“Machinehood” Review

“Machinehood” by S.B. Divya

Welga Ramirez, executive bodyguard and ex-special forces, is about to retire early when her client is killed in front of her. It’s 2095 and people don’t usually die from violence. Humanity is entirely dependent on pills that not only help them stay alive, but allow them to compete with artificial intelligence in an increasingly competitive gig economy. Daily doses protect against designer diseases, flow enhances focus, zips and buffs enhance physical strength and speed, and juvers speed the healing process.

All that changes when Welga’s client is killed by The Machinehood, a new and mysterious terrorist group that has simultaneously attacked several major pill funders. The Machinehood operatives seem to be part human, part machine, something the world has never seen. They issue an ultimatum: stop all pill production in one week.

Global panic ensues as pill production slows and many become ill. Thousands destroy their bots in fear of a strong AI takeover. But the US government believes the Machinehood is a cover for an old enemy. One that Welga is uniquely qualified to fight.

Welga, determined to take down the Machinehood, is pulled back into intelligence work by the government that betrayed her. But who are the Machinehood and what do they really want?

A thrilling and thought-provoking novel that asks: if we won’t see machines as human, will we instead see humans as machines?

Review

I enjoyed this one for the most part but I do prefer the author’s later books “Meru” and the sequel “Loka” to some degree. Though to be fair – the main difference with those two books is they are more about individual struggles vs worldwide struggles which might be someone else’s preference. Also “Meru” and “Loka” are set much farther into the future than this one (it’s only 2095 in “Machinehood”) and I feel like that setting works better with the creation of AIs and how they developed. Especially considering the issues with AIs in today’s world.

I did feel like this book took a bit of effort to get through as there was a lot of world building and development of what was going on. Sometimes I felt like more could have been explained but it also would have made the book even longer. The book has two point of view characters, Welga and her sister-in-law Nithya and one of the things I did like was the way the plot developed around them. I felt like the dual plots worked well as they both figured what was going on with the Machinehood and possible solutions. The family dynamics were interesting to read as well though there was a minor sub-plot that felt oddly place and not necessary to the overall plot (unless there was an intended point I missed). I did like the resolution of the core situation but it was obviously only the beginning of the changes that would be coming and issues that would need to be solved.

One thing that did bug me was that Welga uses intelligence based insults a lot. It was enough that I started to really get annoyed when often I can let it go for the sake of the story. That said it did almost fit with the setting and the concepts around intelligence and whether the AIs had gained sentience. Most of the usage was along the lines of taking about a AI and whether or not it was useful and comparing people to it which is where it got annoying. It makes me wonder how disabled people, especially those with intellectual / developmental / cognitive disabilities, are treated in this universe.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “Machinehood”

Book Details

The background of the cover for Machinehood is a computer circuit board that is white and pale blue above that are two round gear shapes one inside the other and then a white band of light in a circle. In the center of all of that is a white robot or android body from mostly the chest up with its head turned towards the center. The title is at the top with the author's name at the bottom.

Author’s Website
S.B. Divya
Publisher / Date
Gallery / Saga Press, March 2021
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
404
Completion Date
November 5, 2024

“This World Is Not Yours” Review

“This World Is Not Yours” by Kemi Ashing-Giwa

After fleeing her controlling and murderous family with her fiancée Vinh, Amara embarks on a colonization project, New Belaforme, along with her childhood friend, Jesse.

The planet, beautiful and lethal, produces the Gray, a “self-cleaning” mechanism that New Belaforme’s scientists are certain only attacks invasive organisms, consuming them. Humans have been careful to do nothing to call attention to themselves until a rival colony wakes the Gray.

As Amara, Vinh, and Jesse work to carve out a new life together, each is haunted by past betrayals that surface, expounded by the need to survive the rival colony and the planet itself.

There’s more than one way to be eaten alive.

Review

This was an interesting story. There wasn’t a lot of in-depth world building in this one but it mostly made sense since the colonists didn’t really understand the world they were on either and that was mostly the point. The writing style was interesting in that each chapter was a short scene in the character’s lives with time jumps of various lengths in between. Some of the chapters were no more than a page long and only contained the internal monologue of the characters. The characters themselves were not all that likable but I felt like it was the point given how toxic their relationships with each other were. The ending was a bit disturbing but I liked it.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “This World Is Not Yours”

Book Details

The cover of This World Is Not Yours depicts a person inside a spacesuit whose face is partially obscured in shadow and appears to be grinning manically. The rest of the cover is very dark with a lot of grays and green colors. The title is across the chest of the spacesuite with the author's name at the top.

