SciFi and Fantasy
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Five Books About Battling Doubles, Doppelgängers, and Clones
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Five Books About Battling Doubles, Doppelgängers, and Clones

Books reading recommendations Five Books About Battling Doubles, Doppelgängers, and Clones From evil twins to alter egos that take on a life of their own, you’re always your own worst enemy… By Lorna Wallace | Published on July 16, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share Science fiction, fantasy, and horror books can be filled with foes of all kinds—from aliens and orcs to ghosts and slashers. But there’s something uniquely and horribly unsettling about having to battle a version (or multiple versions!) of yourself—be they a double, doppelgänger, or clone. Facing off against a double is a fairly common problem in the world of superheroes, with everyone from Superman to Captain America having gone toe-to-toe with themselves. Such mirror matches usually play out the same way: the characters are a physical match, but something about the hero’s idiosyncratic identity—be it their tenacity, heart, or past experiences—gives them the extra boost needed to defeat their alternative (often evil!) self. Outside the world of comic books, however, dealing with doubles can get a little more complicated. Not only do doppelgängers and clones often bring a character’s inner demons to the surface, but defeating them can also be a little trickier—as the five books below demonstrate. The Dark Half by Stephen King (1989) Thad Beaumont has made a successful career out of being a novelist—but not under his own name. All of his best-selling books—which are ultra-violent crime novels—have been written under the pen name George Stark. The story starts with Thad deciding to retire the pseudonym, which he does by staging a fake funeral for his alter ego. But Stark doesn’t want to be killed off and literally claws his way out of the grave to enact bloody revenge on anyone who had a part in his death. The Dark Half is clearly a personal book for Stephen King, who wrote a few novels under the pen name Richard Bachman. So it makes sense that there’s a good deal of introspection about personal and authorial identity in the story, but it’s also full of gruesome kills thanks to Stark’s murder spree (which lands Thad in hot water because while they aren’t 100% superficially identical, the two do share fingerprints and DNA). The Dark Half might not be one of King’s best books—it’s admittedly hard to top masterpieces like The Stand (1978) and IT (1986)—but it is one of his most underrated. Dark Matter by Blake Crouch (2016) Dark Matter is a sci-fi thriller that works brilliantly when you go in knowing absolutely nothing. Since it’s on this list, I’ve already revealed that there’s some sort of double or doppelgänger shenanigans going on, but what form that takes can still be a surprise (and won’t be revealed in the description below!). The book starts with physics professor Jason Dessen being knocked out while walking home one night and then waking up to a changed world. His wife claims they never married, his teenage son doesn’t exist, and he’s apparently been working on an experimental physics project. All Jason wants is to get his family back, but achieving that might not be so easy. The journey that Jason goes on in Dark Matter is hectic, twisty, and mind-bending. That isn’t exactly ideal for our main character, but for the reader it results in a fast-paced plot that barrels breathlessly forward. The Murders of Molly Southbourne by Tade Thompson (2017) In some sci-fi stories, clones get on fairly well with each other, but The Murders of Molly Southbourne is not one of them. Molly Southbourne has a bizarre condition: every time she bleeds a clone of her is created, and that clone will eventually try to murder her. The novella starts with one of these clones—which Molly refers to as “mollies”—waking up chained to a wall in a basement. She’s confused and can’t remember how she got there, and then Molly comes in and tells her the story of her life. Tade Thompson manages to pack a lot into this compact novella. The tale that Molly tells is strange, engrossing, and, as would be expected from the premise, very bloody. Such Lovely Skin by Tatiana Schlote-Bonne (2024) Teenager Viv has had the summer from hell, but her life is about to get even worse. She accidentally killed her little sister and then lied about it and she’s been wallowing in a pit of grief and guilt ever since. With school about start up again, she decides to try to get back to some sense of normality by doing her first Twitch stream—which is how she makes money—in months. While doing an offline run-through of an indie horror game, Viv reveals the truth of her sister’s death to an NPC (non-playable character). But telling this secret allows an evil mimic to latch onto her. The demonic doppelgänger starts causing mayhem, but Viv is only able to convince one person that she isn’t the culprit: Ash, an outcast boy who she’s previously spread nasty rumors about (unbeknownst to him). I found Viv’s self-obsessed personality to be a little bit grating, but the visceral horror imagery throughout the book more than makes up for that. The Other by Annie Neugebauer (2026) I’m a sucker for any story that takes place in the woods (and I just recently put together a list of horror stories set in jungles and rainforests!) and The Other makes great use of its nature setting. Elise and Logan are at a crossroads in their marriage, so they’ve gone on a multi-day hike in the woods to give them space to think and talk through their relationship. It’s initially a quiet retreat, but then they come across another couple on the trail who look eerily like them. Although a little unsettled by the coincidence, they’ve already set up camp and it’s rapidly getting dark so they decide to stick it out. But then they wake up the next morning to find that the other couple are now not only identical to them, but they’re also claiming to be them. The Other is the kind of fast-paced novella that can be read in just a couple of sittings. It’s an incredibly stressful premise—Elise and Logan aren’t even sure of each other anymore, but they know that they can’t let their doppelgängers get back to the car at the trailhead—and it’s made all the more tense by the isolated setting. There are surely plenty of other books out there that feature someone having to battle an alternate version of themselves. Be it a classic or something more modern, feel free to leave your suggestions and recommendations in the comments below![end-mark] The post Five Books About Battling Doubles, Doppelgängers, and Clones appeared first on Reactor.

Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender Heads to Select Theaters as Tickets Go on Sale
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Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender Heads to Select Theaters as Tickets Go on Sale

News Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender Heads to Select Theaters as Tickets Go on Sale Sorry to everyone who’s not in NYC or LA By Molly Templeton | Published on July 16, 2026 Image: Paramount+ Comment 0 Share New Share Image: Paramount+ New York and Los Angeles Avatar fans, it’s your lucky day. Variety has the news that the upcoming animated film Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender will play—for one week only!—in select theaters in these two cities. From July 24th to July 30th, the movie will have three showings daily at Los Angeles’ AMC Burbank Town Center 6 and Manhattan’s AMC Empire 25. (Those attending San Diego Comic-Con also have a chance to see the film on the big screen on July 24th.) While this is a treat for fans, it also has a more practical purpose: As Variety notes, “The news signals that Paramount will likely be campaigning Avatar Aang for next year’s Oscar for best animated feature and other accolades.” Avatar Aang continues the story told in Avatar: The Last Airbender. It’s both a sequel to that series, and a prequel to The Legend of Korra. The synopsis says: The new film, based on the animated series created by Michael Dante DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko, sees Avatar Aang, the world’s last Airbender, learn of an ancient power that could save his culture from extinction. With the help of his friends, he embarks on a global quest to find it before it falls into the wrong hands and threatens to upend the peace they sacrificed everything to achieve. The movie stars Eric Nam as Aang, Dave Bautista as Tagah, Jessica Matten as Katara, Román Zaragoza as Sokka, Steven Yeun as Zuko, and Dionne Quan as Toph. Freida Pinto, Ke Huy Quan, Taika Waititi, Geraldine Viswanathan, Ronny Chieng, and Ken Jeong also provide voices, and Dee Bradley Baker returns to voice Appa and Momo. It’s directed by Lauren Montgomery and co-directed by Steve Ahn and William Mata. Tickets are on sale now. If you’re not near one of these two theaters, you can watch the movie when it streams on Paramount Plus starting July 25.[end-mark] The post <i>Avatar Aang: The Last Airbender</i> Heads to Select Theaters as Tickets Go on Sale appeared first on Reactor.

The Dangers of Dating: Deadly Attraction, Double Date, and Killer’s Kiss 
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The Dangers of Dating: Deadly Attraction, Double Date, and Killer’s Kiss 

Books Teen Horror Time Machine The Dangers of Dating: Deadly Attraction, Double Date, and Killer’s Kiss  Oh no, not the secret THIRD identical sister! By Alissa Burger | Published on July 16, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share Romance is a major theme in ‘90s teen horror: someone’s always hooking up, breaking up, going out with someone they shouldn’t, or wishing they could be with someone they can’t have. Teenage love is never easy, but it gets even more complicated when someone tries to have it all by secretly dating multiple girls (or less frequently, guys). And when the truth comes out, things get complicated, which is the case in Diane Hoh’s Nightmare Hall book Deadly Attraction (1993) and R.L. Stine’s Fear Street books Double Date (1994) and Killer’s Kiss (1997).  In all three of these books, male protagonists carry on relationships with multiple girls, with varying levels of subterfuge. Deadly Attraction’s Robert Q. Parker III is just having a bit of fun with a girl from Salem until his “real” girlfriend comes back to him, Double Date’s Bobby Newkirk wants to date two identical twins without either one finding out, and in Killer’s Kiss, Vincent Milano can’t make up his mind between wild Delia and “good girl” Karina, so he just keeps dating them both. As far as these guys are concerned, all’s fair in love and war, and they go to pretty outrageous lengths to keep dating as many girls as they can … though the girls are also willing to go pretty far to get their guy or in some cases, their revenge.  Many of Hoh’s Nightmare Hall books are quite insular, focusing on the on-campus community of Salem University. While the students make trips off campus for a bite at the local diner or pizza place, or to do some shopping in town, there isn’t a lot of authentic interaction between the people who live in town and the Salem University students, with a pretty stark division of town and gown. But worlds collide when Robert Q. starts dating Darlene, a waitress from the local diner. She is infatuated with him and does everything she can to fit in with him and his friends. But it’s all for naught: Robert Q. is just having some fun with Darlene until his ex-girlfriend Gerrie gets tired of dating his friend Richard and comes back to him. When Robert Q. brings Darlene to a fraternity party, and then gets back together with Gerrie, Darlene quickly becomes disposable as far as Robert Q. is concerned. A Salem University student named Hailey comforts Darlene in the bathroom after Darlene sees Robert Q. and Gerrie getting cozy together, and the two girls overhear Robert Q. talking with Richard as he says “Look, Richard, twenty bucks is my final offer. You take the townie home. Get her out of here. Just drop her at her house. It’s on Fourth Street. Not that far. Twenty bucks for twenty minutes, that’s not bad” (31). Darlene and Gerrie are very different, in terms of both social class and life experience, but as far as Robert Q. and Richard are concerned, they’re a lot like moveable game pieces, capable of being picked up, passed back and forth, and disposed of at will.  Robert Q. and Gerrie seem well on the road to reconciliation, at least until someone beans Gerrie in the head with a rock outside the fraternity party and she has to be rushed to the hospital. Someone sets Robert Q.’s sports car on fire and when Richard catches someone trying to steal his car at the mall and tries to stop them, the perpetrator hits Richard with his own car, killing him. Many of the Salem University students see Darlene as the prime suspect and while Hailey stands up for her, she starts to have doubts of her own—especially because Darlene refuses to let go of her belief that she and Robert Q. are destined to be together and it’s just a matter of time before he comes back to her. Hailey’s alternate suspect is Darlene’s brother, who is a Salem University student, but Hailey doesn’t know his name and can’t figure out who he is to track him down and ask him a few questions.  