Under the Dome: The Enemy Within

The final episode of Under the Dome is here and in the first few minutes of this rushed finale we see how far this show has come from being the simple story of some minor league TV actors trapped under a dome. Barbie is digging a grave in the forest.

Barbie: Dr. Bloom deserves a burial.

Julia Shumway: I know how hard this is for you. She was our last hope of finding a cure for your daughter.

Daughter? Cure? Dr. Bloom? Whut? Just two lines reveal how far we’ve strayed, so let’s take a listen to the opening monologue the way it should sound now…

[Read more]

The Stargate Rewatch: Universe Season Two

Stargate Universe Season 2
Executive producers: Robert C. Cooper, Brad Wright, Joseph Malozzi, Paul Mullie
Original air dates: September 28, 2010 – May 9, 2011

Mission briefing. Telford survived his shootout with Kiva, which is more than can be said for Kiva. Her replacement, Dannic, is nuts, and can’t even keep his own people’s loyalty. Johansen is wounded by gunfire, and loses her baby, though she experiences a vision of the baby being rescued by the crew who stayed on Eden. The stones are used to bring medical personnel on board to heal the wounded.

[Holy crap, we dialed Pittsburgh!]

Series: Stargate Rewatch

The Dragonlance Chronicles Reread: Dragons of Winter Night Part 1, Prelude and Chapter 1

Welcome back to our reread of the Dragonlance Chronicles!

We hope you enjoyed the brief break—and our excellent guest Highlords—but enough faffing around. There are dragons to slay, lances to find, Gemstone mysteries to solve and love triangles to flatten out as we begin the second book, Dragons of Winter Night. Plus, we missed Raistlin.

We last saw the party at Goldmoon and Riverwind’s wedding (wasn’t her dress fabulous?). Let’s see what they’ve been up to since then.

[‘Cause we were both young when I first saw you]

Series: Dragonlance Reread

Now We Got Bat Blood HEY

The folks at How It Should Have Ended have given us a twofer parody of Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice and Taylor Swift’s star-studded, sci-fi-inspired “Bad Blood” music video with their new video, “Bat Blood.” Yep, this is about how we imagine Batman v Superman will go, with Bruce Wayne racking up the famous allies—Valhalla, Hocus Pocus, Fist-Bump, and The Scoundrel, among others—to face off against Supes and his crew.

Afternoon Roundup brings you lunar cautionary tales, why every game franchise should have a Super Mario Maker version, and animating Disney in virtual reality!

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Run for Your Wife! Covering The End of the World Running Club

Born in the bush suburbs of Sydney to a Scot seeking inspiration and a passionate actress from Lancashire, Adrian J. Walker first found success as author when he self-published From the Storm in 2012. Last summer he followed it up with The End of the World Running Club, “a post-apocalyptic running fable about hope, love and endurance”—perfect, apparently, “for fans of The Martian”—which Del Rey UK recently acquired the rights to re-release.

At the time, Emily Yau, Assistant Editor of the aforementioned Ebury imprint, described The End of the World Running Club as “an original, exciting and powerful” piece of writing:

So much more than your usual post-apocalyptic novel, it takes you on a journey that’s full of twists and turns, breath-taking action and engaging characters. But ultimately it’s an uplifting story of what it is to be human, which will resonate strongly with readers.

And judging by the seven hundred odd reviews and ratings Walker’s second novel has amassed across Amazon and Good Reads in the year since the beast was unleashed, she’s not wrong.

[Read more]

Series: British Fiction Focus

Rereading Joe Abercrombie’s First Law Trilogy, Last Argument of Kings: “Charity” and “Better Left Buried”

Oh baby! It’s starting! The second chapter this week is like… the best. It’s the culmination of all the crap we’ve wondered about Bayaz. We learn the truth! Or something approximating it. I can barely contain my excitement, knowing I have to get through Jezal and Terez scratching at each others’ faces.

In the words of Big Moe, “It’s about to go down.”

[Read more]

Series: The Joe Abercrombie First Law Trilogy Reread

Malazan Reread of the Fallen: The Wurms of Blearmouth, Part Four

Welcome to the Malazan Reread of the Fallen! Every post will start off with a summary of events, followed by reaction and commentary by your hosts Bill and Amanda, and finally comments from Tor.com readers. In this article, we’ll continue our coverage of The Wurms of Blearmouth.

