

Book Review: The Graveyard Book, by Neil Gaiman
Neil Gaiman’s made a living by playing with our notions of how things work. In American Gods, he asked what would happen if the people of...
2 min read


Book Review: Neverwhere, by Neil Gaiman
In Neil Gaiman’s Neverwhere, Richard Mayhew is yanked out of his ordinary London existence when he finds a girl bleeding in the streets....
2 min read


New Release: The Red Wraith Is Available in Print!
Hi everyone, I hope you had a great Thanksgiving, and gained less weight than I did:) Just wanted to let you know that Edge Science...
1 min read


Book Review: Wizard and Glass, by Stephen King
Wizard and Glass, the fourth installment in Stephen King’s Dark Tower series, might have the strangest structure of any novel I’ve read....
2 min read


Book Review: Ghost Talkers, by Mary Robinette Kowal
All too often, soldiers make the ultimate sacrifice. But what if death didn’t relieve them of their duties? What if the fallen still had...
1 min read


Book Review: The Glass Magician, by Charlie Holmberg
Like its predecessor The Paper Magician, Charlie Holmberg’s The Glass Magician is crisp, creative, and vaguely unsatisfying. Ceony, the...
1 min read


Book Review: The Waste Lands, by Stephen King
The Dark Tower series, as Stephen King explained in his introduction to its first book, The Gunslinger, is essentially his Lord of the...
2 min read


Book Review: The Paper Magician, by Charlie Holmberg
For a book that clocks in at only 226 pages, Charlie Holmberg’s The Paper Magician sure delves into a lot of backstory. Stranger still,...
2 min read


Book Review: The Drawing of the Three, by Stephen King
Most authors wouldn’t start the second installment in a seven-book series by maiming the protagonist. But The Drawing of the Three was...
2 min read


Book Review: American Gods, by Neil Gaiman
Did gods create the people of Earth to believe in them? Or did the people of Earth create gods by believing in them? In American Gods,...
2 min read