SPEC.FIC

all about diverse, debut, and indie sci-fi & fantasy books written by women and nonbinary authors

Tag: Del Rey

  • ARC Review: Weavingshaw by Heba Al-Wasity

    ARC Review: Weavingshaw by Heba Al-Wasity

    SPECTACULAR…give me 14 of them right now!!

    This dark and haunting masterpiece just absolutely barrelled itself into my book-loving heart and obliterated whatever poor soul had previously held the title of ‘the best book I’ve read in recent memory’. The way I became an obsessive unrecognizable creature absorbing this story, these characters into my veins as directly and swiftly as possible, while at the same time mourning the fact that I would never again be able to read this book for the first time.

    Heba Al-Wasity sweeps us away with her beautiful, well-edited manuscript, her characters that burrow and nestle themselves in the dark corners of your heart, and a masterclass in creating atmosphere, depth, tension, anticipation, and feeling.

    Being pitched as a gothic fantasy, this means pain, and no doubt there is suffering here. You will feel it, you will feel everything, and it climbs and it builds like a wave about to devastate the shores of a sleeping village, unaware of the beast about to change its entire world in one crash. I was that sleeping village. And I’m awake now.

    Dear potential reader, I could summarize the plot and tell you about all of the poignant themes brilliantly laid bare for your consumption in Weavingshaw, but I promise that no matter what, once this book comes out, there will be severe FOMO for those who don’t immediately shell out what little value money has in the exchange of such a treasure.

    * Gothic

    * Political

    * Demons

    * Ghosts

    * Mysteries

    * A slow burn you will devour

    Leena Al-Sayer can see the dead; this is her most severely kept secret. But when she needs to exchange it for the life of her brother in a deal that will threaten to upend her already fragile situation, she bargains with the Saint of Silence. Not a Saint but a haunting mystery, one that slowly unravels into madness, demons, ghosts, and dark corners of the world that might have been better left unturned.

    The first book in a TRILOGY.

    Recommendation: I’d recommend this book to anyone, everyone!

    Additional compelling themes/commentary:

    * Legacy – and what men will do/have done to maintain it. How self-important they make themselves and how monstrous…how they feel fit to make decisions of fate like gods for those they see as less than or in control of simply for greed.

    * Exploitation – of the poor, the migrant, the refugee. How they are used and bled for the continued vitality of the rich and ruling class. How prison systems become businesses, profits before people…How ‘othering’ people makes it so easy to treat them as less than, to rationalize harming them.

    * Secrets – even the smallest of these can change the course of a life.

    * Family – and how sometimes the ones we love the most will move and shake our lives so violently we might find resentment haunting our relationships

    * Fear & Control – and that maybe, just maybe we might be stronger than we think when it comes to fighting our ghosts.

    Thank you to Del Rey for providing this ARC for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.

    Buy from Bookshop.org here.

    Disclaimer: This blog is part of the Bookshop.org affiliate program and I may earn a very small amount for each purchase made.

    Find more information about the author and their books at their website linked here.

  • ARC Review: To Ride A Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose

    ARC Review: To Ride A Rising Storm by Moniquill Blackgoose

    Everything is turned up a notch in the second installment of the story of Anequs and Kasaqua! Politics, romance, new allies and dangerous enemies…once again Moniquill Blackgoose pens a piece of work that should be required reading for all.

    To Ride A Rising Storm is The Second Book of Nampeshiweisit following To Shape A Dragon’s Breath. We pick up right where the first one ended and continue to follow the journey of Anequs, a young indigenous woman chosen by Kasaqua, the first dragon her island home of Masquapaug has seen in a long time. This is the story of them attending the colonizer’s dragon academy and facing the Anglish ways and customs, including standing up to those who would do away with her people altogether.

    Review:

    I requested the ARC of The Second Book of Nampeshiweisit because I absolutely loved the first book. And if you loved the first book, you will enjoy the second. It’s very much the same style and format as the first. The writing is consistent, pragmatic, and practical – just like Anequs. The pacing is measured and even until you reach the very last pages where it then explodes into chaos. Similar to the first book, my only critique is that there is a lot of info dumping at times.

    One of my favorite parts of this book is the way the author weaves in stories alongside the main plot. Characters will sit down and listen to a story being told (which will last for a chapter) and it’s like finding myself around a campfire with friends and family while someone recounts a folk tale.

    Again, as in the first book, much of the story is comparing the differences between Anequs’s culture and that of the Anglish (European-centric-esque). Book #2 explores more of the differences pertaining to romantic relationships especially and themes around courting, marriage, and family inheritances.

    Recommendation:

    Readers who want to take their time with a story, who want to read from the perspective of an indigenous woman navigating a world that is completely different than her own, and who love dragons! As I said for the first book, I would recommend this to be required reading.

    The release date is January 27, 2026 so mark your calendars!

    Thank you to Del Rey for providing this book for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions are my own.

    Buy from Bookshop.org here.

    Disclaimer: This blog is part of the Bookshop.org affiliate program and I may earn a very small amount for each purchase made.

    Find more information about the author and their books at their website linked here.