Dumpy Little Unicorn

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  • About
  • Contact me
  • Jane’s Great Re-read
  • Be on a Podcast
  • Credits
  • Podcasts – masterlist
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy (UK)
  • ADHD Resources

Recent Posts

  • Book Haul WorldCon part 2
  • Book Haul Glasgow World Con part 1
  • Glasgow 2024: A WorldCon for Our Futures
  • Review: Godkiller by Hannah Kaner
  • Review: The Daughters of Izdihar by Hadeer Elsbai
be more unicorn, Books, Geekery

I’ve been to a marvellous party

Day 2.  I think I made it to two panels All the Universe is a stage and Gareth L Powell’s reading.  The rest of the time I was soaking up…

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17/08/2019
Books, reading, Review

Seven Deadly Swords – Review

Seven Deadly Swords by Peter Sutton a non-linear fantasy novel.  Partly set in the time of the Crusades and in various points in history up to 2012 tells the story…

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08/08/2019
Films, Review

Hobbs and Shaw – Review

I have been chomping at the bit waiting for this to come out. Dwayne Johnson and Jason Statham versus Idris Elba in the Fast and Furiousverse.  I’ve never really been…

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05/08/2019
  • Books,  reading,  Review

    Review: Ocean’s Echo by Everina Maxwell

    24/10/2022 / 0 Comments

    Ocean’s Echo is the second novel set in the same universe as Winter’s Orbit, but with new characters and new drama. The headline of this review is that I adored it.  It is full of themes that I really got behind.  Consent, mental control, neurological modifications and the ethics surrounding them. We are first introduced to Tennal.  He is an extroverted disaster zone.  He’s contrary, rebellious, charismatic, and the nephew of the Legislator, one of Orshan’s senior political figures. At the beginning of the novel, he is slumming it in a gambling den hiring himself out as a reader. Second generation of the orginal neuro-modded humans.  He can read minds…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Jane's Great Re-Read: Wyrd Sisters by Terry Pratchett

    11/04/2015

    Review: The Mortal Word by Genevieve Cogman

    05/11/2019

    Review: Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold

    01/03/2020
  • Books,  reading,  Review

    Review: Kaikeyi by Vaishnavi Patel

    20/10/2022 / 0 Comments

    Kaikeyi is a beautifully written retelling of the Ramanayan from Kaikeyi’s point of view. We follow her through from childhood to adulthood. There is a feminist angle to the story. Her desire to be more than society expects her to be and also improve things for other women. It’s written in the first person so it is her voice she is telling us her story and it is one that had me from the opening chapter. I’m not overly familiar with Hindu mythology but this was a story I couldn’t get enough of and sped through ravenously. I needed to know how KaiKeyi would react and what she would do…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Book Review: Macaque Attack by Gareth L. Powell

    19/11/2014

    Review: I Still Dream by James Smythe

    15/10/2019

    Book Club Reads: The Anubis Gates Tim Powers

    19/09/2019
  • Books

    Book post squee

    17/10/2022 / 0 Comments

    Today has been long train delays and fixing stuff but I came home to some delightful book post from Orbit UK. How lovely does Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Fairies look? If I’m honest I was smitten with the title. If ever there was a book for Unicorn towers it’s this one. Review will be out in the new year but I had to share the pretty.

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Book Review: Phoenix Rising by Bryony Pearce

    06/05/2015

    Jane's Great Re-Read: The Time Traveller's Wife

    23/02/2015

    Review: The Witch and the Tsar by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore

    08/12/2022
  • Books

    Review: Strike the Zither by Joan He

    07/10/2022 / 0 Comments

    Oh my word, this was so much fun. A YA fantasy of epic proportions. Both the teenage angst with a backdrop of rebellion revolution and much double crossing. Where poetry and playing the zither are far more important than the actual fighting. That strategists are a side’s most important resource. It has everything, yearning, pining, loyalty betrayal found family. Burnt bridges. All told beautifully at a cracking pace where the reader breathlessly wishes to devour the book and see what will happen next. An array of colourful characters. Whose soubriquets are far more important that real names. Where double crossing is standard and all the more enjoyable for it.

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Book Club Reads: The Anubis Gates Tim Powers

    19/09/2019

    Review: The Stars Undying by Emery Robin

    11/11/2022

    Hello from Dublin

    15/08/2019
  • Books,  General Jane,  reading

    Lost Mojo

    30/09/2022 / 0 Comments

    It has taken months for the desire to come back and its been a slow and incremental thing. But the habit is back and it is reliable and again I can get some solace by escaping to worlds created by others.