A fair warning before we get started: We’ll be discussing both novel and whole-series themes, narrative arcs that run across the entire series, and foreshadowing. Note: The summary of events will be free of major spoilers and we’re going to try keeping the reader comments the same. A spoiler thread has been set up for outright Malazan spoiler discussion.

[Read more]

Series: Malazan Reread of the Fallen

Reinventing Cyberpunk in Mr. Robot

Cyberpunk may have been one of the 1980s’ most quintessential subgenre-movement-phenomena, and it also may have been one of the quickest to descend into self-parody. It was easy to get hung up on the aesthetics—chrome, casual violence, neon reflected in dirty puddles, mirrored sunglasses, neo-Orientalist imagery driven by fears of a economically dominant Japan—while only superficially engaging with the deeper themes of the technology-driven, corporation-dominated near-futures portrayed therein.

Then the Internet age proceeded to co-opt the vocabulary of cyberpunk, much as the world of espionage absorbed the lingo of John le Carré’s fictional spies. Brief resurgences via The Matrix and Snow Crash (which is more satirical than some people realize) notwithstanding, cyberpunk now seems like a quaint retro-future at best, and entirely moribund at worst.

At least it did until Sam Esmail’s television series Mr. Robot came along—and on the USA Network, of all places. In a recent Reddit AMA, Esmail stated that he “wanted to bring cyberpunk to TV,” and he has actually done it—and in the process, reinvented cyberpunk and made it valid again for the twenty-first century.

[Warning: Spoilers for season 1!]

Mistborn: The Final Empire

With the release of Brandon Sanderson’s new Wax and Wayne novel Shadows of Self just around the corner, we wanted to head back to the beginning and remember when we were first introduced to Vin, Kelsier, and the intricacies of Allomancy in Mistborn: The Final Empire

For a thousand years the ash fell and no flowers bloomed. For a thousand years the Skaa slaved in misery and lived in fear. For a thousand years the Lord Ruler, the “Sliver of Infinity,” reigned with absolute power and ultimate terror, divinely invincible. Then, when hope was so long lost that not even its memory remained, a terribly scarred, heart-broken half-Skaa rediscovered it in the depths of the Lord Ruler’s most hellish prison. Kelsier “snapped” and found in himself the powers of a Mistborn. A brilliant thief and natural leader, he turned his talents to the ultimate caper, with the Lord Ruler himself as the mark.

But even with the best criminal crew ever assembled, Kel’s plan looks more like the ultimate long shot, until luck brings a ragged girl named Vin into his life. Like him, she’s a half-Skaa orphan, but she’s lived a much harsher life. Vin has learned to expect betrayal from everyone she meets, and gotten it. She will have to learn to trust, if Kel is to help her master powers of which she never dreamed.

Read the first chapter of this epic series below, and check out our excerpts from Shadows of Self, publishing October 6th!

[Read an excerpt]

Martinis and Dior: Cocktail Culture on the Moon

I like details. Little things tell me everything about people, their society, their hopes and fears, the sky above them, the rock beneath them.

When I began writing Luna, I knew I would be building a world from scratch, but also one that adhered to the constraints of the physical realities of the moon. The Moon may have been Heinlein’s Harsh Mistress but we’ve learned a lot about Lady Luna since and she’s got leaner and meaner. A lot meaner. I wanted those facts to shape the world and lives of my characters, from low gravity to moon dust, which is seriously nasty stuff. I suppose it’s a “hard science fiction” book—though that’s an expression I hate. Hard science technically shapes the lives, loves, jealousies and ambitions of every one of my moon’s one point seven million citizens.

[That’s where the Martinis come in.]

Tor.com is Seeking an In-House Publicity Coordinator

Tor.com is seeking an in-house publicity coordinator. This person will work with publicity and editorial departments and contacts throughout all of genre publishing, developing plans for comprehensive book coverage on Tor.com and assisting with publisher and author outreach. They will also be responsible for encouraging and moderating conversation between readers on the site and on social media.

This is a full-time position working in our New York office. Ideally, we are looking for a candidate with at least 2 years of publishing experience, who is outgoing, extremely organized, and detail-oriented. Applicants should be both highly enthusiastic and knowledgeable about science fiction and fantasy across a range of media.