Hailey does eventually solve this mystery:Darlene’s brother is actually her half-brother, has a different last name, and happens to be the guy Hailey herself has recently started dating, Finn Conran—but it’s actually Finn’s friend Pete Torrance that they all ought to be worried about. Pete has been friends with Darlene and Finn since they were all kids and while he has had a crush on Darlene for years, she’s never given him a chance. So he figures if he can take out the competition, frame her brother for the attacks, and basically make sure he’s her only remaining option, she’ll have to go out with him. Pete lures Hailey to Darlene and Finn’s house, planning to murder her and frame Finn, but she defends herself with chemicals from Finn’s photography dark room, traps Pete in the basement, and calls the police, saving herself before Finn can come to her rescue, though she sure is happy to see him when he shows up. Even Darlene gets a happy ending of sorts, reunited with her ex-boyfriend Bo (though there’s a bucketload of red flags in that relationship too, including a troubling level of obsession on both sides).  Double Date’s Bobby Newkirk is conceited and obnoxious. He dates and discards one girl after another, doesn’t spare a single thought for their feelings or see them as human beings deserving of respect or consideration, and feels that it’s his duty to date as many girls as possible, because he doesn’t want to “deprive” any of them of the (dubious) pleasure of his company. When he sees identical twins Bree and Samantha Wade, he bets his friends he can go out with both girls in a single weekend, without either of them finding out about the other. Much like Robert Q. and Richard in Deadly Attraction, he views the girls largely interchangeable. When his friend Paul says “I couldn’t tell them apart […] Which one was Bree and which one was Samantha?”, Bobby’s response is “What difference does it make? […] They’re both totally hot! […] Talk about dating two girls at once! What would it be like to go out with twins? Wow” (10). And, confident in his desirability and powers of persuasion, Bobby goes for it, asking Bree to come see his band play on Friday night and meeting up with Samantha at the mall on Saturday.  Bobby quickly learns that there are some major differences between the twins: Bree is quiet and reserved, while Samantha is more of a risk-taker, capping off their date night at the mall by shoplifting earrings from a jewelry store and running from security guards. Samantha knows that Bobby is dating both of them and Bree starts to get suspicious, which is when things begin to take some pretty wacky turns. First, Samantha warns Bobby that Bree could be potentially dangerous, telling him that if she finds out about Bobby dating them both, there’s no telling what might happen. Samantha hints that Bree has a history of instability, though she doesn’t go into detail, telling Bobby that “She’s starting to go over the edge. You don’t know her. She’s fragile—like glass […] If she breaks, she could do anything” (62, emphasis original). One of Bobby’s many ex-girlfriends, Melanie, is friends with the Wade twins and tries to steer him away with cryptic warnings as well. But no challenge or danger is too big for Bobby and he keeps on dating both sisters, confident that he can tell them apart by the small butterfly tattoo that Samantha has shown him on her shoulder, which distinguishes her from her sister. Things get even more complicated when Bree tells him that they have a secret third sister, Jennilynn, who is actually the unstable one. She tried to kill Samantha and Bree, and for everyone’s safety, she lives with their aunt and uncle now, but it seems like she has tracked them down and is trying to make their lives miserable again … and claim Bobby for herself, which is simultaneously an ego boost and a mind game, as Bobby goes back through his encounters with the girls, trying to figure out who he was with when, who he should be afraid of, and whether or not he can level up by making out with triplets instead of twins, even if it could be potentially fatal. Jennilynn lures him to her family’s cabin in the woods and knocks him unconscious. When he wakes up, he’s in his T-shirt and underwear and tied to a chair as she pours honey all over him and then dumps a box full of biting ants on his head, as he screams and tries to free himself. Jennilynn flees, Bobby finally gets loose, and when he escapes the cabin, he runs into Melanie, who tells him she came to the cabin looking for Jennilynn and offers him a ride to the Wades’ house so he can warn them (but not before she digs some beach towels out of the trunk to avoid him getting her car set all sticky. Dude is a mess). But when they get to the Wade house, the joke is definitely on Bobby, as he is humiliated and mocked by all the girls he’s used and discarded. There’s no Jennilynn. The twins have known what Bobby was doing the whole time and decided to teach him a lesson. Nobody has a tattoo, but a sheet of temporary tattoos have allowed the twins to switch identities back and forth to mess with him. Bobby is terrified and publicly humiliated, both by the girls he wronged and the Wade twins’ parents, who can’t figure out why a half-naked guy covered in honey is in their living room screaming about a third Wade daughter who doesn’t exist. Bobby still seems a bit perplexed—his final question to the gathered girls is “You—you mean you don’t like me?” (152, emphasis original), before “Defeated, he turned and slumped out of the room, their laughter ringing in his ears” (152). The lesson may or may not stick as well as the honey did, but the girls have leveraged sisterhood and solidarity in getting their revenge on Bobby.  