Tuesday, June 30, 2026

#Review - The Last Contract of Isako by Fonda Lee #Dystopian #SYFY #Cyberpunk

Series:
 Standalone
Format: 
514 pages, Paperback
Release Date: May 5, 2026
Publisher: Orbit
Source: Publisher
Genre: Cyberpunk, Dystopian, SYFY

A battle-worn corporate samurai undertakes one last mission on a merciless planet where death is always a mere breath away, in this standalone science fiction epic from the author of the modern fantasy classic Jade City. 

LIVE BY THE CODE. DIE BY THE KNIFE.

Isako is a legendary swordswoman, but every legend must come to an end. When her long-time client unexpectedly retires, she plans to follow—to walk out into the frozen wasteland of their planet with her head held high and her family enriched by her death. But when she's offered a final mission, she can't refuse, especially when she realizes who lies at the center of it all: Martim, her last—and worst—apprentice, who's somehow made his way to the top. As she's thrust into a world of corporate espionage and shadowy secrets, what she uncovers could forever change humanity's existence among the stars.  

The Last Contract of Isako is epic science fiction like only Fonda Lee can write it—set in a world where money trumps loyalty, the elite have the power to extend life or end it, and one woman in the twilight of her calling must decide what's ultimately worth living—or dying—for.


The Last Contract of Isako by Fonda Lee is a standout standalone science fiction novel—cyberpunk samurai in space, corporate dystopia with blade-sharp honor, and a masterful character study of aging, legacy, and systemic rot. The story unfolds on the frozen planet Aquilo, where humanity clings to survival inside Tenacity City, an airshield-protected dome run by the all-powerful Company. Resources are brutally scarce. Those who can no longer contribute are expected to "resign" by walking into the lethal tundra beyond the shield—a practice that blends corporate efficiency with ritualistic finality. 

This creates a society where loyalty is contractual, life is transactional, and death is often the most honorable exit. The airshield looms as both protector and prison. Corporate divisions wage shadow wars. "Second stagers" (consciousness transfers into synthetic bodies) extend the lives of the elite, raising questions of identity and immortality. Factions divide between terraformers (who want to reshape Aquilo) and reunionists (who seek reconnection with a long-silent Earth). The setting evokes classic cyberpunk grit—neon under a dome, inequality, body modification—but grounds it in samurai-inspired contractor culture and the bleak logic of late-stage capitalism in space. 

Isthmus Isako, "Quickblade," is a legendary atier—elite contractors who serve as strategists, bodyguards, advisors, and swordsmen. At 50, she's past her physical prime but unmatched in skill and reputation after 12 years on an Exclusive contract with Director Forest Greves of Astrocommunications. When Greves's division loses a brutal corporate war, he chooses public resignation (deathwalk) alongside laid-off workers, devastating Isako. She plans to follow him, securing a fat bonus for her estranged daughter Maya. Instead, her contract transfers to the victorious Savannah Minto, and Isako receives one final mission: block Sandbar Uchi's ascension to the Board. 

This draws her into espionage, the disappearance (or death) of a former apprentice (Dragonfly Martim), drug intrigue, survivor testimonies from a deadly industrial disaster, and layers of conspiracy involving synthbodies, hidden knowledge, and the Company's deepest secrets. The narrative is twisty and structurally bold. It builds through investigation and brutal action, then shifts perspectives and timelines mid-book for major revelations that recontextualize everything. Fight scenes are visceral—Isako's triggersheath quick-draw is iconic—and political maneuvering is tense. 

The pace mixes moody character moments with explosive confrontations. Isako is the heart of the book: world-weary yet principled, a mother who prioritized duty over family, a ronin-in-waiting grappling with what her code means when the system is rotten. Her relationships—with old partner Rain Kob (ailing but loyal), apprentices like Martim, and rivals—add emotional depth. Secondary characters feel fully realized, from cunning directors to desperate freelancers. Lee avoids caricatures; everyone operates under the same crushing pressures. 

Themes of honor, legacy, mortality, and identity shine through. What does a life of service mean in a machine that discards people? How do you define self when bodies and minds can be swapped? The book explores these without preachiness, through personal stakes. Bleak and tragic in places, yet hopeful in small human connections. The ending satisfies while delivering a gut-punch reality check.  The story pays homages to samurai films (Kurosawa echoes), cyberpunk (corporate intrigue, tech inequality), and space opera (big secrets, colonial fallout) while subverting expectations. It strips some "punk" rebellion but amplifies systemic critique. If you enjoy character-driven dystopias, honorable warriors facing impossible systems, or Lee's prior work, this is essential. It cements Fonda Lee as a versatile powerhouse who can deliver epic scope in any genre.





