastic doors that transform all who dare to walk through them. As siblings Tyler, Kinsey, and Bode Locke discover the secrets of the old house, they also find that it's home to a hate-filled and relentless creature that will not rest until it forces open the most terrible door of them all....

Featuring performances by Haley Joel Osment (Entourage, The Sixth Sense), Tatiana Maslany (Orphan Black), Kate Mulgrew (Orange Is the New Black, Star Trek: Voyager), Joe Hill, Gabriel Rodriguez, and Stephen King (The Stand, 11-22-63), as well as a cast of more than 50 voice actors, this audio production preserves the heart-stopping impact of the graphic novel's astounding artwork through the use of richly imagined sound design and a powerful original score.

Well this book was a real slog for me. I've never read Joe Hills' original comic books but I did find the Netflix adaptation engaging and so decided to give this a try.

It's not that the story is bad, it isn't, it's way more that the characters are bad and their portrayal in this full-cast audiobook is dire to say the least.



Thursday, 18 March 2021

Review: What Abigail Did That Summer

What Abigail Did That Summer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Ghost hunter, fox whisperer, troublemaker.

 It is the summer of 2013, and Abigail Kamara has been left to her own devices. This might, by those who know her, be considered a mistake. While her cousin, police constable and apprentice wizard Peter Grant, is off in the sticks chasing unicorns Abigail is chasing her own mystery. Teenagers around Hampstead Heath have been going missing but before the police can get fully engaged the teens return home—unharmed but vague about where they've been. Aided only by her friend Simon, her knowledge that magic is real and a posse of talking foxes that think they're spies, Abigail must venture into the wilds of Hampstead to discover who is luring the teenagers and importantly—why?

Set during Peter's sojourn to Herefordshire (see Foxglove Summer) we find that while the furore of the missing children there is ongoing there's a lesser mystery occurring in Hampstead. Children are going missing only to return with no memory of where they've been... Abigail is intrigued to say the least.

I found What Abigail Did That Summer to be a lovely if a little short jump into the life of one of the more interesting side characters of the series. Abigail is presented as a smart, caring and, most of all, capable protagonist. Possibly a little too capable for a very inexperienced teenager... mind you the arrogance of youth and all that. Abigail is aided in this adventure by Simon, who I think won't be much of a recurring character and one of the wonderful talking foxes first seen in the graphic novel Cry Fox. I really enjoyed this Audible version of the story although I found Shvorne Marks' the tiniest bit off-putting with her not using Abigail's dialect (know what I mean bruv innit) as written by Aaronovitch, not a deal breaker by any means but a touch off.
The story is, as you'd expect, much less police procedural and more Famous Five meets Sapphire and Steel which i found to be very refreshing.

I think we'll be seeing Abigail and her foxy friends a lot more in the future and that's no bad thing.



Saturday, 6 March 2021

Review: Chalk

Chalk
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Paul Cornell plumbs the depths of magic and despair in Chalk, a brutal exploration of bullying in 80s England.
Andrew Waggoner has always hung around with his fellow losers at school, desperately hoping each day that the school bullies, led by Drake, will pass him by in search of other prey. But one day they force him into the woods, and the bullying escalates into something more; something unforgivable; something unthinkable.
Broken, both physically and emotionally, something dies in Waggoner, and something else is born in its place.
In the hills of the West Country a chalk horse stands vigil over a site of ancient power, and there Waggoner finds in himself a reflection of rage and vengeance, a power and persona to topple those who would bring him low.

From Tom Brown's School Days to Carrie via Lord of the Flies children casually inflicting horrors on each other has been a mainstay of literature for a long, long, time. Chalk takes this and weave a gripping tale of magic and vengeance. Our protagonist is Andrew Waggoner, one of those kids destined to be seen as a punching bag by the school's bullies, who after a particularly terrible attack leaves him disfigured finds he can't go to the ineffective adults of the story... after all snitches get stitches as the saying goes.
In pain, fear, and desperation Waggoner calls out to a much older, darker power who surprisingly answers. It's from here that Chalk really hits its stride.

The calm, almost matter of fact way Johnathan Broadbent narrates the story only makes Cornell's horror the more riveting. For me it was this dry, emotionless delivery that really made the story hit home. This isn't a mile a minute kind of story so when the action does ramp up and get a bit frenetic it makes it all the more effective. Anyway I'm finding it tough to put into words exactly what I liked about this so I'll wrap up. Read this book, better yet get the audio version like I did and have a man with a mellow Wiltshire accent tell you one of the most horrific stories I've ever heard.



