Jump to navigation
Search
-

The multilingual poet, author and musician describes surviving a stray bullet as 'happenstance' and muses on aislings, Asimov and other worlds
-

Belfast's salacious literary scene provides the backdrop for Tony Bailie's latest crime story, which is short, sharp and sleazy
-

The second instalment in Ian McDonald's Infundibulum series for young adults is a riveting ride through time and space
-

Author and performer Reggie Chamberlain-King on crime and punishment in fiction and song
-

Jennifer Johnston brings her latest novel to life and talks how it is a 'sort of disappearing book'
-

Violent gangs, murderous bankers and a clever, twisty narrative herald the arrival of Claire McGowan, a new voice in crime
-

Lisa Keogh's deftly written, emotionally fluent account of what happened to Captain Ahab's family after Moby-Dick
-

Quantum widgets and tarot-reading pilots: a ‘fantabulosa bona’ start to Ian McDonald's Everness series
-

The Wireless Mystery Theatre brings urban folklore and children's rhyme together on the very literary Streets
-

Monsters are ten-a-penny in crime novels, Neville writes humans and makes them so much worse
-

'A good-natured pastiche of the detective novel' from Colin Bateman, writes Tammy Moore
-

It starts with a body, a missing boy and a vigilante group. After that, Brian McGilloway's new novel really starts to pick up
-

Tammy Moore gives her opinion on the fifth edition of The Yellow Nib
-

Tammy Moore and Ian Sansom investigate The Bad Book Affair
-

John Connolly's Gates of Hell are about to open - mind the gap