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Review: Planetfall by Emma Newman

    11/09/2015

    Book Haul

    01/09/2021

    Glasgow 2024: A WorldCon for Our Futures

    14/08/2024
  • Books,  reading,  Review

    Review: Soul of the Deep by Natasha Bowen

    29/09/2022 / 0 Comments

    First thoughts, oh my word such an effective and beautifully written novel.  The prose is evocative and emotive and l was drawn into the world that Natasha Bowen has created.  It is the second novel in a series and despite the potential drawbacks to a quick immersion into the world, any gaps in my knowledge were filled in deftly.  What we have is Simidele our protagonist. A Mami Wata who at the beginning of the novel is trapped in service to a god of the dead. Simi is a wonderful protagonist. She is forever trying to do what is right whether that bodes good or ill for her.  Her desire…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Jane's Great Re-Read: Lords and Ladies By Terry Pratchett a Review

    27/08/2015

    Jane's Great Re-read: Witches Abroad – Review

    04/05/2015

    Review: The Fairy’s Tale by F D Lee

    10/10/2019
  • Books,  reading

    Book Haul

    01/09/2021 / 0 Comments

    I’ve not been reading that much of late. The pandemic which I was sure I’d breeze through as an introvert has resulted in me hitting the worst reading slump since my mid-twenties. Not that that has stopped me from buying books. My to-be-read pile has continued to increase despite not having enough focus and I’ve felt guilty because I’ve really wanted to be blogging and podcasting and the energy to do any of it has been lacking. I have been on a small break visiting friends and got to meet up with @runalongwomble of RunalongtheShelves the book tempter in chief for a chat and an explore of Liverpool and a…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Jane's Great Re-Read: The Time Traveller's Wife

    23/02/2015
    Witchsign

    Review: Witchsign by Den Patrick

    08/10/2019

    Jane's Great Re-Read: Equal Rites – Review

    25/03/2015
  • Books,  Subjective Chaos

    Subjective Chaos 2020: the Results

    07/09/2020 / 0 Comments

    As we all know this has been a funny old year but even with all of that noise we (the agents of Subjective Chaos) have been battling our own demons to get the books read and to argue about our favourites. Congratulations to all of our winners: Fantasy: Realm of Ash by Tasha Suri Science Fiction: A Memory Called Empire by Arkady Martine Blurred Boundaries: Godhunter by David Mogo Novella: The Deep by Rivers Solomon Short Story: The Migration Suite:  A study in C Sharp Minor by Maurice Broaddus Series: Rosewater Trilogy by Tade Thompson  

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    For Pterry

    12/03/2015

    Review: Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold

    01/03/2020

    Review: To be Taught if Fortunate by Becky Chambers

    04/03/2020
  • anxiety,  be more unicorn

    Rare Unicorn Sighting

    20/08/2020 / 0 Comments

    I had such plans for this pandemic, I would read, I would blog, I would podcast and I would be a beacon of hope in these trying times. I have managed very little reading, some recording but no editing and a swathe of self-loathing and feeling extremely overwhelmed for weeks at a time. It turns out when the apocalypse comes all I want to do is watch Netflix and Disney + and I have no brain for much else.   This has sucked. I have felt guilty, I have felt terrible and I have had no idea how to start again. So let’s put a pin in that because feeling…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Being More Unicorn

    28/09/2015

    World Con Round up

    25/08/2019

    End of a Decade…

    17/11/2019
  • Books

    Doing stuff

    23/03/2020 / 0 Comments

    We are living in some interesting times. I’m not sure how to feel at the moment, I’m not sure that anyone is.  All I know for sure is that friends of mine are sick and there’s not a lot practically I can do to help them.  Its putting me and us all into this ridiculous limbo.  I’m working from home but I feel untethered and uneasy. I’ve been trying to work out what I can do to be of use.  With Eastercon cancelling and having a podcast one thing I did think about was if you are an author who has had a launch scuppered by the pandemic please contact…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Ragged Alice Review

    25/07/2019

    Book Review: Phoenix Rising by Bryony Pearce

    06/05/2015

    Jane's Great Re-read: Maskerade by Terry Pratchett – a review

    29/08/2015
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