Aug 292024
 

Publishers Weekly: Glover returns to the alternate 1930s America of her Murder and Magic series in this thrilling spin-off, an intoxicating blend of mystery and fantasy. Velma Frye’s days as a bootlegger of forbidden magic are behind her, and she now divides her time between performing high-flying aerial stunts and working as an investigator for magical rights group the Magnolia Muses. Trouble arises when a magic-fueled fight over a pocket watch breaks out after one of Velma’s air shows. She learns the pocket watch is one of many enchanted objects that have been causing unexplained violent incidents across the country, including one that led to a woman’s death. Velma sets off to locate the rest of the dangerous artifacts and gains an unexpected travel companion, the annoyingly charming journalist Dillon Harris. Dillon’s inquisitive nature and skills as a spellcaster prove useful for Velma’s investigation, and together they discover that the enchanted objects are part of a deadly conspiracy with unexpected ties to Velma’s family. The complex mystery keeps readers on their toes and the pages flying. The colorful cast, unique magic system, and slow-burning, enemies-to-lovers romance between Velma and Dillon add to the fun. New readers and returning fans alike will devour this.

Aug 272024
 

Library Journal: When best friends Kit and Julia were 12 years old, a psychic told them that they were twin flames. At the age of 18, they developed romantic feelings for each other. However, Kit was not yet ready to accept her bisexuality and abruptly cut off contact with Julia, causing both of them immense heartache. Fast-forward about a decade, and Kit is now a New Age influencer and professional tarot card reader, while Julia is a successful and buttoned-up wedding planner. When Kit is invited to work a gig at a destination wedding in the California desert, the last person she thinks she’ll run into is Julia, who’s in charge of the event. As their paths continue to cross, they can’t ignore the feeling that fate has brought them back together. But Kit still isn’t out, and Julia doesn’t know if she can trust Kit with her heart again. The otherworldly Joshua Tree setting only enhances the mystical feeling of this sapphic rom-com. VERDICT Readers will enjoy Faubion’s (Ellie Is Cool Again, written under the name Faith McClaren) novel about living and loving authentically, whether or not they usually read books that feature spiritual plotlines.

Aug 232024
 

Locus: Petra Grady has the kind of dirty magical job that no one ever talks about when crafting big novels about monsters and mayhem and magic. As a sweeper, she cleans up the ‘‘dross’’ or magic detritus that is created when powerful folks (mages) cast spells. In Kim Harrison’s urban fantasy THREE KINDS OF LUCKY, Petra is eighteen, working hard for a living at a magic university outside of Tucson, Arizona, and trying not to get overly annoyed at the obnoxious mages who treat her like a janitor. She knows, and they know, that if sweepers don’t do their job the dross will become malevolent, shadows will be created and all sorts of chaos will ensue. (I am hugely simplifying the situation but you get the drift.)

What keeps Petra going while surrounded by some first class academic snobs is her colleagues, her nice-enough roommate, and her dog, Pluck. (As someone who survived watching Old Yeller on Wonderful World of Disney, I am honor bound to advise that you do not bond strongly with Pluck. This is a spoiler that I will not apologize for.) But Petra’s old friend, now professor, Benedict Storm has been trying to figure out a way for spells to be cast that mitigates the dross problem, thus negating the need for sweepers. As much as Petra isn’t happy about the ramifications of such research, (primarily because she doesn’t think they know enough about what they are doing to be tampering with powerful magic, but when has that ever stopped a determined bunch of scientists?), she grudgingly agrees to work with Benedict. It all seems academic until an explosion that might involve Petra and then a lot (A LOT) of magical waste erupts from the campus. (There’s a storage facility. Picture Ghostbusters and you get the idea of how badly this can go.) Folks are killed, the existence of magic might be revealed to the non-magic world, a lot of people in authority-type positions want Petra dead or imprisoned. Ditto Benedict. Ditto other folks they care about. Who do you trust? Where do you run? And what in the world does Petra have to do with the explosion? Well, buckle up as Harrison answers all these questions and more while taking her characters through an onslaught of tough situations (both physical and emotional) until they get to the truth and save the world. (Or at least save Tucson.)

