Oi Dog! Review
Regular readers will know that I recently reviewed Oi Frog! by Kes Gray and Jim Field, after a desperately misguided attempt to expand my daughter’s storybook collection. I had expected something…
Race to the End of the Universe: Tau Zero Review
This week I thought I would go slightly retro and take a look back at some classic 1970s hard science fiction with Poul Anderson’s Tau Zero. This is the story of the stricken interstellar colony ship…
Red Tithe Review
This review contains adult language.Red Tithe is the latest novel from Black Library written by Robbie MacNiven, a writer who cut his literary eyeteeth in fan fiction forums such as the Black Library…
Oi Frog! Review
I recently decided it was necessary to expand my daughter’s bedtime storybook collection, as much for the sake of my own fragile sanity as for her continuing development. After all, there are…
Heloth Review
Editor’s note: Today we’re introducing our newest writer for Thunderbird Studios, Jonathan Ward. Hailing from Bedfordshire, Jon intends to cover the occasional lighter fare, as well as grittier…
American Psycho Review
It’s difficult to say whether or not American Psycho has spoilers to ruin. It’s the strangest start to a book review, but there’s little other way to describe the events of Bret Easton Ellis’…
Legion Review
In the war torn future, it’s enjoyable to partake in the game of espionage from time to time. Spies and deceit, winning through wits over brawn or firepower. Fine spy literature can be…
The Lives of Tao Review
Life is full of surprises. One day, you could go to a bar and strike out with meeting anyone interested in you. The next, you could be a host to a gaseous alien life form whose existence predates…
Armor Review
If there was ever a case study in how two books can topically sound similar but prove so vastly different, it would have to be between Robert A. Heinlein’s Starship Troopers and John…