Dumpy Little Unicorn

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  • About
  • Contact me
  • Jane’s Great Re-read
  • Be on a Podcast
  • Credits
  • Podcasts – masterlist
  • Privacy Policy
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  • 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
  • A Cream coloured book with a line drawing of a woman carrying both a sword and a baby. The novel's title is A Sword of Bronze and Ashes by Anna Smith Spark
    Books,  reading

    Book Haul Glasgow World Con part 1

    16/08/2024 / 0 Comments

    Well, I've written about my general world con experience but a good portion of the time I was there for the books. I picked up a wide array of titles from indies, small press and trad publishers. So let's run through what got picked up.

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Book Haul WorldCon part 2

    19/08/2024

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

    04/05/2015

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

    27/08/2015
  • Books,  reading,  Review

    Review: Godkiller by Hannah Kaner

    16/01/2023 / 0 Comments

    Godkiller is a wonderful debut by Hannah Kaner.  The narrative is split into four narrators: Kissen, the eponymous Godkiller; Elogost retired Knight of King Arren; Inara, orphaned noble who has been cloistered so far in her life and is bonded with Skediceth a small god of white lies. Kissen and Ianara are thrown together when Inara’s world collapses.   Oh how did I love this novel.  This world is dark and frightening.  Gods are real and they can grow to be exceedingly powerful depending on how much belief they receive. Some years prior to the novel the humans rebelled against the gods that had become too powerful, or too wild…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Review: Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett

    09/01/2023

    The Winter Crown by Elizabeth Chadwick – Review

    12/11/2015

    Jane's Great Re-read

    11/12/2014
  • Books,  Feminism,  reading,  Review

    Review: The Daughters of Izdihar by Hadeer Elsbai

    12/01/2023 / 0 Comments

    This is a helluva novel to wake up to the new year with.  The Daughters of Izdihar by Hadeer Elsbai is an absolutely gripping fantasy novel set in an alternate Egypt with a feminist agenda front and centre. Nehal and Giorgina are in different social classes but both feel the oppressive weight of a society where a woman does not have the vote, where she is the possession of her father and can be sold into marriage.  Add in the magic for this world where elements can be controlled by weavers. Water, earth, air and fire can all be controlled by adepts with talented weaver specialising further.  Prior to the…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Book Crawl

    26/07/2019

    Book Club Reads: The Anubis Gates Tim Powers

    19/09/2019
    Witchsign

    Review: Witchsign by Den Patrick

    08/10/2019
  • Books,  reading,  Review

    Review: Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett

    09/01/2023 / 0 Comments

    I wasn’t entirely sure what to expect with this.  I was won over by Heather Fawcett’s promise of Faeries (spelt the way I like too).  Emily Wilde is a scholar.  An expert in the Fae and her life’s work has been the compiling of her Encyclopedia.  The novel takes the form of her journal with footnotes included. This, the first in what I hope will become a series details Emily’s expedition to study the folk of Ljosland.  She is single-minded when it comes to her research, hyperfocusing on her studies. Her rival at Cambridge is the effortlessly successful Wendell Bambleby. Where Emily is methodical and diligent with her eyes on…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Review: Loki by Melvin Burgess

    17/11/2022

    Review: Planetfall by Emma Newman

    11/09/2015

    Book Haul WorldCon part 2

    19/08/2024
  • Books,  Review

    Review: The Witch and the Tsar by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore

    08/12/2022 / 0 Comments

    The Witch and the Tsar is perfect winter reading and I enjoyed it very much.  Set in the Russia of Ivan the Terrible.  He is the Tsar that the witch Yaga is pitched against in the title. This folklore retelling of Baba Yaga mythos is engaging and dramatic.  If you’ve been reading my reviews you know I have a soft spot for feminst retellings of traditionally vilified women characters and The Witch and the Tsar does this really well.  Yaga  is a demi god, daughter of Mokosh. She is a Vedmar (witch) a healer and midwife she travels from place to place. Until she is called out in this christianised…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Lost Mojo

    30/09/2022

    For Pterry

    12/03/2015
    A Cream coloured book with a line drawing of a woman carrying both a sword and a baby. The novel's title is A Sword of Bronze and Ashes by Anna Smith Spark

    Book Haul Glasgow World Con part 1

    16/08/2024
  • Books,  reading,  Review

    Review: Where it Rains in Color by Denise Crittendon

    05/12/2022 / 0 Comments

    Denise Crittendon has created a vivid sci-fi world where melanin bearers are highly prized and the lead character Lileala is the rare indigo who is a figurehead for her people chosen for her beauty and her ability to shimmer. At the beginning of the novel Lileala is a bit of a pampered brat.  She has been chosen to be the rare indigo a symbol of beauty and grace, although one without a voice.  The previous rare indigo Ahonotay had abdicated her role many decades ago and has retreated from all society leaving a void and much expectation on the new rare indigo. All is going well until Lileala comes down…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Glasgow 2024: A WorldCon for Our Futures

    14/08/2024

    World Con Round up

    25/08/2019

    Review: Soul of the Deep by Natasha Bowen

    29/09/2022
  • Books,  Review

    Review: Loki by Melvin Burgess

    17/11/2022 / 0 Comments

    It is almost like this was written for me.  I am a sucker for Norse retellings.  Doubly so when they are from Loki’s point of view. And this is a retelling of the Norse Myths from Loki’s point of view so obviously I am here for it.  Loki is always a figure of fascination, as a trickster and purveyor of chaos and often being the villian of the piece. Melvin Burgess here gives Loki a voice and a chance to intepret the norse myths his way. This is an earthy retelling, bodily functions and plenty of bedroom shenanigans including the weird things that gods of several mythologies like to do…

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    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Review: Last Smile in Sunder City by Luke Arnold

    01/03/2020

    Seven Deadly Swords – Review

    08/08/2019

    Review: Godkiller by Hannah Kaner

    16/01/2023
  • 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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    Review: To be Taught if Fortunate by Becky Chambers

    04/03/2020

    Review: I Still Dream by James Smythe

    15/10/2019

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

    11/04/2015
  • 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…

    read more
    Jane Hanmer Jane Hanmer

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    Review: To be Taught if Fortunate by Becky Chambers

    04/03/2020

    Jane's Great Re-read: The Time Traveler's Wife – Review

    04/03/2015

    Review: Soul of the Deep by Natasha Bowen

    29/09/2022
  • 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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    Review: The Mortal Word by Genevieve Cogman

    05/11/2019

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

    27/08/2015
    A Cream coloured book with a line drawing of a woman carrying both a sword and a baby. The novel's title is A Sword of Bronze and Ashes by Anna Smith Spark

    Book Haul Glasgow World Con part 1

    16/08/2024
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