Friday, June 26, 2026

#Review - This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me by Ilona Andrews #Epic #Fantasy

Series:
 Maggie the Undying # 1
Format: 
470 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: March 31, 2026
Publisher: Tor Books
Source: Library
Genre: Epic Fantasy

The page-turning politics of Game of Thrones meets the worlds-spanning romance of Outlander in this blockbuster new epic fantasy series from the #1 New York Times bestselling author duo Ilona Andrews.

DELUXE EDITION—featuring gorgeous sky blue sprayed edges

When Maggie wakes up cold, filthy, and naked in a gutter, it doesn't take her long to recognize Kair Toren, a city she knows intimately from the pages of the famously unfinished dark fantasy series she's been obsessively reading and re-reading while waiting years for the final novel.

Her only tools for navigating this gritty world of rival warlords, magic, and mayhem? Her encyclopedic knowledge of the plot, the setting, and the characters' ambitions and fates. But while she quickly discovers she cannot be killed (though many will try!), the same cannot be said for the living, breathing characters she's coming to love—a motley band that includes a former lady’s maid, a deadly assassin, various outrageous magical creatures, and a dangerously appealing soldier. Soon, instead of trying to get home, she finds herself enmeshed in the schemes—and attentions—of dueling princes, dukes, and villains, all while trying to save them and the kingdom of Rellas from the way she knows their stories will end: in a cataclysmic war.

For fans of Samantha Shannon, Danielle L. Jensen, Sarah J. Maas, and isekai and portal fantasy, This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is the beginning of the most epic adventure yet from genre powerhouse author duo Ilona Andrews.



This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is the first installment in author Ilona Andrews' new series called Maggie the Undying. This novel marks their first foray into high/epic fantasy and delivers a fresh, meta take on the portal/isekai trope. Maggie Haley, an ordinary woman from our world obsessed with an unfinished dark fantasy series, wakes up cold, filthy, and naked in a gutter in Kair Toren—the capital of the kingdom of Rellas. The gritty, political world of rival warlords, eight great houses, knightly orders, mages, and looming catastrophe feels terrifyingly real. 

She possesses two extraordinary advantages: encyclopedic knowledge of the books’ plot, characters, secrets, and doomed trajectory, and the ability to come back from the dead (though the limits and costs remain unclear). Instead of desperately seeking a way home, she dives into survival, alliances, and an attempt to avert the cataclysmic war she knows is coming. It blends the fish-out-of-water romance and adventure of portal fantasy with intricate political intrigue, brutal stakes, and found-family dynamics. Ilona Andrews crafts a rich, lived-in grimdark-leaning fantasy world that feels both familiar (in the best way) and freshly dangerous. 

The politics among the Crown, noble houses, knight orders, and magic users are complex and high-stakes—think A Song of Ice and Fire levels of scheming without feeling derivative. Magic systems (with evocative names like Mirror Heart, Fatefire, and others) add layers of wonder and threat. The setting shines through vivid sensory details: the filth of the gutter, the grandeur and rot of the city, the tension in every alley and court. Magical creatures and outrageous elements keep things lively. The world feels expansive yet grounded, with real consequences for every choice. 

Maggie is a relatable, competent, and refreshingly adult. She’s not a teenager discovering hidden powers or instantly becoming queen. She’s a woman who has lived a bit, relies on wit and book knowledge, makes mistakes, and grows through them. Her love of stories and determination to protect characters she’s come to care about make her deeply sympathetic. Her “undying” ability adds tension rather than making her overpowered; death still hurts, and the emotional/psychological toll is explored. The supporting cast is colorful and memorable. 

Maggie quickly builds a ragtag found family—including a former lady’s maid, a deadly assassin, outrageous magical creatures, and a dangerously appealing soldier. These relationships feel earned and heartwarming amid the darkness. The broader cast (princes, dukes, villains, knights) is large and politically entangled; keeping track of everyone can be challenging at first, but the payoff in alliances, betrayals, and twists is worth it. Many readers highlight strong banter, loyalty, and character growth. The story starts with immediate survival stakes and steadily builds into intricate political maneuvering, action, mystery, and larger quests. 

