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Review: Angel Down by Daniel Kraus, at Strange Horizons

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Earlier this year, the literary and genre fiction communities were startled by the announcement that Daniel Kraus's Angel Down , a fantasy-horror novel in which a squad of WWI soldiers discover an angel on the killing fields of 1918 France, had won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. This is not the first time that a novel in the fantastical genres had won this award—it is preceded by books like The Underground Railroad , A Visit from the Goon Squad , and The Road —but as I write at the beginning of my review of the book, published today at Strange Horizons , there are different kind of genre fiction, just as there are different kinds of literary fiction. I was surprised that the Pulitzer jury had the kind of genre fiction that Kraus writes on their radar, and even more surprised that the Pulitzer board, when offered a choice between Angel Down and more traditional nominees like Katie Kitamura' Audition and Torrey Peters's Stag Dance , would choose to recognize Kraus's n...

The Great Tolkien Reread: A Journey in the Dark, The Bridge of Khazad-Dƻm

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"Flame of Udƻn" by Weirling , 2025 The last thing that Pippin saw, as sleep took him, was a dark glimpse of the old wizard huddled on the floor, shielding a glowing chip in his gnarled hands between his knees. The flicker for a moment showed his sharp nose, and the puff of smoke. After failing to cross the mountains that separate them from Mordor, the fellowship of the Ring decide to go underground, through the lost dwarf city of Moria. Things do not go well. The discovery of the entrance to Moria, its dangerous traversal, the attack on the company by a large contingent of orcs and eventually a balrog, and the death ("death"? let's say loss) of Gandalf are the climax of The Fellowship of the Ring , and one of the most exciting, memorable sequences in the whole novel. There's much to talk about here, and as we've done in the past, we will divide our discussion into several topics. *** There's a commonplace about Tolkien that I first read on Teresa Nie...

Review: Nonesuch by Francis Spufford, at Ancillary Review of Books

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Sometimes I make very odd reading decisions. For example, in late March of this year, a time when I was regularly running for shelter ahead of Iranian missiles, I made the inexplicable choice to read Francis Spufford's latest novel Nonesuch , which takes place during the London Blitz. But although there were moments during my reading when I found myself wondering why I'd done this to myself, for the most part I found the experience of reading Nonesuch cathartic. There was something reassuring about the insight, sympathy, and yes, humor with which Spufford wrote about the experiences of his heroine, stock exchange clerk by day, good time girl by night Iris Hawkins, as she found her footing in a world where a bomb might kill you, but if it doesn't, there's still work to do in the morning. Iris's already complicated life is complicated further when she learns that a secret occult society associated with the British Union of Fascists is trying to use magic hidden in Lo...

The Great Tolkien Reread: The Ring Goes South

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"The Fellowship" by Robin Robinson , 2024 'We cannot go further tonight,' said Boromir. 'Let those call it the wind who will; there are fell voices on the air; and these stones are aimed at us.' 'I do call it the wind,' said Aragorn. 'But that does not make what you say untrue. There are many evil and unfriendly things in the world that have little love for those that go on two legs, and yet are not in league with Sauron, but have purposes of their own. Some have been in this world longer than he.' Fourteen chapters into the book titled The Fellowship of the Ring , the fellowship of the Ring is formed, and sets out on its mission. We are now once again in journeying mode, with all that Book One of Fellowship had taught us to expect from that type of storytelling: detailed, granular nature writing, challenging landscapes, and a wilderness that quickly proves more stubborn than expected. So far in this journey, we have had wrong turns, short cut...

The Great Tolkien Reread: The Council of Elrond, Part 2

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"The Council of Elrond" by Cor Blok , 1960 'Then,' said Erestor, 'there are but two courses, as Glorfindel has already declared: to hide the Ring for ever; or to unmake it. But both are beyond our power. Who will read this riddle for us?' 'None here can do so,' said Elrond gravely. 'At least none can foretell what will come to pass, if we take this road or that. But it seems to me now clear which is the road that we must take. The westward road seems easiest. Therefore it must be shunned. It will be watched. Too often the Elves have fled that way. Now at this last we must take a hard road, a road unforeseen. There lies our hope, if hope it be. To walk into peril—to Mordor. We must send the Ring to the Fire.' In the first part of "The Council of Elrond", we learned about the Ring's history and Sauron's efforts to recover it (and also, that science is bad ). Now comes the time to decide what to do about it—to reach the conclusio...

April Reviews in Locus, by Samantha Mills, Artem Chapeye, and W.P. Wiles

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I had three reviews in the April 2026 issue of Locus , and they are now all online. First up, I reviewed Samantha Mills's collection Rabbit Test and Other Stories . The title story was one of the most talked-about pieces of SFF short fiction of the last few years, racking up multiple award wins due both to its topicality—it is a story about America backsliding on reproductive health published just as this happened in reality—and the excellence of its execution. In my review I try to detect how a collection built around a single, attention-grabbing story manages to buttress it with other readings, and what those other stories tell us about Mills as a writer. One of the earliest pieces, "Strange Waters", feels almost like a first attempt at the framework that would eventually become "Rabbit Test", relying, like it, on a sense of the ebb and flow of history. Mika, a fisherwoman, has been swept out to sea, away from the city she calls home. But the currents she...

The Great Tolkien Reread: The Council of Elrond, Part 1

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Publicity still for Lego Rivendell 'You have done well to come,' said Elrond. 'You will hear today all that you need in order to understand the purposes of the Enemy. There is naught that you can do, other than to resist, with hope or without it. But you do not stand alone. You will learn that your trouble is but part of the trouble of all the western world. The Ring! What shall we do with the Ring, the least of rings, the trifle that Sauron fancies? That is the doom that we must deem.' In today's chapter, we encounter perhaps the most fantastical turn of plot in the whole of The Lord of the Rings : a group of powerful people gather together for a meeting on an important topic; speak for hours without pause for rest or refreshment; give long, detailed presentations with only minimal interruption; and come to a mostly unanimous conclusion about the scope of the problem and the steps they will undertake to solve it. And all before breaking for lunch. It's a long c...