In Killer’s Kiss, Vincent Milano sees himself as a real catch, much like Bobby and Robert Q., but in a bit of a twist, he is also framed as a desirable prize to be won. Delia and Karina have competed for everything their whole lives, from the best grades to homecoming queen. They’re always trying to one-up one another: as Delia tells her friends “I’m the front-page editor, but Karina is editor of the whole paper […] I manage the volleyball team. Karina is the star player” (17). And now, in senior year, they’re competing for the prestigious Conklin scholarship, which is based on a combination of academics, a talent competition, and artistic achievement. On top of that, they both have their sights set on Vincent, who tells both Delia and Karina that she’s his one and only. Vincent plays them off one another, telling Delia that Karina is delusional and believes she’s dating him, but swears it isn’t true. The girls finally realize what’s going on when Delia sees Vincent and Karina together. They have a pretty good conversation and Karina tells Delia “he made it easy to believe what I wanted to believe. He should have told me. He should have told you too. He lied to both of us” (71). But the truce doesn’t last long and before they know it, Vincent is playing them off one another again. Tensions rise even higher when someone starts to sabotage Delia’s Conklin competition materials, destroying her guitar before the talent portion and defacing her portfolio before the artistic evaluation. To top it all off, it turns out Karina and Delia aren’t enough for Vincent—he starts making out with Delia’s younger sister Sarah as well.  It all comes to a head at Vincent’s birthday party, which he decides to hold in an abandoned house on Fear Street. The partygoers spend a lot of the night wondering where Delia is … until she shows up late, looking like a disaster. The gathered teens look on in horror as “Delia staggered into the doorway. She took two steps—then stumbled. The heel of one of her red shoes had snapped off […] The right sleeve of her dress was ripped at the shoulder” (99). She is covered with bruises, scratches, and blood, and tells everyone that it’s because Karina tricked her into coming over and then tied Delia up in her room to keep her away from Vincent’s party. It’s a wild end to the night, but the next morning is even more intense, when Delia and the others show up at the house to help Vincent clean up and find him dead, with a lipstick print in Delia’s signature shade on his cheek. Once again, it looks like Karina is out to get Delia, this time framing her for murder: the lip print is reversed, planted on his cheek with a paper that Delia used to blot her lips. The police find several of these blotting papers in Karina’s room, who vehemently denies everything, but this apparently evidence enough to get Karina charged with Vincent’s murder and institutionalized.  But Delia seems to be a good friend, going to visit Karina in the hospital with their friend Gabe. As they wait for Karina’s doctor to finish in her room so they can see her, Delia and Gabe talk about how she won the Conklin scholarship and their bright futures that are waiting for them after graduation. Delia muses that “It’s not the way I wanted to win it” (143), before telling Gabe “Karina would have won, you know […] If I had let her” (144). Once Delia starts talking, the truth comes tumbling out: Delia did it all. She sabotaged her own guitar and portfolio. She faked her injuries the night of Vincent’s birthday party, killed him after everyone else had left, and planted the blotting papers in Karina’s room to frame her for the murder. As she confesses to Gabe, “I was losing everything. Everything. Vincent. My sister. The award. I saw everything slip away […] I had to kill him for liking Karina better than me. And for kissing my sister […] And if I could pin the blame on Karina—then all my problems would be solved!” (146-7). Gabe is understandably horrified and Delia tries to make him promise not to tell, but Karina’s doctor overheard the whole thing, calls the cops, and begins to set things right.  In Deadly Attraction, Double Date, and Killer’s Kiss, when guys try to date multiple girls, things end badly, with consequences ranging from humiliation to death. There are a lot of moving pieces in all three books: the guys treat the girls badly, using and exploiting them, viewing them as prizes to be won rather than people to know and respect as equal partners. In competing for these young men’s affections—none of whom seem to be worth the trouble, to be honest—the girls go to great lengths as well. In Deadly Attraction, Darlene is fixated on Robert Q. and when she gives up on getting back together with him, she becomes just as intensely fixated when she gets back together with her ex-boyfriend Bo, as Hailey laments that “Darlene’s switched heroes […] but she’s still using the same script. Woman overboard. She may not be a killer, but she sure could use some help” (179). The girls in Double Date go to elaborate lengths to get their revenge on Bobby, while Karina and Delia publicly attack one another as their fight over Vincent in Killer’s Kiss. All might be fair in love and war, but the consequences end up being more than any of them bargained for.[end-mark] The post The Dangers of Dating: <em>Deadly Attraction</em>, <em>Double Date</em>, and <em>Killer’s Kiss</em>  appeared first on Reactor.

Read an Excerpt From The Divine Gardener’s Handbook by Eli Snow
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Read an Excerpt From The Divine Gardener’s Handbook by Eli Snow

Excerpts Romantasy Read an Excerpt From The Divine Gardener’s Handbook by Eli Snow WARNING: MAY CAUSE REBELLION, RADICAL GARDENING, AND ROMANCE. By Eli Snow | Published on July 16, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from The Divine Gardener’s Handbook, a sapphic dystopian romantasy by Eli Snow, out from Saturday Books on August 18th. In a Jenga-stacked megacity where glowing blue flowers hum in the dark and palace doors open into secret worlds, getting a job in the Divine Gardens is almost impossible—like being plucked from obscurity by a carnival claw machine. But Cyprin has spent her whole life trying.Her only chance is winning the annual flower pageant, dominated for five years by Purcell: brilliant head gardener, unbearable rival, and the one person Cyprin can’t stop thinking about. When Cyprin cheats her way to victory, she’s thrust into a world of sentient plants, ancient secrets, and a God who turns out to be just some exhausted man with a very good garden.What begins as rivalry, heated glaring, and increasingly personal acts of warfare spirals into