Early sections involve more exposition and setup (a common note in reviews), but once Maggie gains footing and allies, the pacing accelerates into addictive, page-turning territory with fights (magical and mundane), clever schemes, and shocking revelations. The tone balances grim stakes—violence, political brutality, and the ever-present threat of war—with Ilona Andrews’ signature humor, snappy dialogue, and moments of warmth. It’s plot-heavy, with strong elements of adventure and intrigue, while delivering emotional depth on trauma, resilience, found family, and changing fate. Romance is present but secondary to the plot and character arcs—a slow-burn with excellent chemistry and tension rather than instant swooning or heavy spice. 

The central relationship develops naturally through shared danger, banter, and mutual respect. Fans of Ilona Andrews’ pairings will likely adore the dynamic; it promises to deepen across the trilogy. It’s more “romantasy lite” than full-on romantasy, which suits the epic scope. Comparisons to Outlander (portal elements + romance), Game of Thrones (politics + brutality), and isekai/portal fantasies (Samantha Shannon, Danielle L. Jensen, Sarah J. Maas vibes) are apt. It also echoes the “book lover trapped in their favorite story” trope, but grounds it with serious consequences. I will say this in closing. Do not be shocked if the book ends on a cliffhanger. These days, this is the only way authors can get readers to continue with the series. Unless you don't like the story!



CHAPTER 1

MONTH OF PLANTER, DAY 6

Rain drenched the city, cold and relentless. It leached all color from the medieval-looking buildings, turning the world gray and soaking through the filthy rag in which I had swaddled myself. The sour stench rising from the grimy folds was truly epic. I couldn’t feel my toes, and my fingers were going numb.

The three-story buildings towered over the alley like the walls of a stone canyon, boxing me in. Sometime between yesterday evening and this morning, my stomach had turned into a painful bottomless pit. I hadn’t eaten in three days. I wasn’t even shivering anymore. My body didn’t have the energy.

I checked on my rock again. It lay in a puddle by my feet, a cream-colored chunk of building stone about the size of a large grapefruit. Any bigger, and it would be too hard to grip with one hand. I had found it this morning and carried it through the rain for two hours until I found the right bridge.

The rock was still there. I touched it with my foot to make sure. It felt solid and real.

I peeled myself from the wall and leaned a little to glance out of the alley. In front of me a narrow stone bridge spanned the width of a rain-swollen river. Another wall of medieval buildings loomed on the other side. Behind them, a tower soared, a spire rising at least six hundred feet, silhouetted against the storm-choked sky and topped by a huge flower of translucent, milky glass. The flower’s petals were shut into a bud, guarding the observation deck in its center from the storm. Every few seconds, bright gold sparks dashed through the enchanted glass.

A dozen dark shapes circled the flower, surfing the wild air currents. My brain expected them to be birds, but birds had only one pair of wings, not two. The feeling of wrongness was overwhelming.

Yep, the Mage Tower and the strange bird-things were still there, too.

I huddled against the wall.

I couldn’t touch the Mage Tower, but I knew it was real. For one, I had pictured it differently. In my head it was a flawless pale needle, elegant and almost dainty. If this had been a hallucination, what I saw would’ve matched the vision in my head, but the reality was nothing like that. This tower jutted up, defiant, its walls worn but strong, as if it had grown from bedrock. And it felt old. Like it had stood there for thousands of years and would stand just like that for another millennium, timeless and indifferent, while the city around it crumbled into dust, rebuilt, and crumbled again.

No, it was real, like this endless rain, like the pain in my freezing bare feet, and like the gnawing ache in my stomach.

In the distance, a bell tolled four times. Four PM.

It wouldn’t be too long now.

To say that this was not the way I envisioned spending my Sunday would be a criminal understatement. Today would’ve been my one day off. I should’ve spent it watching Netflix, nibbling on a pizza, and reading while lounging on my couch in my tiny apartment, in my soft sweatpants, warm and dry. Not wrapped in a dirty rag, shivering in a grimy alley, while the sky dumped gallons of cold rain on my head.

