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Dune Book Review: The Most Important Science Fiction Novel Ever Written
Dune is the book that every other science fiction book is either descending from or reacting against. Frank Herbert published it in 1965, and sixty years later it still feels like the most complete world anyone has ever built in a novel. Every detail — the ecology, the religion, the politics, the economics, the technology, the biology — connects to every other detail with a precision that borders on obsessive. This isn't worldbuilding. This is world-engineering.

Luke Stoffel
3 min read


Leviathan Wakes Book Review: The Expanse Starts Here and It's the Best Space Opera of the Century
Leviathan Wakes launches The Expanse with space opera, noir detective fiction, and alien body horror. The best space opera of the century. Five stars. Book Review.

Luke Stoffel
2 min read


The Fates Divide Book Review: The Sequel That Made Me Care About the Politics
The Fates Divide picks up where Carve the Mark left off and does what good sequels do — it expands the scope while deepening the personal stakes. Where the first book was about Akos and Cyra surviving, this one is about them choosing. And the choices are terrible.
Cyra and Akos are separated for much of the novel, and Roth uses that distance to give each character their own arc rather than tethering them to the romance. Cyra is drawn into the political upheaval of the...

Luke Stoffel
2 min read
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