Reviews for 3/19
BestSF.net reviews the March issue of F&SF.
Sci Fi Weekly reviews Antagonist by Gordon R. Dixon and David W. Wixon.
The Agony Column reviews Lucius Shepard's new novel, Softspoken (and, a bit further down the page at the same link, Christopher Golden's The Borderkind).
The Winston-Salem Journal looks at John Scalzi's novel The Android's Dream.

The Kansas City Star reviews Kim Stanley Robinson's Sixty Days and Counting and Anne Bishop's Belladonna.
The Houston Chronicle looks at Max Barry's Company.
In The Washington Post, Michael Dirda reviews two Howard Waldrop collections: Things Will Never Be the Same, a career retrospective, and the new Small Beer Press edition of Howard Who?, his first collection.
The Baltimore Times reviews Nalo Hopkinson's The New Moon's Arms.
Fantasy Book Critic reviews Glen Cook's Lord of the Silent Kingdom.
Fantasy Book Critic also reviews Neal Asher's Brass Man, which you can buy from the SFBC with a money-back guarantee!

New reviews at Fantasybookspot:
- this one for Alex Archer's Solomon's Jar
- this one for Heather Hayashi's To Save the World
- this one for the anthology Star Trek: Constellations
- this one for Richard Lee Byers's Unclean
- this one for Night Rising by Chris Marie Green
- this one for Bart Stewart's Tales of Real and Dream Worlds
- and this one for the first issue of the comics series The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger Born.
Neth Space reviews A.A. Attanasio's The Dragon and the Unicorn.
SFFWorld reviews Daniel Abraham's A Shadow in Summer.
SFFWorld also reviews Guy Gavriel Kay's Ysabel.

Faren Miller's review of Patrick Rothfuss's debut novel The Name of the Wind, from Locus, is now available online. (The book will be available soon from the SFBC.)
The New York Times reviews Dan Simmons's The Terror. (And Jeff VanderMeer is not happy with that review at all.)

Bookgasm looks at Night Watch by Sergei Lukyanenko.
CA Reviews covers Lincoln Child's Deep Storm.

Elizabeth Bear reprints the Publishers Weekly review of her collection New Amsterdam.
Relish reviews John Scalzi's The Android's Dream, and gently doesn't like it. [via The Whatever]

Walter Jon Williams has just re-read Roger Zelazny's Creatures of Light and Darkness (coincidentally, my favorite Zelazny novel).
Abigail Nussbaum reviews the 2006 Nebula-nominated short stories.
Blogcritics reviews O.R. Melling's The Summer King.
Blogcritics reviews Pamela F. Service's Tomorrow's Magic.
Velcro City Tourist Board reviews issue #2 of Hub.


Comments
Out of interest, is there a particular reason you list and link reviews from, say, SciFi Weekly and SF Site individually, but only mention (without linking) reviews at Strange Horizons as part of your magazine round-up?
Posted by: Niall | March 19, 2007 01:48 PM
Niall: I hadn't thought about it, but you're right -- I don't list Strange Horizons reviews consistently.
I think it's been because I look at Strange Horizons as part of my Monday list of sites to check, and so I list their weekly update then. Other review sites I mostly see through feeds, so I run through Bloglines and link their reviews as they come through. I've just this morning added Strange Horizons' feed to my list, so -- if they do list reviews as they go up, I expect I'll start linking to them then.
Posted by: Andrew Wheeler | March 19, 2007 02:23 PM
Thanks. There is a separate feed for the reviews department here.
Posted by: Niall | March 20, 2007 12:26 PM