Daily Mail

SF & FANTASY

- JAMIE BUXTON

THE COURT OF MIRACLES by Kester Grant (Harper Voyager £12.99, 464pp)

iT MAy be Paris, but gay it ain’t. The revolution has failed, the aristocrat­s flounce safely in their grandes maisons while the poor must flounder in the merde.

in this twisty, turny and fiercely-told tale of revenge and redemption, the underworld has organised itself into guilds and follows an inverted code of honour.

Enter Nina, a cat burglar with claws, whose life is turned upside down when her sister is sold into prostituti­on.

it’s hard not to love a girl who can negotiate with thief lords, burgle the Dauphin’s bedroom and organise a jailbreak, but what sets this brilliant debut apart is her sense of passionate outrage and honour.

THE CITY OF A THOUSAND FACES by Walker Dryden

(Orion £16.99, 560 pp) As A RADiO series, this epic was as widescreen as the spoken word can get. As a book, it repeats the trick.

Tumanbay, a Baghdad-y, desert megapolis, is stinking rich, deliciousl­y decadent, terrifical­ly teeming and undeniably unfair with its slave markets, arranged marriages and executions galore.

But there’s insurrecti­on on the edge of the empire, a secret cult within the city walls and stirrings in a very literal underworld.

Linking multiple plot strands together is a pair of mysterious, blue-eyed slaves, a spymaster, a wayward prince and a curiously sympatheti­c slave-trader. Together they create a complex, gorgeous and compelling tapestry of love, death, trust and betrayal.

THE GIRL AND THE STARS by Mark Lawrence

(Harper Voyager £14.99, 480pp) yAz’s tribe, the ictha, live in the most northerly north of a frozen planet. They never give up and do whatever it takes to survive.

But — spoiler alert — when yaz’s brother falls foul of the priesthood and is ritually chucked into a pit of doom, she does what plucky girls do: jumps in after him. Only she enters a perilous underworld where a battle is raging between earlier survivors of the drop and children infected with evil spirits.

in this cave-world where she must survive giant cannibals, killer robots and tribal power struggles, yaz discovers she has powers that mark her out as unique — and as a target for her numerous enemies.

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