something much more dangerous. As rebellion spreads through the city and the truth beneath the Gardens begins to unravel, Cyprin and Purcell find themselves caught between ambition, obsession, and the terrifying possibility of understanding each other completely.Even if they burn the whole world down in the process. Buy the Book The Divine Gardener’s Handbook Eli Snow Buy Book The Divine Gardener's Handbook Eli Snow Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget God’s gardens were beautiful in a way that a simple word could never do justice. The leaves so lustrous they could have been polished. Petals had peeked out in saturated hues that put Cyprin in mind of fresh paints. The grass—even the damned grass looked like it had been laser cut. Planed rather than trimmed. The gardens were nothing like the city, where Cyprin worked in one of twelve hundred apple orchards, where apples undulated like ocean waves whenever she closed her eyes, where only stale light made it down past the scrapers and the hot-sick smell of full trash cans and close bodies surrounded her—getting a job there was like getting plucked out of obscurity by one of those claw machines at a fair. It was an almost-impossibility. But for the first time in a lifetime of trying, Cyprin had secured an interview in the Divine Gardens. The pinnacle of horticultural research and practice happened in the Divine Gardens. And only ten thousand lucky individuals got to be a part of it. Which had sounded like a lot until Cyprin had thought about the seven billion who lived in the Divine Kingdom of Verdure, most of them with green thumbs. And until she’d remembered hardly anyone ever vacated their position in the gardens. Most went through to retirement. Some chose to keep working until they died, nodding out with the bluebells in some quiet corner. No matter how old or infirm they were by the end, the garden admin staff seemed to find ways for them to contribute. After all, the divine gardeners were like a big family. A big elite family. Okay, maybe more like a cult. A cult Cyprin desperately wanted to belong to. God’s gardens were full of purist snobs who bathed in starch and dewed instead of sweating, and for the interview, Cyprin had made herself a close approximation of them. Dark hair waxed tight to her scalp, lips precision-lined, tawny brown skin scrubbed of imperfections. She’d even donned impractical but showy all-white coveralls. But after walking in the midmorning heat to get to the garden admin center, everything was sweat-soaked. At least the garden admin center where the interview was to be held was cool and damp, hewn out of the bedrock. Grow lights strung up in lines at ankle height constituted a major OHS hazard, and seedlings littered the floor in disposable cardboard pots. If only Cyprin had known whom she was about to meet. How this was about to go. She would’ve run back to the city. And maybe avoided the black market. Maybe. Toward the back of the admin center, two women talked at a stone desk, dressed in the white outfits of palace staff. They were everything Cyprin wanted to be. One held a watering can and had soft, round features, with stunning green eyes framed by large glasses. She was short and medium-sized, with a curly bob of brownish hair and pinkish-white skin, while the other woman was tall and eggshell-white, thin, and blond. The blond had a good sassy eyebrow-raise going, as though whole parts of her face were leaning away from the conversation. Cyprin tried to butt in for her appointment. “Hey, excuse me?” The short woman shushed her before returning to her conversation, and Cyprin’s visions of perfect, floaty, enviable garden angels evaporated. She tried to butt in again. “Hey, I’m here for—” The blond’s eyes were sympathetic, but the brown-haired girl was rude. “Be quiet for a moment, will you? Wait your turn.” Cyprin’s glare should’ve withered her on the spot, but the woman just went right back to her whiny conversation. “—I wanted gold petals for the petal-mail fitting, but there weren’t enough perfect gold roses, so I’ve ended up with red and gold! That’s a problem, isn’t it? Do you think that’s a problem? I’m worried it’s going to make God look sallow!” Cyprin committed the whole of her to angry memory. The manic corkscrew curls, cheeks the pink of rat tails. Drip, drip—the watering can was as emotionally off-kilter as its owner. Droplets fell from it and completely failed to hit a plant a mere finger’s width away. Cyprin’s eye twitched faintly. It was hate at first sight. “Excuse me,” Cyprin said, very loudly and firmly. “I’m here for my interview.” The blond on the other side of the desk turned toward Cyprin with an unmistakable air of relief. The short lady with the brown curls tipped the watering can onto her own foot. Good Divine, what a dorkus! Cyprin had never seen such large eyes on a person, luminous and green, almost hypnotic. “Oh! You must be Cyprin Voltag!” said the blond, the owner of the sassy eyebrow. “I’m Amanda Anstan, and this is our head gardener, Purcell Whitlock. So nice to finally meet you in the flesh.” “Fine. I’ll leave you to it.” Purcell smiled in a brittle way. “After all, I’m supposed to go and dress God.” She looked cute but bitey, like a terrier that had suffered too many pats on the head. A-hur-hur-hur, dress God, Cyprin mocked Purcell in the safety of her imagination, suffering the end of their exchange with a polite smile plastered on her face. These two were chatting about how tight they were with God while her whole life rested on a knife’s edge. Unbelievable. Purcell jostled her on the way out, and that was when Cyprin realized she could smell her, sweet and cloying like a candy shop. Cyprin had the unhinged thought that if she cracked Purcell open like a piñata, pink musk sticks would spill out. For a moment she felt every bit the predatory city rat she was trying not to be. The possibility of there being ten thousand Purcells in the gardens reared its ugly head. Cyprin pictured them as little marshmallows she would pop in her mouth one by one until she was sick. But she had to get in. She had to finally see him From The Divine Gardener’s Handbook by Eli Snow. Copyright © 2026 by the author, and reprinted with permission of St. Martin’s Publishing Group. The post Read an Excerpt From <i>The Divine Gardener’s Handbook</i> by Eli Snow appeared first on Reactor.