Friday, 26 February 2021

Review: The Sandman

The Sandman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

The Sandman is a full cast adaptation of the comic book / graphic novel series by Neil Gaiman. This Audible Original edition covers the events of the first three volumes: Preludes & Nocturnes, The Doll House, and Dream Country

Torn from his realm, The Sandman - Morpheus, the immortal king of dreams, stories and the imagination – was imprisoned on earth for decades. On escaping he must restore his power, descend into hell to face Lucifer, chase rogue nightmares, visit a serial killer convention and cross paths with characters from DC comic books, ancient myths, and real-world history.
Audible and DC present the first in a series of audio adaptations of Neil Gaiman’s best-selling graphic novels, adapted and directed by multi-award-winner Dirk Maggs, performed by an ensemble cast with James McAvoy in the title role, and accompanied by an original score by James Hannigan. As narrator, Neil Gaiman will lead you through this dark, literary world in a twisting fantasy journey of myth, imagination and terror.

I really liked this, like a lot. After that I'm not sure there's much to say so gimmie a minute...
...right I've had a bit of a think and I've come up with some specific things I liked and one that took me out of the narrative for a second but really isn't a big deal.
First off I liked just how little had been changed for the audio play. As far as I can recall there wasn't a single thing (except that thing I alluded to before). Not one of the cast sounded like they were phoning it in or just there for the cheque and each voice was spot on. The effort each and everyone one of them put in for an audio play speaks volumes for their talent and dedication. The soundtrack and incidental music were just right though a small number of the louder, higher pitched sounds were distinctly unfriendly to headphones users.
Now on to that one teeny, tiny, niggle...
...they gender swapped Lucien. I'm only raising it as an issue because otherwise I just come off as a frothing fanboy and I'll admit it did take me out of the story in a "huh, Lucien as a woman. Never thought of that" kind of way.

If you're a fan of The Sandman, Gaiman in general or just like good quality listening materiel I cannot recommend this enough. If on the other hand you're a philistine give it a miss.



Review: Rivers of London: The Fey and the Furious

Rivers of London Volume 8: The Fey and the Furious
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rivers of London: The Fey and the Furious is the eighth collected volume of the Rivers of London comic book. This volume is made up of four issues of the comic book.

Set immediately after Lies Sleeping, The Fey and the Furious begins with DC Peter Grant still on suspension from the Met and a young Essex boy racer found dead in a Dutch dyke (No... stop it! Filthy mind you have!) with cargo of illicit produce in his boot. Peter and the Muslim Ninja, Sahra Guleed, are despatched off to Essex to infiltrate local street racing rings. Things soon take a turn for the "weird bollocks" when the race route goes through fairyland...

I want to start this review with my congratulations on the pun title, great work, now stop it or I'm calling the police. This story only missing a Vin Diesel character to be The Fast and the Furious with fairies and I love it. This one has just the right balance of call backs and returning characters to give the new thing a place to breathe. Beverley Brook is also given more to do in this than just being Peter's girlfriend (I know she gets more of a role in the main series) which is good.

I know I've said this before for others in the series but this one really is the best one so far. Read it, read it now!



Thursday, 25 February 2021

Review: Rivers of London: Action at a Distance

Rivers of London Volume 7: Action at a Distance
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Rivers of London: Action at a Distance is the seventh collected volume of the Rivers of London comic book. This volume is made up of four issues of the comic book.

In a Harry Dresden meets Springheel Jack tale Nightingale mourns the loss of a friend while Peter reads of them pursuing the nefarious Fischer from Windscale to London and back again.

At last a story where Nightingale is the protagonist! I've been waiting for this for a while now and was not disappointed. Nightingale as a protagonist is witty, charming, ruthless and has more tricks up his sleeve than Paul Daniels.

I liked this a lot, in fact it's fair to say this is probably my favourite RoL graphic novel so far. We're also treated to a new artist for this volume with Brian Williamson doing the honours.

Like the others this isn't essential reading but it is a ripping good yarn.



Wednesday, 24 February 2021

Review: Rivers of London: Water Weed

Rivers of London Volume 6: Water Weed
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Rivers of London: Water Weed is the sixth collected volume of the Rivers of London comic book taking place between The Hanging Tree and Lies Sleeping. This volume comprises of four issues of the comic book.

After two of the less well-behaved River goddesses, Chelsea and Olympia, decide to "tax" a drugs mule using the Thames as a highway, Peter Grant and Beverley Brook find themselves drawn into a cannabis smuggling operation with weird magical connotations.

While I liked the story I found the sexualisation of the younger goddesses a bit off putting and the sex scene was just unnecessary. That being said the "police procedural" aspects of the story were as good as any you'll see on TV with and interesting and unexpected antagonist.

If you can look past the parts mentioned this is a good story but I'm afraid they're there and pretty in your face.