THREE KINDS OF LUCKY is the first in Harrison’s new Shadow Age series and she sets things up very nicely for sequels. The core group, good and bad, is established, the worldbuilding is fantastic, and Petra is more than capable of anchoring a long run of books. I saw the villain coming a bit but enjoyed the ride to get to that first confrontation (and all those that followed) way too much to complain. This is solid urban fantasy and a fun read (mostly – remember Pluck!). Harrison fans will be delighted.

Aug 222024
 

Join us in congratulating DMLA authors, Premee Mohamed and Vajra Chandrasekera in making the 2024 British Fantasy Award shortlist with their following titles!

Best Collection

  • No One Will Come Back for Us – Premee Mohamed (Undertow Publications)

Sydney J. Bounds Award for Best Newcomer

  • Vajra Chandrasekera, for “The Saint of Bright Doors” (Tordotcom)

Aug 212024
 

The finalists for the 2023 World Fantasy Awards have been announced, and many congratulations to the following DMLA authors on their nominated titles!

Best Novel

  • The Reformatory, Tananarive Due (Saga; Titan UK)
  • Witch King, Martha Wells (Tordotcom)

Best Collection

  • No One Will Come Back for Us and Other Stories, Premee Mohamed (Undertow)

Aug 202024
 

We choose our own gods here.

Karys Eska is a deathspeaker, locked into an irrevocable compact with Sabaster, a terrifying eldritch being―three-faced, hundred-winged, unforgiving―who has granted her the ability to communicate with the newly departed. She pays the rent by using her abilities to investigate suspicious deaths around the troubled city she calls home. When a job goes sideways and connects her to a dying stranger with some very dangerous secrets, her entire world is upended.

Ferain is willing to pay a ludicrous sum of money for her help. To save him, Karys inadvertently binds him to her shadow, an act that may doom them both. If they want to survive, they will need to learn to trust one another. Together, they must journey to the heart of a faded empire, all the while haunted by arcane horrors, and the unquiet ghosts of their pasts.

And all too soon, Karys knows her debts will come due.

Aug 202024
 

After a long, hard journey west, Cleve Trewe is ready to settle down. He’s got his beautiful wife Berry in San Francisco, a baby on the way, and his sights set on a gorgeous piece of land in the Sierras. This sweet slice of heaven is aptly named Sweet River, and it’s the perfect place to build a ranch, farm, and home for his family. Problem is, Cleve’s not the only one with his eyes on the land. A big-time cattle baron named Asa Hawthorn is prepared to use threats, intimidation—and armed thugs—to get what he wants. Worse yet, Cleve knows the man from the darkest days of the Civil War . . .

Cleve’s not about to surrender his claim.. He’s got his buddy Kanaway by his side, a family of Paiute Indians on his team, and the property papers ready to sign. That’s when the real trouble starts. To squash the deal, Hawthorn unleashes his deadliest henchmen—including a would-be gunfighter from Cleve’s past and a killer-for-hire who never misses. The Paiute family recognizes some of them as the men who slaughtered their tribe—a massacre that Cleve suspects was the work of Asa Hawthorn. Either way, a major battle is brewing. And the crystal blue waters of Sweet River are about to turn red . . .

Aug 202024
 

An inheritance filled with riddles…

Could love be the answer?

When her Amish grandmother passes away, Englisch police officer Jenna Shetler returns to her family’s farm on Maryland’s eastern shore to carry out her grandmother’s unusual last request. A series of letters with specific instructions forces her to seek help from Amish bachelor Abe Bontranger—and confront her teenage heartbreak. Working together brings them closer than they’ve been in years, but with Jenna’s commitment to the police force and Abe’s plans for his Amish life, is a second chance possible for the two of them?

Aug 192024
 

The 2024 Aurora Awards winners have been announced and we’re thrilled to share that the following DMLA authors have won in the Best Novel and Best Short Story categories!

Best Novel: The Valkyrie, Kate Heartfield, HarperVoyager

Best Short Story: “At Every Door A Ghost”, Premee Mohamed, Communications Breakdown, MIT Press

Aug 152024
 

Congratulations to the following DMLA titles for making the final ballot for the 2024 Dragon Awards!

Best Science Fiction Novel

  • System Collapse by Martha Wells
  • The Saint of Bright Doors by Vajra Chandrasekera

Best Fantasy Novel (Including Paranormal)

  • Three Kinds of Lucky by Kim Harrison

Best Horror Novel

  • The Dead Take the A Train by Richard Kadrey, Cassandra Khaw
  • The Reformatory by Tananarive Due