Reviews for 5/7
Meta Corner: Larry of the OF Blog of the Fallen thinks about reviewing.
The Guardian reviews China Mieville's YA novel Un Lun Dun.

BestSF.net reviews Nebula Awards 22, edited by George Zebrowski and featuring (if I'm reading it right) the 1986 Nebula winners.
BestSF.net also reviews the April/May issue of Asimov's.
SciFi Dimensions reviews Cormac McCarthy's The Road.

Green Man Review has a number of new reviews this week, including:
- this one for the forthcoming Ellen Datlow-Terri Windling anthology The Coyote Road (which will be available from the SFBC once it's published)
- a review of David Marusek's first story collection, Getting to Know You
- a review of Emma Bull's new novel, Territory -- a historical fantasy set around a certain event at the O.K. Corral
- a review of Jim Butcher's White Night (also available in the SFBC omnibus Wizard Under Fire)
- a review of Simon R. Green's The Man With the Golden Torc
- a review of Charles Stross's The Jennifer Morgue (also available in the SFBC omnibus On Her Majesty's Occult Service)
- a review of Drew Bowling's The Tower of Shadows
- a review of Robert Charles Wilson's recent novella-as-a-book, Julian (also available in the SFBC exclusive Best Short Novels: 2007)
- a review of K.J. Parker's Devices and Desires
- and a whole lot more.

SciFi Weekly reviews Ian McDonald's Brasyl.
New reviews at Tangent Online:
- this one for the April stories from Strange Horizons
- this one for a colllection by Will Ludwigsen called Cthulhu Fhtagn, Baby! and Other Cosmic Insolence
- and this one for the June issue of F&SF.
The newest reviews on Don D'Amassa's Science Fiction page include Tobias S. Buckell's Ragamuffin (coming soon to the SFBC) and The Accidental Time Machine by Joe Haldeman (which I just read myself last weekend).
D'Amassa's Fantasy page has new reviews of Emma Bull's Territory, Sean Williams's The Hanging Mountains, and more.
And D'Amassa's Horror page has new reviews of Marked by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast, and The Very Blood Marys by M. Christian.
Andormeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine reviews Liz Williams's Dark Space.
The Contra Costa Times reviews Lawrence Watt-Evans's The Wizard Lord and several other books.
The Salt Lake Tribune reviews Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union.

Desicritics reviews the whole "Artemis Fowl" series by Eoin Colfer.
The Star Online is grumpy about the question of whether Guy Gavriel Kay's Ysabel is a "young adult" novel or not.

Fantasy Book Critic reviews Stephen Hunt's The Court of the Air.
Fantasybookspot brings us a review of Neal Asher's The Skinner.
Monsters & Critics reviews the new Jack Dann-Gardner Dozois original anthology Wizards (coming soon to the SFBC).
Pat's Fantasy Hotlist reviews Ian McDonald's Brasyl.
SF Signal has two reviews of Naomi Novik books today: this one for Throne of Jade, and this one for Black Powder War; both are available in the spiffy SFBC omnibus Temeraire: In the Service of the King.

SF Signal reviews Richard K. Morgan's Thirteen (coming soon to the SFBC).
Strange Horizons reviews Tricia Sullivan's novels Double Vision and Sound Mind.
Graham Joyce, in The Washington Post, reviews Elizabeth Hand's non-SFF novel Generation Loss.
The San Francisco Chronicle reviews Jose Carlos Somoza's Zig Zag.
SFReviews.net reviews J.R.R. Tolkien's The Children of Hurin.

Blogcritics reviews the Paula Guran-edited Best New Paranormal Romance.
Blogcritics also reviews Stephen King's short novel The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon.
Powells.com reviews China Mieville's Un Lun Dun.
Desicritics reviews Michael Crichton's Next.
Jay Lake pointed me at the 4/15 SF/Fantasy reviews from Library Journal, which include Lake's novel Mainspring, River of the World by Chaz Brenchley, Rollback by Robert J. Sawyer, and more.

Visions of Paradise looks at Robert A. Heinlein's classic (well, old, at least) novel Farnham's Freehold.
The most recent Library Journal Fiction reviews page includes Pearl Harbor by Newt Gingrich and William R. Forstchen.