Review: Rivers of London: Cry Fox

Rivers of London: Cry Fox: Volume 5
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rivers of London: Cry Fox is the fifth collected volume of the Rivers of London comic book. This volume carries on the trend of consisting of four collected issues of the comic book.

Following on from the story in Night Witch vengeful Russian mobsters are looking to hire members of London's demi-monde (the umofficial society consisting of minor magic users and supernatural creatures) to bring bloody retribution down on the witch Varvara Sidorovna Tamonina. However, the ex-Soviet sorcerer is under the protective wing of London's own wizarding cop, DC Peter Grant, and to get the attention of Grant and his colleagues, the the daughter of a prominent Russian oligarch is kidnapped by parties unknown but possibly fox-like. What makes it worse is that Peter is going to have to leave his beloved London and go out into the countryside.

Cry Fox features one of slimiest gits to ever grace the page, Reynard Fossman, as the main antagonist. What with his sociopathic tendencies and serious paedo vibes I just can't abide this character... but then again I'm not supposed to. I was expecting Abigail to be a little more present in the story, possibly even the protagonist, after all the hints in the main novel series but alas she was somewhat relegated to a secondary character. I did like the not very well hidden twist but it was so obviously flagged as to be none existent as a twist.

Again with these graphic novels it adds to the mythos without being essential reading. Do you need to read it? No, as I've said it's not essential. Should you read it if you like RoL? Bloody right you should.



Review: Rivers of London: Detective Stories

Rivers of London, Volume 4: Detective Stories
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Rivers of London: Detective Stories is the fourth collected volume of the Rivers of London comic book. This volume collects four issues unlike the previous three that were five issues each.

The framing device for this volume is PC Peter Grant's detective exam with each comic book detailing a different story... so a volume of one shots if you will.

Do these stories add to the Rivers of London mythos / lore? Well... yeah they do.
Are they any good? they're ok... and that's the rub. They're only ok, not great, not bad, just ok. Still we can't expect earthshattering genius in every story right? Right?

The art work remains of the highest quality and as I've skimmed through the other volumes where the quality doesn't change I don't think I'll mention it again... unless there's a dip...

Knowing there's a small dip in story quality would I recommend this volume to a friend? All in all I think I would, if only for completionist reasons. Is it essential reading? No, but none of these graphic novel / comic book adventures are.



Review: Rivers of London: Black Mould

Rivers of London: Black Mould
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rivers of London Black Mould is the third volume of the collected Rivers of London comic book. This volume consists of five collected issues of the comic book.

Set between Foxglove Summer and The Hanging Tree Black Mould tells the tale of Peter's colleague, Muslim ninja and possible trusty sidekick, Sahra Guleed, discovering a mould problem in the house of a friend. But what at first seems just a virulent fungus takes a far darker turn when the mould attacks Guleed, piquing Peter's interest and suggesting something far more dangerous...

Now this is more like it! Black Mould is probably the first of these graphic novels to really capture the feel of the main novels. Aaronovitch and Cartmel seem to have hit their stride here and I for one could not be happier. With echoes of Marvel's Venom this is the best of the graphic novels so far.. miss this one at your peril.



Review: Rivers of London: Night Witch

Rivers of London: Night Witch
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Rivers of London: Night Witch is the second of seven (at time of writing) collected volumes of the Rivers of London comic book. This time we're treated to some fleshing out of one of the more interesting side-characters, Varvara Sidorovna Tamonina, the Russian magic user first seen in Whispers Under Ground.

The plot of the volume covers the daughter of Russian tycoon Nestor Yakunin being kidnapped, apparently by a Leshy, a creature from the forests of his homeland - a long way from Kent where the kidnapping occurred.

Aaronovitch and Cartmel have succeeded in their endeavour to flesh out the world of PC Peter Grant with an engaging tale enhanced by the art work from Lee Sullivan.

As before it's not necessary to read this volume but it will make your experience of the River of London somewhat deeper.



Review: Rivers of London: Body Work

Rivers of London: Body Work
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Ever wonder what would happen if Christine ended up in a breakers yard?

Ever wondered just how Constable Guleed got involved with the Folly (or "weird bollocks" as our friend DCI Alexander Seawoll would say)?

Well wonder no longer for all this and more is in Rivers of London: Body Work

Rivers of London: Body Work is the collected volume of the five part comic series and fills in some (oh I hate this word) lore or background in a short side story.

The art work in this volume is delightful as is the main story. I particularly liked the Tales From the Folly shorts at the end where we're treated to some very funny stuff

I think the comic book / graphic novel format suits Rivers of London very well for these shorter tales and as I've mentioned the art style here is perfect for the tone. All in all this (and I'm assuming the other volumes) are maybe not essential to fans of Peter Grant but they are a delightful addition filling in a few gaps.