We live in a society in which automation has become so commonplace that its absence is more surprising than its presence, from suggestions which prompt our next online
Jasmine Bashara lives in a coffin in Conrad Down 15, an address which says everything about the circumstances which, despite her vast potential, have brought her to such
Published alongside their retrospective consideration or our nearest celestial body, Moonrise – The Golden Age of Lunar Adventures, the British Library also look further afield to our next
Following their comprehensive collection of essays published late last year, Science Fiction: A Literary History, the British Library continue their exploration of the realms of that genre with
In the Suthern lands across the waters of the Abus, King Osbert is weak, a fool who is afraid even of lightning and easily manipulated by Queen Aramilla
It’s been eighteen years since Alastair Reynolds’ first novel set in Revelation Space was released, though earlier short stories had introduced that universe, and it has remained his
A clinical psychologist who specialises in adult development, Doctor Meg Jay has drawn on her considerable experience and insight given her by her work in her new book