The Guardian - Saturday Magazine

Science fiction, fantasy and horror

A time traveller’s dilemmas; tales from the author of The Three-Body Problem; weird obsessions; cult leaders; and the hunt for a serial killer.

- By Lisa Tuttle

The Other Valley

Scott Alexander Howard

ATLANTIC, £16.99

This debut novel is set in an isolated valley caught between its own past and future. To the east is a valley 20 years ahead; to the west, the same place is 20 years in the past. To protect against catastroph­ic changes to the timeline, the borders are fenced and patrolled by armed guards. The governing Conseil grants a few brief supervised crossings every year, to elderly mourners desperate for a glimpse of their loved ones when they were still alive. Odile is a shy, studious girl training for a place on the Conseil when she glimpses two visiting mourners lurking outside the school. Recognisin­g them as older versions of the parents of a funny, talented boy she likes, she faces an impossible choice. He is doomed to die, but if she tries to save him, she will destroy her own future. The experience changes her life and never stops haunting her until, years later, she must confront other ethical dilemmas. This is an unusual approach to time travel, a philosophi­cal thought experiment and a deeply moving, ultimately thrilling story about memory, love and regret.

A View from the Stars

Cixin Liu, various translator­s

HEAD OF ZEUS, £20

Essays and short stories from the past three decades by the author of The Three-Body Problem. His tales are filled with a sense of wonder as they push ideas about the future of humanity to their extremes, and the personal essays offer a rare glimpse into attitudes towards science fiction in China and how the genre has changed. A fascinatin­g collection.

Flowers from the Void

Gianni Washington

SERPENT’S TAIL, £14.99

The stories in this wide-ranging collection of horror and fantasy run from the gothic grotesque to even more disturbing tales about weird obsessions and fatal misunderst­andings. Some border on science fiction, with alien creatures and lifesize living dolls, while a fantasy about an African witch trying to join an all-white coven in colonial Massachuse­tts is so richly imagined it feels like a novel in miniature. An impressive debut from a very talented new writer.

The Dark Side of the Sky

Francesco Dimitri

TITAN, £9.99

The tale of a cult told from the inside, through the voices of its members, collective­ly known as the Bastion. To outsiders, founders Becca and Ric are dangerous con artists, but those in the community believe they have found a better, more spiritual way to live. They have seen the stars change when they gather in the pine forest, and are aware of being watched by hungry eyes on the other side of the sky. An absorbing, fascinatin­g novel, cleverly devised so that the reader is never quite sure where reality ends and fantasy begins.

The Hungry Dark

Jen Williams

HARPER VOYAGER, £16.99

After seven fantasy novels, Williams changed direction to crime thrillers. Her latest involves the hunt for a serial killer, but sits firmly in the British folk horror tradition. As a child, Ashley was haunted by the sight of silent grey figures gathering around her. As an adult, she makes a living as a psychic

– but it’s all faked, until those strange figures appear again and lead her to the body of a missing child. Atmospheri­c and suspensefu­l, a wellplotte­d blend of supernatur­al and crime.

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