Monday, April 20, 2026

Review: Metal from Heaven, by August Clarke


Ichorite is progress. More durable and malleable than steel, ichorite is the lifeblood of a dawning industrial revolution. Yann I. Chauncey owns the sole means of manufacturing this valuable metal, but his workers are on strike. They demand Chauncey research the hallucinatory illness befalling them. Marney Honeycutt, a lustertouched child worker, stands proud at the picket line with her best friend and family. That’s when Chauncey sends in the guns. Only Marney survives the massacre. She vows bloody vengeance.
A decade later, Marney is the nation’s most notorious highwayman, and Chauncey’s daughter seeks an opportune marriage. Marney’s rage and the ghosts of her past will drive her to masquerade as an aristocrat, outmaneuver powerful suitors, and win the heart of his daughter, so Marney can finally corner Chauncey and satisfy her need for revenge. But war ferments in the north, and deeper grudges are surfacing.

"Unalone toward dawn we go."

August Clarke's Metal from Heaven is a genre-bending sapphic epic that defies expectation with its bold use of second person narration, a prose that feels like wading through molasses, and a rich, tight worldbuilding. It deftly explores issues of class struggle and anti-capitalism and what price we are willing to pay to have a revolution.

This is absolutely not a love story but a tragedy, and yet it brims with hope and with a visceral sensuality and with longing devotion that borders on feverish obsession, as main character Marney makes a martyred beacon of her dead best friend. This is also absolutely a novel about butch culture, and the all-female cast is a glorious exploration of masculinity and femininity and all the flavors-in-between, and the intersection of class and queerness, with a very clever distinction between working-class and noble lesbians. Marney is unapologetic in her desires, and pursues many women, although only one has her bleeding heart.

The worldbuilding is rich and complex and almost incomprehensible at times, with a great number of places and cultures and complicated politics governing their alliances, and to complicate matters further, many religions. The crux of the matter, the conflict at the heart of the novel, is the usage and mining conditions of a magical metal that causes unnatural consequences on child laborers and creates a condition of chronic illness on many such children, Marney included; this allows the author to also make a vivid depiction of chronic illness, something that is rare enough in speculative fiction.

The prose is a glorious fever dream of ambitious narrative choices, featuring nonlinear storytelling and long paragraphs that lovingly describe women and hallucinations and sex, and a dizzying muddling of I and you and we. It's also hysterically funny at the most unexpected times.

Metal from Heaven is a modern masterpiece.

✨ 5 stars

 

 

Monday, April 13, 2026

ARC Review: The Sun King's Dawn, by Briar Niran

 


Burdened with an inability to desire others, King Richard of Ardenia still finds peace in his unruly siblings, his loyal circle, and even in his young knight, Sir Kaelen, whose yearning stares he has spent years ignoring. But when Richard rides to a borderland village to investigate eerie happenings, all peace shatters. The veil containing Gloamvarn, a neighbouring realm filled with fell beasts and unimaginable horrors, is cracking. Sooner or later, it will fall.
As Richard hunts for a way to safeguard his kingdom, Kaelen stays close, a constant, protective presence that stirs a strange tenderness Richard doesn’t dare name. For the monsters have a new ruler. And the tyrant hungers not only for Ardenia. But its king, too.

Thank you to the author for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Briar Niran's The Sun King's Dawn is a gorgeous achillean romantasy with the slowest of burns, first volume of a quartet, featuring an asexual king and his loyal knight. Told exclusively from the point of view of the king, the novel is a deft exploration of sex-repulsed asexuality and of how alienating it feels to live in a world where everyone expresses their love through carnality. At the same time, it's a novel about finding out one's own way to express love.

King Richard is a beautiful protagonist, complex in his grief and in his belief to be defective. He fiercely loves his siblings, and puts their well-being over his own more than a few times. His loyal knight shines bright with fealty and honor and with the kind of all-encompassing love that the bards sing about, but to the king it's anathema, and source of endless embarrassment and disgust, despite holding deep affection and trust for the knight. This creates a very interesting dynamic that promises to become much more intricate as the series goes on, without the need to somehow "fix" the King.

The worldbuilding and writing might be deemed simple, but they hold up very well, creating the perfect backdrop for the story. This is a secondary world with many creatures from our legends and a basic magical system, but the way it all blends is quite nicely done; the kingdom of the vampire-like creatures especially comes to mind, and there's some really horrifying moments linked to the overall threat of the book, a coming corruption of the flesh. In that regard, threat of sexual violence is also present, but handled expertly in a sensitive manner.

The main villain is perfectly villainous and quite disgusting in his pursuit, while his motivations may at first feel at least partly justified. We feel Richard's despair and horror as the book goes on and the villain's leery overtures become more and more explicit and terrifying. The rest of the cast holds up very well; Richard's three siblings are all well developed, and especially his kid sister is a delight.

The Sun King's Dawn is a perfect first installment.

✨ 5 stars

 

Monday, April 6, 2026

Review: Six Wild Crowns, by Holly Race

 


The king has been appointed by god to marry six queens. Those six queens are all that stand between the kingdom of Elben and ruin. Or so we have been told.
Each queen vies for attention. Clever, ambitious Boleyn is determined to be Henry's favourite. And if she must incite a war to win Henry over? So be it. Seymour acts as spy and assassin in a court teeming with dragons, backstabbing courtiers and strange magic. But when she and Boleyn become the unlikeliest of things - allies - the balance of power begins to shift. Together they will discover an ancient, rotting magic at Elben's heart. A magic that their king will do anything to protect.

"The smallest amount of hope is more precious than none at all." 

Holly Race's Six Wild Crowns is an extraordinary take on the story of Henry VIII and his six wives, filled with sapphic yearning. Drawing from history, the author creates a fantasy tale where an England-inspired island is led by a king who has to take six wives in order to keep up a magical shield that protects the realm. Things, of course, are not as they seem and we follow two women, Boleyn and Seymour, as they contend with secrets that might destroy everything and with the reality of being married to a mercurial king.

The two wives couldn't be more different: Boleyn is ambitious and truly loves the monster; Seymour just wants to survive. Over the course of the book, they change and grow organically. Readers who expect a happy ending should however be cautioned, as this novel is more akin to a Shakespearan tragedy than a modern romantasy. In fact, the sapphic yearning is mostly that, and mostly one-sided; and while the bisexual Boleyn is shown to reciprocate some of the affection, this is a larger tale about living in a men's world and standing up in sisterhood.

The blurb is a little misleading; there's little spycraft and court intrigue, and the dragons are not what we are used to. It's mostly a character-driven tale, although there's some twists and turns that move the plot into uncharted territory. The gorgeous prose makes up for a worldbuilding that is, maybe, not as innovative as it could have been, but that still works perfectly for the purposes of this book. The core cast is painted vividly: we meet the other wives, of course, each of them with her own goals, and Henry is a cumbersome character.

Six Wild Crowns is a fantastic first installment.

✨ 5 stars