Jo Walton’s Reading List: May and June 2026
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Jo Walton’s Reading List: May and June 2026

Book Recommendations Jo Walton Reads Jo Walton’s Reading List: May and June 2026 Classic comfort reads and some excellent science fiction that you should all read immediately! By Jo Walton | Published on July 16, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share May began in Chicago, then I took the train home to Montreal, where I have been ever since. Being at home, I read a lot: a total of eighteen books, and some of them were great. But I read four books that were sent to me to blurb—excuse me, I read half of each of them and then stopped reading. And they were all awful and sapped my will to read and talk about books, because oh gosh yuck, I hate everything and want to put my head in a bucket. And then I read On the Calculation of Volume and I hated it so much, and they blurred the memory of the good books I did love and wanted to share, and that’s why this post is coming in late. Cherry Baby — Rainbow Rowell (2026) This came out in April, and I saved it until I was home to read. I really think Rowell is getting better and better. This is a story of how people can meet at the wrong time in their lives, and meet again at a different time. It’s sort of like Landline in that respect, but also very different. It’s also about creativity and people’s expectations of each other. As always with Rowell, all the characters are great, all real and with real upsides and downsides. Terrific. Five Windows — D.E. Stevenson (1953) Re-read. What a lovely book. It uses the literal framing device of five windows to tell the story of a young man’s life, and how he becomes a writer. It’s one of the most realistic depictions of someone becoming a writer and getting published I’ve ever read, and it’s also charming, with excellent characters. In some ways it’s a million miles and seventy-five years from Cherry Baby, but in others it’s very like it in the way it views the characters kindly but clearly and shows people having work and creativity in their lives. If you want to try Stevenson, this would be a good one to start. Roman Tales: A Reader’s Guide to the Art of Microhistory — Thomas V. Cohen (2019) This is another of Cohen’s awesome books of microhistory, with some thoughts on what it is. What we have here is five stories of people and events around the beginning of the sixteenth century in Rome, discovered in court records and then looked for in other records, to make as coherent a story as we can out of events like a stolen dwarf, a monk who walled himself up without permission, a rowdy drinking party, a divination, and so on. All the cases are fascinating—and Cohen points out things like the way the father of the dwarf (being a court dwarf is a job) calls him “the dwarf” on the record, but his brother always calls him by name. If you’re interested in the oddities of people’s lives, this is a very readable book that’s definitely focused on the micro but all the better for it. Success — Una Silberrad (1912) A completely unique book, about a man who is a scientist and inventor and his cousin who works with antique furniture. It contains some distressing anti-Semitism, which is a pity, because it’s otherwise a very interesting and unusual book. You seldom see characters like this. The story concerns an unfair dismissal and the invention of an aerial torpedo (what we might call an air-to-air missile) and as with other Silberrad and Nevil Shute and very little else, is a book that isn’t SF that’s concerned with technology and the way technology intersects with society. It’s also the story of a man having a breakdown when his work is taken away, and how he recovers and becomes a better person, but it sees very clearly the thing that capitalism can do to people. I really enjoyed reading this, on the whole. Greenteeth — Molly O’Neill (2025) Fantasy about a Jenny Greenteeth, a lake-dwelling monster, and her adventures with a witch and a boggart peddler. This does involve some saving the world, or at least the village, and a lot of quests, and the Seelie Court, and it had reasonably thought-through worldbuilding. It was well written, and the first-person monster was great, but I somehow felt it went on a little too long. The Memoirs of Philipe de Commines — Philipe de Commynes (1499) This is a primary source for the reigns of Louis XI and Charles VIII of France, and Charles VIII’s invasion of Italy. It is therefore very useful and relevant for me for the papal election. As always when I read this kind of primary source, I realise that other people have only read parts of it, if at all, and that I have read a lot of recent secondary histories that have definitely not read it, even though it is a (biased, French) eyewitness account of things that are writing about. Commines was sent to Florence right after the Pazzi Conspiracy! He was with the French invading force that swept down on Naples, and he was there when they fought their way back to France inch by inch. I cannot recommend this book. It is too long, and not only is it too long but it refers to everyone by title in a way that makes it extremely difficult to remember who they are if you don’t already know. But it is an invaluable primary source, there’s an English translation, it’s out of copyright, and I am making a good-parts version. Detective Aunty — Uzma Jalaluddin (2025) Terrific book about an Indian mother whose daughter is being framed for murder, and how she solves the case—while meeting and interacting with a lot of people in Toronto’s Indian community. Great characters and sense of place and very well done, as always with Jalaluddin. The Italian Village in the Hills — Victoria Springfield (2026) Romance novel set in Italy, which has three whole generations of romances and works beautifully. I also really liked that it began with a girl whose closest friend and connection is her grandfather, because that’s not something you often see. The big misunderstandings were to do with who was a fascist way back, and were therefore less annoying than such things often are. Springfield holds the balance between the POVs and stories pretty well. Our Trip Around the World — Renate Belczyk (2020) This book ought to be better than it is. It’s a perfect example of how the protagonist of a travel book needs to be someone you want to spend time with, and not a perfectly ordinary, perfectly nice girl. Two German friends went around the world in the 1950s, stopping for quite a long time sometimes to work to get money for the next leg, sometimes milking the publicity and once even getting free motorcycles out of it. Then one of them wrote about it decades later. They go to Mexico, Canada, Japan, India, and… I was going to say “have very conventional experiences,” but it’s not that, their experiences are sometimes quite exciting, it’s the reactions to the experiences that are conventional. Everyone can’t be Bernard Ollivier or Alice Steinbach, I suppose, but this one was disappointing. Dark Moon Defender — Sharon Shinn (2006) The next volume in the Twelve Houses series, which continues to be very good, and continues to be set in the “will to battle” space where a war may or may not be inevitable and things are happening. Contains a love story—it’s clear now that each member of our core team will find love, one per volume. I like the magic system. I like the way