Reviews for 5/1
SciFi UK Review looks at issue # 7 of Forgotten Worlds.
The May update for SF Site includes:
- a review of Adam Roberts's Gradisil
- a review of Jim Butcher's White Night (also available in the SFBC omnibus Wizard Under Fire)
- a review of Amanda Hemingway's The Poisoned Crown
- a review of Mary Gentle's Ilario: The Lion's Eye
- a review of Gene Wolfe's Soldier of Sidon
- a review of Hal Duncan's Ink
- a review of Electric Velocipede issue #11
- a review of Gail Z. Martin's The Summoner
- a review of Vernor Vinge's The Witling
- a review of Alan Dean Foster's Star Trek, The Animated Series: Logs Four, Five and Six
- and Jeff VanderMeer's latest "Dispatches from Smaragdine" column, reviewing recent Elizabeth Hand novels and proving other wonders.

Strange Horizons reviews three books about skiffy TV shows (the serious, soul-searching kind, that makes you think your're engaging in something really serious and worthy by lying on the couch watching vampires get staked by cute cheerleaders).
Bookgasm reviews Kim Stanley Robinson's Sixty Days and Counting.
The Eos Blog quotes from the starred Publishers Weekly review for Gardner Dozois and Jonathan Strahan's The New Space Opera.
Tobias Buckell also reprints a Publishers Weekly review, this time for his new novel, Ragamuffin (coming soon from the SFBC).
The infamous Michiko Kakutani of The New York Times reviews Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union (coming soon to the SFBC).
Cory Doctorow of Boing Boing reviews Ian McDonald's Brasyl.