Author’s Website
Kemi Ashing-Giwa
Publisher / Date
Tor Nightfire, September 2024
Genre
Science Fiction, Horror
Page Count
166
Completion Date
October 29, 2024

“Lost Ark Dreaming” Review

“Lost Ark Dreaming” by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

Off the coast of West Africa, decades after the dangerous rise of the Atlantic Ocean, the region’s survivors live inside five partially submerged, kilometers-high towers originally created as a playground for the wealthy. Now the towers’ most affluent rule from their lofty perch at the top while the rest are crammed into the dark, fetid floors below sea level.

There are also those who were left for dead in the Atlantic, only to be reawakened by an ancient power, and who seek vengeance on those who offered them up to the waves.

Three lives within the towers are pulled to the fore of this conflict: Yekini, an earnest, mid-level rookie analyst; Tuoyo, an undersea mechanic mourning a tremendous loss; and Ngozi, an egotistical bureaucrat from the highest levels of governance. They will need to work together if there is to be any hope of a future that is worth living—for everyone.

Review

I really enjoyed this novella despite its abrupt ending. The great world building and interesting characters make up for a lot. I feel like the author put a lot of thought and detail into the story and created a complex world. I like the way we get three points of view of the tower – individuals from the top, middle and bottom areas, with their perspectives and personalities. They’re all interesting in their own ways and bring something to the story. I did feel like some things could have been written with more depth – like having characters reacting more to a specific plot point part way through the book. I think even the abrupt ending works to some degree because of the story being told – it’s mainly about the three of them learning there’s more than they previously knew and attempting to make a change.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “Lost Ark Dreaming”

Book Details

The Lost Ark Dreaming cover shows a group of five towers stretching up into the sky from the ocean with the sun rising behind them. One tower is taller than the rest and in front of the image. The title of the book is written across the front of the towers with the authors name below.

Author’s Website
Suyi Davies Okungbowa
Publisher / Date
Tordotcom, May 2024
Genre
Science Fiction, Dystopian
Page Count
178 pages
Completion Date
October 28, 2024

“No One Will Come Back For Us” Review

“No One Will Come Back For Us” by Premee Mohamed

Here there be gods and monsters – forged from flesh and stone and vengeance – emerging from the icy abyss of deep space, ascending from dark oceans, and prowling strange cities to enter worlds of chaos and wonder, where scientific rigor and human endeavour is tested to the limits. These are cosmic realms and watery domains where old offerings no longer appease the ancient Gods or the new and hungry idols. Deities and beasts. Life and death. Love and hate. Science and magic. And smiling monsters in human skin.

Premee Mohamed’s debut collection of contemporary cosmic horror and dark fantasy heralds the arrival of a new and vibrant voice on the cutting edge of modern speculative fiction.

Review

The seventeen stories in this book are an interesting mix of horror, fantasy and science fiction. Many of them exist within a “gods are real” universe with a more fantasy horror slant while others are general fiction horror with science fiction elements. I enjoyed all of them though I think a couple could have done with a bit more explanation of what was going on and why. I did like that the author included additional information about the various stories at the end of the book.

Below the Kirk, Below the Hill – a woman finds an undead child and struggles to figure out what to do next. I liked the way this one ended because the choices were limited and there wasn’t much that can be done for the child.

Instructions – a set of instructions for British servicemen in a German occupied France. Only it turns out it’s not that simple. As you read through the instructions you slowly figure out the twist to this one. I liked it.

The Evaluator – in which a child has been possessed buy a disturbing entity and all people can do is evaluate the situation. This is another one where there are limited choices but this time the horror is more about being helpless.

At the Hand of Every Beast – a monster in the form of a large cathedral wonders through the area and a small child investigates it. This one was strange but I enjoyed it.

The Adventurer’s Wife – A newspaper reporter is tasked with interviewing a deceased adventurer’s widow. This one has a great twist in the end. Not all is as it seems on multiple fronts. Fun ending.

The General’s Turn – a captured solder is put through a test by the enemy. I’m not entirely sure I understood this one. The explanation from the author helps some.