Shinn writes. Start at the beginning of the series. Death on the Nile — Agatha Christie (1937) Re-read. Interesting to consider what makes this book so much better than most of the Christies that are exactly the same. It may be that she knew what the plot was from the beginning, rather than going back to put in the clues, but whatever it is, this one works. Hercule Poirot, on a boat going up the Nile, and someone is murdered in a very clever way. What more could you possibly want? Hauntings and Other Fantastic Tales — Vernon Lee (1890) A collection of ghost stories, many of them set in Italy and with the historical details worryingly correct. Well written, interesting, but sometimes a bit creepy for my liking, while not being exactly horror. Backstage: Stories of a Writing Life — Donna Leon (2025) Essays about Leon’s life and work. As with her previous collection of essays, I felt as if she was holding herself back. The Man of Her Dreams — Sarra Manning (2023) Manning is a UK author who doesn’t always get US releases, and I lose track of her. This book is fabulous, in ways that require spoilers to discuss why it’s so interesting and what it’s doing, and which would land differently to someone who is or isn’t used to the conventions of genre romance. It uses a convention of genre romance to get away with doing a clever thing. And yet, it fulfils the romance author-reader contract. Funny, thoughtful, clever. A History of Storytelling — Arthur Ransome (1909) As it says, a history of telling stories, very much of its time, but entertaining. It’s interesting to read Ransome discussing non-fiction stories in the seventeenth-century with the techniques of having a made-up point-of-view character (like “Poor Richard,” to give a familiar example) in what is actually an essay. Also interesting to see what he puts in and leaves out, and what he thinks about things. He’s very well read. I wouldn’t have picked this up if not for liking the Swallows and Amazons books, but I liked it. What’s So Funny? — Donald Westlake (2007) Re-read, bath book. Later Dortmunder book which I’d only read once before and didn’t remember the plot well. It concerns stealing a chess set, from which nobody benefits. Some lovely cameo bits, and some great examples of the things Westlake does so well, like the regulars having their weird conversations and the friend group being friends, but nothing that really stands out. On the Calculation of Volume I — Solvej Balle (2020), translated from Danish by Barbara J. Haveland Gosh I hated this so much. I don’t know when I’ve loathed a book more and actually finished it. But I didn’t hate it so much before I finished it and saw where it was going, which was nowhere. If there had been any kind of resolution whatsoever I still wouldn’t have liked it, but bleah. So this very normal French woman bookseller is caught in a Groundhog Day event where it keeps on being November 18th, but she can move freely around the country, she wakes up where she went to bed, she can accumulate objects, and things she uses are depleted, injuries heal in the time they normally would—she isn’t being reset, but the world is. The book is written as a diary, with numbered days; she goes through a whole year of living in that one day. She was a very unpleasant person to spend a whole year with, a whole book with, because she’s very passive. The book has the pacing of an existentialist movie. I will never read the sequels or anything else by this author. There are so many great genre books written in other languages that I’d love to read, but what do I get? This thing where reading it felt like being smothered by a pillow. The algorithms and humans who recommended this book are all fired! Movie Shoes — Noel Streatfeild (1949) Re-read to cheer myself up after the former book. Well, it turns out that the book I read (the original, British version) was called The Painted Garden and this re-read of the ebook was also a first read of the Americanized edition, in which dustbin man had been changed to “sanitation man” and so on. As this is a book about a British family going to California for a winter in 1949, I wonder what the young American readers, who need to be spoon-fed with language, made of the actual story? Anyway, not a long book, and as always the backstage theatrical stuff is a joy. June was the month when I realised I wasn’t reading enough science fiction and deliberately set out to read more, and this turned out really well. I read sixteen books. New Adventures in Space Opera — Jonathan Strahan (2024) This is what made me realise I’d been missing science fiction—the kind of science fiction I like, the kind with aliens and space stations. I always say this is what I like, but somehow I’d not been reading it. About half my fiction reading is genre, but I don’t distinguish between fantasy and SF, and there had been a lot of fantasy in the mix recently. This brilliant anthology, full of fun stories, many of them long, almost all of them terrific, was such a joy that it made me decide to actively reach out for more of this stuff. I highly recommend this anthology. Red Roses: Blanche of Gaunt to Margaret Beaufort — Amy License (2016) This is sort of if you wrote a book about all the women in Shakespeare’s history plays from Richard II to Richard III, but some of them are invisible in the text of the plays. This book looks at all the women, from the wives of John of Gaunt forward through the next five generations, finding out as much as it can about their lives. There are about ten women in this book, and most of them are interesting, and the less interesting ones are because there just isn’t much to find. They’re wives and mothers, but also significant people. The only odd thing is that License spends so much time telling me Margaret Beaufort did not kill the princes in the tower that I actually started to consider it, which I never had before. There must be a rhetorical term for denying something that never would have crossed anyone’s mind had it not been raised in denial. Anyway, the most interesting woman in the book is Katherine Swynford, third wife of John of Gaunt, after having been his mistress for years in the lifetime of his second wife. Ninefox Gambit — Yoon Ha Lee (2026) Space opera, milSF, whatever you want to call it. I read it because Lee’s short story in the Strahan anthology was delightful, and this book kept me glued to the page. I’d not read it before because everyone recommending it had said how mathematical it was, which was extremely off-putting, and turned out to be nonsense. These people are using handwave tech to make nanotech do things, it’s explained the way such things are explained in SF, and the fact that the protagonist is good enough at math to solve the handwave equations on the fly is mentioned. I didn’t read this book for ten years because the people who liked it, in their enthusiasm, made it sound as if I wouldn’t. I did. It was great. Closer to Cherryh than to anything. Have bought the sequels. The good thing about not reading it before is that there’s more to catch up on. Pine Breeze at Hotel Toscana Mare — Hanna Holmgren (2026) Romance novel set in Italy, but with the unusual feature of having been translated from German by the author. So a German woman leaves her skeevy boyfriend and goes to Italy and then everything is all right. That’s the formula of a romance novel set in Italy, after all, and this isn’t any