Black Pulp Review
Black Pulp is the kind of adventure fiction we need right now: exciting, inclusive, and above all fun. It deserves a place on your shelf!
Black Pulp is the kind of adventure fiction we need right now: exciting, inclusive, and above all fun. It deserves a place on your shelf!
A. Lee Martinez has a wildly inventive mind that is doing fresh and wonderful things with genre fiction in Constance Verity Saves the World
Avengers of the Moon is a loving callback to classic adventure science fiction. It’s got ray guns, rocket ships, clunky robots, and derring-do aplenty.
It’s hard to find the truth beneath the lies you tell yourself. In Kit Frick’s See All The Stars, secrets, lies, and betrayal unfold.
After taking a week off last week, the staff picks are back. We have a variety of suggestions including books, comics, and television.
This book may not be everybody’s idea of a page-turner, but The Legend of Zelda Encyclopedia is a worthy addition to the Zelda library.
Dear Fahrenheit 451 is one of the most entertaining books I’ve read! Annie Spence expresses the exact sentiments I have felt when reading.
In Alex White’s Alien: The Cold Forge, subverting expectations and dismantling stereotypes makes for a surprising journey through the world of Alien.
“The greatest danger facing us is ourselves, an irrational fear of the unknown. But there’s no such thing as the unknown — only things temporarily hidden, temporarily not understood.”