We always warn you to crystalize more metre in your docket ( and on your shelves ) for each month ’s new expiration — but March brings new books from genre legend John Scalzi and Kim Stanley Robinson , as well as some very intriguing short - story collections and debuts . So , yeah . Better make all sort of room .
The Erstwhile by Brian Catling
In this sequel to The Vorrh , Catling wander a wild and layered tale that include chassis from the Bible ( reawakened angels ) , mythology ( a former cyclops ) , folklore ( wight in a obsessed forest ) , and story ( William Blake ) , as well as robots . ( March 7 )
Gather Her Round by Alex Bledsoe
Bledsoe wraps up his five - part Tufa serial — about magical pansy who dwell in the mountains of Tennessee — with this narrative that starts with a romantic triangle and leads into an exploration of the giant , belligerent beasts who have of a sudden appeared in the local forest . ( March 7 )
Hunger Makes the Wolf by Alex Wells
This introduction novel is about an orphan who bring on a corporate - have major planet and soon becomes a motorcycle - hinge upon mercenary — until she becomes attract into a complex murder mystery . ( March 7 )
Lotus Blue by Cat Sparks
A first novel about a teenage daughter traveling with her sr. sister across a post - apocalyptic waste dotted with mysterious wreckage — including a crash - landed artificial satellite and an ancient warfare car that rises from the desert intent on wiping out all of humanness . ( March 7 )
Magic for Nothing by Seanan McGuire
The author ’s sixth in her InCryptid series follow the on-going adventures of a cryptozoologist mob who keep the rest of the world safe from the strange monsters we have no approximation are all around us . ( March 7 )
Seven Surrenders by Ada Palmer
The source ’s follow - up to Too Like the Lightning is adjust in a precariously balanced society that may be upended by the unlikely alliance between a yard bird , a counselor , and a preternaturally talented child . ( March 7 )
Standard Hollywood Depravity by Adam Christopher
The author ’s up-to-the-minute noir tale starring his automaton hit man , Raymond Electromatic , starts with a deceptive skirt — as these write up often do — and leads into an infernal region dwell by mobsters and other distasteful character . ( March 7 )
Brother’s Ruin by Emma Newman
In 1850 England , a untested char with magic endowment works to save her pal from the clutches of the Royal Society of the Esoteric Arts — expose a secret plot that threaten not just her family , but the whole urban center , too . ( March 14 )
The Djinn Falls in Love and Other Stories edited by Jared Shurin and Mahvesh Murad
The Wanderers by Meg Howry
Things get mighty strange for three astronauts who spend over a twelvemonth in a extremely naturalistic model while education for the first mission to Mars . ( March 14 )
Chalk by Paul Cornell
The a la mode from the versatile author of idiot box , comics , curt stories , and novels ( Doctor Who , Wolverine , Batman & Robin , Witches of Lychford ) is about a schoolboy in Thatcher ’s England who ’s tormented by bullies until an ancient power is awakens within him . ( March 21 )
The Collapsing Empire by John Scalzi
The novel novel from the prolific author ( Old Man ’s War , The Last Colony , Redshirts ) imagines life after the find of “ the Flow , ” a wormhole that allows speedy transport between far - flung planets . When it ’s discovered that the Flow is fluid , menace the stability of the novel ruling “ Interdependency , ” three people are tasked with doing whatever they can to save humanity . ( March 21 )
Infinity Engine by Neal Asher
Asher accompany War Factory by keep on the story of elusive rogue AI Penny Royal — whose human being , alien , and machine - based pursuers now admit another dangerous AI . No matter what , a deadly confrontation is imminent . ( March 21 )
New York 2140 by Kim Stanley Robinson
The late from the noted source of the Mars trilogy concentre on the inhabitants of a New York City skyscraper . But the next reading of the Big Apple is barely recognisable from today ; rising tides have transform the metropolis into a water - tie city where each edifice is its own island . ( March 21 )
Relics by Tim Lebbon
A supernatural revulsion tale about a London criminology scholar who slip up upon a secretive smuggled market specializing in magical objects — and presently ascertain that both the enamor collectable and the people who desire them can be very dangerous . ( March 21 )
Star’s End by Cassandra Rose Clarke
The late from the generator of The Mad Scientist ’s Daughter is about a woman who learns the shocking truth about her Church Father ’s business dealing when she inherits the small planet system of rules have by her family . ( March 21 )
Luna: Wolf Moon by Ian McDonald
The 2nd rule book in McDonald ’s Luna series discover the Moon , now controlled by corporations work by warring home , in political turmoil . One of the sept has fallen , its heirs taken in by rivals — except for the most rebellious Word , who escape to Earth to recruit new allies . ( March 28 )
Strange the Dreamer by Laini Taylor
An epic fantasy about a untried librarian with a unusual connection to a mythical lost city — a spot that is n’t so “ deep in thought ” once he starts vividly stargaze about it . ( March 28 )
Dear Sweet Filthy World by Caitlin R. Kiernan
The author ’s in vogue collection of unforesightful fantasy and repugnance fiction admit 28 previously ungathered and otherwise rare report . ( March 31 )
Books
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