[Full job description and application link below!]

Genderswapped Sally and Jack Skellington are Simply Meant To Be

 Sakimichan has done lots of interpretations of Disney and fairy tale characters, but we especially love this breathtaking Jack and Sally genderswap. While flipping gender scripts has become a standard strategy in art, this interpretation really spoke to us. Plus, if everyone else is going to talk about pumpkin spice everything already, we can start breaking out The Nightmare Before Christmas images, dammit.

Morning Roundup brings you Metal Gear Bowie, updates on American Gods and Miracleman, and fantasy writing that breaks all the rules!

[Plus one last fleeting moment with Key & Peele.]

The Harry Potter Reread: The Half-Blood Prince, Chapters 1 and 2

The Harry Potter Reread has reached the penultimate offering! It took the reread far too long to understand what “penultimate” meant, though. What a sad truth.

This week we’re starting in on The Half-Blood Prince! Chapters 1 and 2—The Other Minister and Spinner’s End.

Index to the reread can be located here! Other Harry Potter and Potter-related pieces can be found under their appropriate tag. And of course, since we know this is a reread, all posts might contain spoilers for the entire series. If you haven’t read all the Potter books, be warned.

[Read more]

Series: The Harry Potter Reread

Five Books About Imaginary Religions

In fiction, religion is often cast as technology’s dark other: irrational, tradition-bound, and baroquely complex. Speculative fiction writers can’t look away. If technology represents humanity’s transcendence through reason, religion implies its eternal submission to mystical entities. But SFF tends to be conflicted about its imaginary religions. Fictional religions are often anti-science, they attract charlatans, they prey on ignorance—and yet there’s usually a kernel of real mystery at their heart, and the workings of the religion are often the coolest things about a book. Perhaps it’s no surprise. After all, sci-fi and fantasy writers create entire worlds; many of them feel that no imaginary world would be complete without an imaginary religion.

[Here are five of my favorites.]

Series: Five Books About…

Defying Categorization: Dragon Heart by Cecelia Holland

Cecelia Holland has a lengthy career behind her, including the acclaimed 1976 science fiction novel Floating Worlds. Most of her works are historical fiction, but Dragon Heart, her latest, marks a return to the SFF genre. It is also the first of her novels I’ve read, and her easy, engaging style is effortlessly readable: impressively clear. I admire it wholeheartedly.

My emotional engagement with Dragon Heart, on the other hand… oh, that’s going to be complicated to explain.

[Contains spoilers. Fairly detailed ones, mind.]

Star Trek The Original Series Rewatch: “The Devil in the Dark”

“The Devil in the Dark”
Written by Gene L. Coon
Directed by Joseph Pevney
Season 1, Episode 26
Production episode 6149-26
Original air date: March 9, 1967
Stardate: 3196.1

Captain’s log. In the pergium production facility on Janus VI, a group of miners are engaged in an armed search, trying to find the thing that has already killed fifty people. Chief Engineer Vanderberg leads a team to relieve one guard, leaving behind another, Schmitter. Schmitter is understandably nervous, though Vanderberg reassures him that the Enterprise is on its way.

Only a minute after Vanderberg and the others walk away, Schmitter is attacked by something, and burned to a crisp.

[Kiss it, baby it, flatter it if you have to, but keep it going!]

Series: Star Trek: The Original Series Rewatch

Spy Mice: Margery Sharp’s The Rescuers

Friendly mice—both talking and non-talking—had become a staple of children’s fiction by the 1950s, featuring in everything from historical parodies (Robert Lawson’s Ben and Me), wistful and mildly irritating stories of contemporary New York City (E.B. White’s Stuart Little), secondary fantasy worlds (the Narnia series), and even films (Cinderella). Friendly, comforting, non-talking rats and mice were also a staple of fictional prisons and solitary confinement, played with even in novels where the prisoners are not exactly prisoners (Frances Hodgson Burnett’s A Little Princess). In The Rescuers, Margery Sharp decided to combine both ideas, taking a look at friendly prison mice from the mouse point of view.

Talking mice, of course.

[In which a mouse must choose: love, or a career? Spoilers.]