different. I liked the details of making the abandoned house into a hotel, and dealing with the locals; the love interest was not especially convincing but that’s fine. I was less enthused about the fact that nobody thinks about accessibility for a second: making a bike path to the sea—that’ll save the day; putting in outdoor terraces up a lot of steps—that’ll make people like it. Well, not me, but two seconds of attention to the idea of guests who are not young and fit would have gone a long way. Perfectly fine book. Starlight 3 — Patrick Nielsen Hayden (2001) Re-read. Contains many great stories with standouts from Susanna Clarke, Ted Chiang and Susan Palwick. The whole set of Starlight anthologies were terrific, I wish there had been more. The Cambridge Companion to Petrarch —Albert Russell Ascoli and Unn Falkeid (2015) Set of essays by different people about different aspects of Petrarch’s life and work. Some of them were better written than others, but in general this was a terrific book full of valuable information and observations. If you are interested in Petrarch, you should definitely read it. Marcovaldo, or The Seasons in the City — Italo Calvino (1963) This is a book of linked short stories about the same protagonist, Marcovaldo, and his family, living in Milan in the Fifties. They are gently whimsical but mostly not out-and-out surreal. This is not as good as Calvino’s best work, but it’s very good, and readable in a normal way, and weirdly less sexist. Powsels and Thrums — Alan Garner (2025) Short stories, poems, essays, and biographical musings from the strange and brilliant Alan Garner. Probably not where you want to start, but if you already like any of his work, grab this. There are some very interesting thoughts on class and creativity, a lot about place (as you’d expect), amazing thoughts about Carroll’s odd words in “Jabberwocky” and how they relate to Cheshire dialect, and some wonderful flashes of fiction. There really is nobody like him. Cuckoo’s Egg — C.J. Cherryh (1985) Re-read, bath book. I was looking for space opera that I had on the shelf and could read in the bath. Not a very successful bath book because it’s too gripping and I kept wanting to keep reading it and so having extra-long and extra-frequent baths. This is the story of an alien bringing up a human baby to become something that is in between human and alien, and we the reader know more than the human in question, but of course not everything, not enough. Quintessential Cherryh in many ways, maybe a good place to start if you’ve never read her, because it completely stands alone, and has aliens and space stations and also woods and hills and a world. I wonder if it was in some way a response to the question in Card’s Ender’s Game of what it is ethical to do to a child in order to deal with an alien menace—but this is a very different equation. I don’t think of Cherryh as a kind writer, but while there’s plenty of war in her books there’s very little genocide, and while there are lots of different and scary aliens, her focus is always on finding a way to have, or be, a bridge between them; communication, not extermination. No easy answers, and this is a very good book. Magus: The Art of Magic from Faustus to Agrippa — Anthony Grafton (2023) Marvellous book about real-world magicians and people called magicians in sixteenth-century Italy and to a lesser extent the rest of Europe. Grafton is a very good writer, and the book is compelling and full of fun detail. I raced through this and really enjoyed it. I think most people who have a general interest in what people thought they were doing when they were trying to do magic, and what general period ideas about magic were like would enjoy this book, and it would be very useful for anyone trying to write non-standard fantasy. An Italian Education — Tim Parks (1995) Parks, married to an Italian woman and having two children, writes about how children grow up in Italy and about family life in the 1990s. Mildly amusing, and well characterised, so a reasonably fun read. The Deepening Stream — Dorothy Canfield Fisher (1930) This is a book about a girl growing up, starting from early childhood and going on well past when she is herself a mother. Indeed, about halfway through the book you get to the point where a conventional novel would stop, and instead the Great War starts. Absolutely harrowing, and utterly brilliant. There’s nobody like Dorothy Canfield Fisher, and I recommend it, but you have to be braced for this one. What We Are Seeking — Cameron Reed (2026) Re-read, I read it last summer and I read it again now because it is out and I can talk to people about it. The first paragraph is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever read. This is a very traditional SF story, told in a way that could only be written now. There are people who live on spaceships and lots of settled planets, and there are aliens, and linguists, and first contact, and new ways of living and having families, coming into conflict with traditional ones. Lovely, lovely cultures, interesting aliens and language, terrific characters, and not as harrowing as Reed’s earlier The Fortunate Fall. Read it, love it, discuss it with your friends, nominate it for awards, this is great. As often with me and really good books I liked it better on second reading when I knew what was going to happen, because there wasn’t anxiety about what actually would happen. I love re-reading a book for the first time and knowing it will be the first of many. Father Material — Alexis Hall (2026) Third book in the London Calling sequence. The beginning took a while to get me engaged, because I kept feeling these characters should have grown up a bit by now, and then I realised that was the point. It gets very good about a third of the way in. Considered as a whole, these three books are very good. Koestler: The Literary and Political Odyssey of a Twentieth-Century Skeptic — Michael Scammell (2009) Long, thorough, and very interesting biography of Arthur Koestler, a strange man who had a fascinating life. Scammell does not try to make Koestler appear nicer than he was; indeed, he’s very fair to him. Good if you’re interested in Koestler, or twentieth-century communism and disillusion from it. Warnings for sexual predation. Also interesting on living for a long time as a demi-famous person. The Mars House — Natasha Pulley (2024) This book is so great. I loved it so much I didn’t want to have finished it. This is a well-worked-out and interesting future in which people are living on Mars in complex ways and Mars has a relationship with Earth that can be described as “it’s complicated.” And there’s a guy called January who’s a dancer in the Royal Ballet in London, until London sinks and he becomes a refugee on Mars. So that’s all you need—don’t read the back of the book, don’t find out any more about it, just trust me that you want to read it. You’ll enjoy it much more if you don’t have more spoilers than I’ve given you for the first chapter and just go into it for what it is. Even without knowing anything about it, I guessed several major plot things. But I loved it anyway. Loved it. I want more like this.[end-mark] Buy the Book Everybody’s Perfect Jo Walton Buy Book Everybody's Perfect Jo Walton Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleiBooksIndieBoundTarget The post Jo Walton’s Reading List: May and June 2026 appeared first on Reactor.