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Reviews for 4/17

Locus Online has posted Graham Sleight's "Yesterday's Tomorrows" column from the December 2006 issue, covering books by Frederik Pohl and C.M. Kornbluth, separately and in collaboration.

FPS reviews the art book Worlds of Amano, a retrospective of the art of Yoshitaka Amano (one of the Guests of Honor at this year's Worldcon).

Fantasybookspot brings us:

Last Colony

Monsters and Critics reviews a book called Magic Bites from an author they, as usual, forget to mention.

Monsters and Critics reviews Joel Shepherd's Breakaway.

Breakaway

Monster and Critics also reviews Gordon Dahlquist's The Glass Books of the Dream Eaters.

SFF World reviews John Meaney's Bone Song (not to be confused with John Clute's "The Bone Song of Philip K. Dick" -- this is a different song, in another key, played by different bones).

SF Signal reviews the comics adaptation of George R.R. Martin's novella "The Hedge Knight."

New from SF Site's mid-month update:

For a Few Demons More Blindsight

Weapons of Choice Designated Targets Final Impact

Also new at SF Site this week: Michael M. Jones's "Schrodinger's Bookshelf" column, covering various short fiction venues (two books and two magazines).

Strange Horizons reviews The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction, edited by George Mann, and Fast Forward 1, edited by Lou Anders.

Publishers Weekly reviews Alexis Glynn Latner's first novel Hurrican Moon.

David Louis Edelman runs through the works of Kurt Vonnegut, ranking them.

Laura Anne Gilman reprints the Publishers Weekly review of her novel Burning Bridges.

John Scalzi quotes from a Romantic Times review of his novel The Last Colony.

Last Colony

The Genre Files on Jim Butcher's Proven Guilty (also available in SFBC's upcoming omnibus Wizard Under Fire).

Wizard Under Fire

Anna Genoese isn't really reviewing Roger Zelazny's great Lord of Light, but I can't resist her perfect description of it: "It's about the beginning of the world, the end of the world, and what happens in between."

Salon reviews J.R.R. Tolkien's The Children of Hurin.

Children of Hurin

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Comments

A sentence linking one of my book reviews also linking something of John Clute's? Weird.

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