I wasn’t a big reader through most of my childhood, but when I was sixteen, my first serious boyfriend broke up with me, and it was hell. My brain kept rehashing every moment of the relationship in excruciating detail. One afternoon, as I lay on my bed, wallowing in self-pity, my mom handed me a thick fantasy book, and when I turned my nose up at it, she told me, “Maggie, you need to live in someone else’s head for a bit.”

I’d thought I would read a few pages. When I came up for air, five hours later, my breakup was an afterthought. Some seriously messed-up stuff happened on the first page, and I had to find out how it turned out. Somehow by the end of those five hours, the book had wrung me dry. I could deal with life again.

I’d tried every genre under the sun since, but fantasy was my vice of choice. There was something about blades and magic that did it for me. Deadly swordmasters, thieves prowling through moonlit streets, dark magicians, warrior princesses, ruthless nobles, majestic dragons, hideous monsters, I loved it all. Put a hot dude in armor with a sword on the cover, and my eyes glazed over while my hand crept to the BUY button, budget be damned.

I had read enough fantasy books to fill a library, but that very first series was my special treasure. Set in the city of Kair Toren, capital of the kingdom of Rellas, the story revolved around the power struggles of eight noble families, and it was so full of fantasy tropes, it would be clichéd except that the superb writing moved it right past stereotypical into classic. The characters felt so real, they practically jumped off the page.

The series had two books, The Thieves of the North and The Lords of the East. The third one had never come out.

I had been rereading those two books for the last ten years. Whenever life got to be too harsh, I would grab them off my bookshelf, and they never failed to pull me out of whatever funk I had going on at the time. I could quote passages from memory. I had stalked the author’s abandoned website religiously for any hint of a release date. I haunted the fan groups looking for rumors and stewing in collective frustration. Adrian Latour, the author of the series, was always an enigma. He didn’t do social media or appearances, and his bio, with a blank square where the author photo should have been, consisted of a single sentence: Adrian Latour, man of dreams and chronicler of stories. After the second book came out, he seemed to vanish. He never wrote anything else, and nobody offered an explanation as to why he stopped working. The story just cut off. One of my favorite characters was left standing on a box with a noose around his neck for a decade.

Three nights ago, after a long day of delivering groceries, I went to sleep in my apartment south of Austin and woke up in Kair Toren.

A hint of movement on my left made me turn. Something small padded through the rain toward me. I brushed the water off my face.

A red furry creature padded out from the rain-soaked alley and stared at me with unblinking dark eyes. Its head was round, with curved marten ears that stood straight up, a button nose, and very long whiskers. It didn’t walk, it slunk, its longish body sitting low on four short legs that ended in webbed hand-paws armed with sharp retractable claws. It was as if an otter and a Ragdoll cat had a baby and dyed it red.

A stelka. A female one. Males had tufts on their ears.

Stelkas infested Kair Toren and its five rivers, catching fish and rats, eating garbage, raiding cellars, stealing everything that wasn’t nailed down, and generally being a nuisance. Like overly smart foxes, except that normal foxes at least hesitated before they scurried over to take a bite out of someone five times their size. Last night, exhausted and desperate, I’d fallen asleep under some busted crates, and this morning I woke up because one of these red assholes decided to chew on my leg.

The stelka opened her mouth and showed me sharp white teeth.

It couldn’t be.

I crouched and tilted my head, trying to get a better look.

There it was, a white patch on the stelka’s chest that looked like a lopsided half-moon. I had seen a dozen stelkas in my three days of stumbling around the city, and only one of them had a white patch like that. I must’ve been really delicious.

“You followed me.” My voice creaked like I had crawled out of the grave.

The stelka eyed me.

“Nope. Not happening.”

The little creature took a step forward.

I showed her my rock.

Another step.

I gripped the rock and hit the cobblestones with it.

The beast shied back and hissed.

A piercing screech tore through the air above us. I glanced up. One of the weird birds swooped at the tower in a suicidal dive and rammed the petals.

For a moment, the entire flower went dark, barely visible in the rain.

Oh crap.

The bud pulsed with pale light. Tongues of golden lightning erupted from the petals, snaking toward the birds. They tried to flee in a panic, but the lightning chased them, stabbing at their wings.

One of the bird-things cried out, plunged from the sky, and smashed onto the paver stones between me and the stelka with a wet thud. It was about the size of an eagle, with a long whip-like tail tipped with a fan of dark feathers. Its wings were wide, its long hind legs were sheathed in contour feathers, and all four of its appendages ended in paws armed with sharp talons.