Sixteen Minutes – a sixteen minute warning comes and a man hides in a bunker abandoning his family in the process. Question is, were bombs really dropped? This one is more about the man who hides in the bunker slowly losing his mind more than anything else. The ending is a little vague on purpose.

Fortunato – a ship lands to rescue the survivors of a failed colony and the crew soon learns the story of what went wrong. Of course the rescue goes about as well as you’d expect. I enjoyed the slow build of horror of this one as things go horribly wrong.

The Honeymakers – Something strange happens with a bee hive and girls who interact with it. This one is a bit confusing but I liked the idea of it.

Four Hours of a Revolution – Many Deaths stalk a group of rebels and solders fighting a revolution…there’s some confusion… This one is interesting to read as death follows everyone as things happen.

For Each of These Miseries – A woman travels to a deep see fortress to help her mother’s friend who is dealing with a monster and a group of soldiers who are slowly succumbing to the pressure of keeping things secret. The ending of this one is interesting.

Everything is Part of Its Infinite Place – a boy grieves the loss of his brother and encounters a double of himself and a series of strange events before making a choice. The ending of this one is a little vague as we know something happened but it’s not clear of it was a good thing or a bad thing.

No One Will Come Back For Us – a visit to a hospital during a epidemic that may have a supernatural cause. I enjoyed reason this one but I think the might have been one where things could have been explained a little more? Or at last the ending as I’m not sure about the narrator’s point of view.

Willing – A farmer’s two cows suffer during birth – one dying one living but birthing a stillborn. A sacrifice is required. I really liked the way this one ended.

Us and Ours – two kids during an invasion of creatures dealing with everything. This one was good – the kids are pretty much used as bait by another group for the creatures. I From the author’s description it seems like the ending is supposed to be a little vague about who actually won. I liked the way it ended though with the two kids driving off to have their own adventures.

The Redoubtables – a young journalist is investigating a disaster to write an article about it. It turns out that the disaster was intentional because a group of scientists destroyed their experiment completely in order to keep it contained. No real explanations are given as to why and that’s the true horror of it all.

Quietus – a young man is being used as test subject – from his point of view he’s fighting several wars. We also get emails exchanged between scientists running the experiment on sleep deprivation and virtual reality. The ending is a little vague but it seems like the right choice to end the experiment is made for the good of all. But whether or not it’s too late is unclear.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “No One Will Come Back For Us”

Book Details

Cover of No One Will Come Back for Us. There is an individual in a spacesuit flouting upside down in deep space with an air tube trailing behind them. There are are two long tentacles floating from the top corner around the figure in the spacesuit one far above and one reaching down towards the person. The cover has a softer light at the top corner where the tentacles are coming from. The title is written one word at a time down the right side of the cover wit the author's name at the bottom.

Author’s Website
Premee Mohamed
Publisher / Date
Undertow Publications, May 2023
Genre
Horror, Fantasy, Science Fiction, Short Stories
Page Count
288
Completion Date
October 26, 2024

“A Pale Light in the Black” Review

“A Pale Light in the Black” (NeoG Series No. 1) by K. B. Wagers

For the past year, their close loss in the annual Boarding Games has haunted Interceptor Team: Zuma’s Ghost. With this year’s competition looming, they’re looking forward to some payback—until an unexpected personnel change leaves them reeling. Their best swordsman has been transferred, and a new lieutenant has been assigned in his place.

Maxine Carmichael is trying to carve a place in the world on her own—away from the pressure and influence of her powerful family. The last thing she wants is to cause trouble at her command on Jupiter Station. With her new team in turmoil, Max must overcome her self-doubt and win their trust if she’s going to succeed. Failing is not an option—and would only prove her parents right.

But Max and the team must learn to work together quickly. A routine mission to retrieve a missing ship has suddenly turned dangerous, and now their lives are on the line. Someone is targeting members of Zuma’s Ghost, a mysterious opponent willing to kill to safeguard a secret that could shake society to its core . . . a secret that could lead to their deaths and kill thousands more unless Max and her new team stop them.

