science fiction Mage, by R. A. Meenan Review by Joel Kreissman Mage, the third novel of R.A. Meenan’s Zyearth Chronicles series, starts in the year 2039 on an alternate Earth inhabited by both humans and
casimir laski Dog Country and Mouse Cage by Malcolm F. Cross Review by Casimir Laski Note: This review contains minor spoilers. With Dog Country and Mouse Cage, author Malcolm F. Cross appears to have bridged quite an imposing literary gap: managing
dystopia Bearhead, by Adrian Tchaikovsky Review by Roz Gibson Adrian Tchaikovsky is an author that furry fans of hard SF should become familiar with. He wrote the excellent Children of Memory, which features a civilization
science fiction Toledot, by Madison Scott-Clary Review by Domus Vocis Separated into a few interconnected stories taking place nearly two-hundred years apart, “Toledot” is the sequel to Madison Scott-Clary’s furry science fiction novel, “Qoheleth”. One
r.a. meenan Brothers At Arms (Zyearth Chronicles) by R.A. Meenan Review by Joel Kreissman Starting six months after Shadow Cast, Zyearth is starting to recover from Basileus Theron’s attack. His mind-controlled army has been freed, but those he converted
omnibus The Complete Red Vixen Adventures by Royce Day Review by Weasel What kept me engaged to this book wasn’t the wonders of space pirates, or space travel, or adventures. It was the drama. Getting all the dirty
Danny Carl Estes The Snow Adventure: Rocky Beginnings by Danny Carl Estes and Guhweto Review by Domus Voci In the urban fantasy world of Burrland, an arctic wolf named Byrghir Snow is driven from his tribal clan as a pariah, mostly due to his
tales of the para-imperium Tales of the Para-Imperium by Joel Kreissman Review by Ardy Hart Tales of the Para-Imperium is not so much a book as it is a guide to exploring a fascinating universe. Written by Joel Kreissman, this incredible
Madison Scott-Clary Qoheleth and Gallery Exhibition by Madison Scott-Clary Review by Domus Vocis It’s one thing to read furry fiction, but it’s another to read fiction that has a furry character in it. Well, not a anthropomorphic
Wendy Wann Safari City by Wendy Wann Review by Roz Gibson At first glance Safari City seems to be a typical furry dystopian story, with reptiles and amphibians forming a subjugated underclass fighting for equal rights. Early
The Zyearth Chronicles Shadow Cast by R. A. Meenan Review by Joel Kreissman R.A. Meenan’s Shadow Cast is the first novel in her Zyearth Chronicles series, though not the first story. It is set on a planet
Mary E. Lowd Entanglement Bound, by Mary E. Lowd Review by Nathan Hopp It is the 24th century, and humanity has colonized the stars. Aliens and robots are as commonplace as interstellar travel, while mercenaries and pirates casually jump
military The Visitors, by Royce Day Review by Joel Kreissman “The Visitors” officially knits together two of Royce Day’s long-running series about fox-like extraterrestrials into a single timeline: The steampunk/alternate world war “Prisoners of
novel Guardians: Downfall, by J. S. Nielsen Review by Mamma Bear Guardians: Downfall is a furry military scifi novel set in the year 2776. In a time of galactic warfare, we join the story on the bridge of the UGSM Serenity, where Captain Fischer is about to launch his Goliath warship
Anthology Furry Trash, ed. J. F. R. Coates Review by Weasel “One person’s trash, is another’s treasure.” I didn’t quite know what to expect going into FURRY TRASH, and I was curious to see how
novel Soup of the Moment: A Tale of Barsk, by Lawrence M. Schoen Review by Joel Kreissman Lawrence M. Schoen’s Soup of the Moment: A Tale of Barsk is a distant prequel to his earlier novel Barsk: The Elephant’s Graveyard but
thurston howl publications GENMOS: Crossroads by Stephen Coghlan Review by Ardy Hart When I was younger, I used to watch a lot of action movies. I liked watching things explode, I liked those near-death experiences the main character
Anthology Exploring New Places, ed. Fred Patten Review by Joel Kreissman Exploration! That age-old activity. Whether it be exploration of new lands, planets, universes, or mindsets, people have been Exploring New Places for a long time and
Novella Furry Galaxy 75: Pandora's Box, by Van Hill Millvele Review by Linnea ‘LiteralGrill’ Capps Furry Galaxy 75 Book One: Pandora’s Box is a novel of “a clean anthropomorphic space fantasy” written by Van Hill Millvele. It’s a
cats When a Cat Loves a Dog, by Mary E. Lowd Review by Joel Kreissman Mary E. Lowd’s “When a Cat Loves a Dog” starts with a mixed-species wedding, something that has only just become legal in the setting. Lashonda,
Novella Jove Deadly's Lunar Detective Agency, by Garrett Marco and Mary E. Lowd Review by Mamma Bear In a lonely corner of the lunar landscape, a classic, seat-of-the-pants detective sticks out his shingle and does what he does best, solving the hard crimes
Anthology Boldly Going Forward, ed. Sean Gerace Review by Linnea ‘LiteralGrill’ Capps Boldly Going Forward is a charity anthology benefiting the ALS Association. Recently released by Goal Publications, it features stories from eight authors all surrounding space
Mary E. Lowd Tri-Galactic Trek, by Mary E. Lowd Review by Mamma Bear Tri-Galactic Trek features ten short stories that are re-imaginings of a certain episodic science fiction television franchise. The diverse furry crew of the Initiative travels though
science fiction What's Bred in the Bone by Jan S. Gephardt Review by Thurston Howl Despite the title of this book, this is less of an erotica book and more of a bioengineering sci fi book. The premise of Gephardt's book
M.C.A. Hogarth Kherishdar's Exception, by M.C.A. Hogarth Review by Roz Gibson Before tackling M. C. A. Hogarth’s Kherishdar’s Exception, the fourth book in the series, potential readers should start with one of the earlier books: