Originally published in March 2008 with illustrations by Brett Helquist as part of the celebrations of World Book Day, Neil Gaiman’s story of twelve year old Norseman Odd
“History is the stories that leave a mark, the past that refuses to stay past.” It was in 2010 that Justin Cronin’s breakthrough novel The Passage was published,
It’s always far away. It’s always someone else. The terrible thing never happens to you. The apocalypse never comes in your lifetime. It was somewhere in Russia, a
It’s been quite a few years since Ken MacLeod last went into out space, the arena to which the divided protagonists aspired in his first novel, The Star
Jupiter, the lord of the solar system which dwarfs the other planets, has featured prominently in mythology, astronomy, and science fiction, notably in the work of the legendary
Central Station, Tel Aviv; like any station, there is a mix of travellers of all nationalities, even species, and commerce; being Tel Aviv, there is an undercurrent of
The past year has been a whirlwind for Benedict Carrington, the death of both his parents, his introduction to former astronaut turned industrialist Jason Truby, his involvement with
Since their launch in 2009, Arrow Video have released over two hundred cult titles, often previously unavailable in the UK or long since deleted, in most cases as
The ever shifting chameleon of fantastic literature, China Miéville’s first publication since the short story collection Three Moments of an Explosion last year, the novella This Census-Taker is