Review

I enjoyed this for the most part. I really liked the characters and how they ended up interacting, but it never really felt like there was that much conflict. Many of the events that happened didn’t feel as serious as they should have been. I did enjoy the dual plots of the games while also solving a mystery. I also felt like the family drama with Maxine and her family got a little annoying especially with the various “secrets” going on. There was also more romance/relationship stuff than I was expecting which isn’t a problem exactly. It didn’t do anything to distract from the dual plots for the most part it was just there more than I like. In any case the dual plots were good and I thought it worked well to have both of them in the same story as they were going about their work lives while preparing for and participating in the Games. I will be reading the next book in the series at some point.

Warnings and additional reviews are available on the StoryGraph page for “A Pale Light in the Black”

Book Details

A Pale Light in the Black book cover. The background is black with streaks of blue and red and in the center is a large image of Jupiter. In front of the planet are several ships flying away from it above and to the sides. Near the bottom of the cover is a station where the ships are leaving from. The title of the book is across the center of the cover and the authors name at the top.

Author’s Website
K. B. Wagers
Publisher / Date
Harper Voyager, March 2020
Genre
Science Fiction
Page Count
432
Completion Date
October 21, 2024

“Fiyah Issue No. 31 – Disability” Review

“Fiyah Issue No. 31 – Disability” edited by Emmalia Harrington

CONTENTS

Prose –

DEMON SLAYER // Terna Abu – 3665 words

Tse-Abiem village badly needs help, but the Demon Slayer is not at all who they expected. Surely you need muscles and might to defeat something so fearsome… right?

WORMS FILL MY MOUTH // F. Kirk – 4338 words

Isaac is supposed to have a mild illness. The worms in his mouth, teeth in his body, and the Meat stalking him are anything but minor.

THE TOMB OF THE FORGOTTEN SOLDIER // Mwanabibi Sikamo – 5258 words

After Mum died, they have been experiencing vivid dreams and visions. Perhaps these experiences are related to the letter and audio recordings Mum left behind.

WAY UP IN DE MIDDLE OF DE AIR // Jamie Roballo – 2005 words

Papa Ezekiel has had cataracts for as long as June can remember. Tonight, he tells her the story of what he saw, and what he still sees.

Poetry –

Giant Robot and His Person by Akua Lezli Hope

we stim to the moment by Camille Hernandez

Go Body Go! by Taylor Mckinnon

Review

Fiyah is a magazine of Black Speculative Fiction and the them for this issue was disability. I really liked the “Letter from the Editor”, introduction for this one. There’s some good context given in it for everything and a reminder of how many not so great tropes there often is in fiction with disability representations.

Demon Slayer by Terna Abu – Tse-Abiem village badly needs help, but the Demon Slayer is not at all who they expected. Surely you need muscles and might to defeat something so fearsome… right?

I really enjoyed the way this play out with assumptions being made and how fear can create problems and how those problems can be solved. It’s a fun read and I liked that it wasn’t all about the demon slayer slaying the demons but him teaching the villagers something about themselves as well.

Worms Fill My Mouth by F. Kirk – Isaac is supposed to have a mild illness. The worms in his mouth, teeth in his body, and the Meat stalking him are anything but minor.

This was great – It seems like it’s both a story about the ways people have denied COVID and how serious it actually is, along with the problems people face having a chronic illness. Using something that comes across as seemingly a lot worse (actual worms) but still with the “it’s not so bad” reactions from outsiders. Which makes it even more disturbing.

The Tomb Of The Forgotten Soldier by Mwanabibi Sikamo – After Mum died, they have been experiencing vivid dreams and visions. Perhaps these experiences are related to the letter and audio recordings Mum left behind.

I’m not sure I fully understand this one but I like it anyway. It has an interesting plot with interesting characters.

Way Up In De Middle Of De Air by Jamie Roballo – Papa Ezekiel has had cataracts for as long as June can remember. Tonight, he tells her the story of what he saw, and what he still sees.

An interesting story – I really liked the way this was told with a grandfather telling his granddaughter the story of what he saw that night. And how he saw it. There’s a few things going on in the story.

I also enjoyed the poems included in the magazine.

Magazine Details

A black person is depicted on the cover looking down and to the right. She as wearing her hair tied up tightly in two braids on top of her head flowing in the air and earrings as well as a hearing aid in her ears and a necklace. Behind her ar various plants and flying butterflies in bright yellow.

Magazine Website
“Fiyah Issue No. 31 – Disability”
Cover Artwork
Kaitlin Edwards
Date Published
June 2024
Completion Date
September 20, 2024