Marcus Bines
mbines.bsky.social
Marcus Bines
@mbines.bsky.social
Writer, reader; husband, dad; film buff, vegan; teacher, omnist; give me SFF & horror.
Weekend Book Reviews: Believe women.

I’m going to attempt a re-start of last year’s effort to review all the books I finish this year, once a week if I can. Just one book this week: Title: Nightwatching Author: Tracy Sierra Year: 2024 Publisher: Penguin Audio Genre: Psychological thriller Format…
Weekend Book Reviews: Believe women.
I’m going to attempt a re-start of last year’s effort to review all the books I finish this year, once a week if I can. Just one book this week: Title: Nightwatching Author: Tracy Sierra Year: 2024 Publisher: Penguin Audio Genre: Psychological thriller Format read: Audio via Libby Narrator: Emily Ellet Plot setup: An unnamed mother wakes up in the middle of a winter’s night and hears noises in her isolated house.
marcusbines.wordpress.com
January 10, 2026 at 11:07 AM
What was it with mid-century male sci-fi writers and their lack of imagination?

Deliberately provocative headline? Sure, but I have a point… Image by Patrik Houštecký from Pixabay I’ve just finished reading Foundation by Isaac Asimov (first published in 1951) and I genuinely don’t know how it…
What was it with mid-century male sci-fi writers and their lack of imagination?
Deliberately provocative headline? Sure, but I have a point… Image by Patrik Houštecký from Pixabay I’ve just finished reading Foundation by Isaac Asimov (first published in 1951) and I genuinely don’t know how it became such a revered science fiction classic. As well as what I consider some fundamental storytelling issues which come from collecting four short stories into a ‘novel,’ Asimov’s imagination is peculiarly limited in places.
marcusbines.wordpress.com
October 1, 2025 at 9:56 AM
Book Review: Orbital by Samantha Harvey (2023)

I’m not especially interested in books simply because they win prizes; I’m a genre fan in my reading life, getting most of my enjoyment from well-told horror, sci-fi and fantasy novels in the main, with the odd thriller thrown in for good measure. But…
Book Review: Orbital by Samantha Harvey (2023)
I’m not especially interested in books simply because they win prizes; I’m a genre fan in my reading life, getting most of my enjoyment from well-told horror, sci-fi and fantasy novels in the main, with the odd thriller thrown in for good measure. But I noticed this was available on audio through Libby (i.e. free, thank you libraries!) and was curious about the subject matter, so gave it a try.
marcusbines.wordpress.com
July 16, 2025 at 10:35 AM
Book Review: The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas

In The Shawshank Redemption (1994), main character Andy Dufresne sets up a prison library and gets his less-than-well-educated co-prisoners to help him unpack books. One of them picks up this novel and announces the author’s name, raising a…
Book Review: The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas
In The Shawshank Redemption (1994), main character Andy Dufresne sets up a prison library and gets his less-than-well-educated co-prisoners to help him unpack books. One of them picks up this novel and announces the author’s name, raising a laugh in the middle of a film that sorely needs them: “Alexander Dumb-ass.” It’s a quote that has entered the ‘library of family references only my wife and I get’ that regularly annoys our children, but as I listened to the audiobook of…
marcusbines.wordpress.com
June 15, 2025 at 11:14 AM
Book Review: Monstrilio by Gerardo Sámano Córdova (2023)

Magos and Joseph have just lost their son, Santiago, to a long-term health condition. Filled with grief, Magos decides to cut out a piece of his dead lung and nurtures it into a sentient being, relying on folk tale logic and her shaky…
Book Review: Monstrilio by Gerardo Sámano Córdova (2023)
Magos and Joseph have just lost their son, Santiago, to a long-term health condition. Filled with grief, Magos decides to cut out a piece of his dead lung and nurtures it into a sentient being, relying on folk tale logic and her shaky maternal instincts to raise it into ‘childhood.’ What she does not anticipate are the challenges of its more aggressive tendencies – Monstrilio needs to feed regularly, and not in a socially acceptable way.
marcusbines.wordpress.com
June 8, 2025 at 1:37 PM
Reading Tell Me I'm Worthless by @hangsawoman.bsky.social. I don't know what other terrifying things are going to happen in this novel, but imagining eyeless Morrissey stepping out of a Smiths poster on p.15 is pretty scary already... #booksky 📚💙
March 23, 2025 at 2:22 PM
Book Review: Space Opera by Catherynne M. Valente (2018)

An alien (the Esca) appears on Earth, projecting itself to every human at the same time to inform us that we are one quite boring species in a multiplicity of alien beings spread across the galaxy, and they have all just found out about us.…
Book Review: Space Opera by Catherynne M. Valente (2018)
An alien (the Esca) appears on Earth, projecting itself to every human at the same time to inform us that we are one quite boring species in a multiplicity of alien beings spread across the galaxy, and they have all just found out about us. They believe we may be sentient, but to ensure this is true, they insist that we must take part in the Metagalactic Grand Prix, a song contest which has been happening on various planets since the end of the Sentience Wars.
marcusbines.wordpress.com
March 19, 2025 at 9:18 PM
Reposted by Marcus Bines
What I don't get, and will never understand – if you're hellishly rich, why would you NOT want do mad stuff to make the world better?

I mean, just do it for the ego

Surely "man who fixed poverty and saved the climate" is better than "man who bought app and ruined democracy for share value."
February 21, 2025 at 12:24 PM