Blog Archives
Read an excerpt of The Apocalypse Ark on The Civilian Reader

The Civilian Reader has posted an excerpt of The Apocalypse Ark, the third book in my Cross series of supernatural thrillers. The Civilian Reader previously posted excerpts of the first two books in the series, The Mona Lisa Sacrifice and The Dead Hamlets. If you haven’t yet read the books, here’s a chance to preview them. If you have read them, thanks for reading!
Weird Fantasy – The January 2025 Bibliofiles edition

I leaned toward fantasy reads this month — the weirder the better. And there were some real weird reads in this edition of the Bibliofiles.
Fiction
Sycamore by Ian Rogers

I’ve always loved Ian Rogers’ tales of The Black Lands, an eerie and deadly realm that intersects with our own and provides PI Felix Renn with supernatural creatures to investigate. So I was delighted to read Sycamore, which follows Renn to small-town Ontario and a mystery involving a string of murders, a missing man, a mysterious librarian, an eerie child — and a hidden portal to the Black Lands. Weird lit at its finest. You’ll be afraid of the dark all over again.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/220978924-sycamore
We Are the Dead by Mike Shackle

What happens when the bad guys win in a fantasy novel and take over the world? The resistance fights back, of course. This is the premise of We Are the Dead by Mike Shackle. The land of Jia is overrun by the Egril hordes, which have united under a mysterious leader with powerful magic. Jia falls instantly to the Egril forces, which rule the land through a puppet government. But not everyone is willing to accept their rule. Brutal, bloody and action-packed, this is a nice twist of the blade for the fantasy genre.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/42602296-we-are-the-dead
Kaiju Agonistes by Scott Lynch

A well-meaning but increasingly monstrous kaiju goes head to head with politicians in this blackly comic and delightful tale.
Link: https://www.uncannymagazine.com/article/kaiju-agonistes/
Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett

Foundryside by Robert Jackson Bennett presents one of the most original worlds to ever hit the fantasy genre. The city of Tevanne is ruled by merchant houses that use a hybrid of magic and technology to maintain their power and live a near godlike existence. The entire society is built upon the practice of scriving — altering reality by inscribing objects with enchanted sigils to convince them to act in ways contrary to their nature. Scrived pieces of wood can be hard as stone, swords can hit much harder than they should be capable of, lights can burn forever and so on.
The only problem is no one truly understands how it works. The technology comes from an ancient race long gone who had attained the power of godhood, and the people of Tevanne are trying to understand it as they slowly piece the remains together.
But Foundryside is not just an impressive piece of worldbuilding. It’s also a clever heist tale, as the thief Sancia steals an artifact that turns out to be from that ancient race — and is itself sentient. Sancia is a unique character herself, as she is a scrived human being that can essentially hear the thoughts of inanimate objects — the result of unthinkable experiments by the rulers of Tevanne.
It’s also very much a political novel as it depicts deep divides between the wealthy and the poor, between those who aspire to godhood and those who are trapped in the worst gutters of humanity. There are more than a few parallels to our own society here.
There’s even a philosophical element, as Foundryside explores what is to be human — and what it is to be a god. And there’s an interesting angle in our AI age of what it means to be a sentient object.
All of these things come together over the course of the book, as the secrets of the dead race are discovered and the story shifts from being a clever fantasy novel to a near existential horror. If you’re looking for a truly different reading experience unlike anything else in the genre, then Foundryside is the book for you.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/37173847-foundryside
The Fantasy Writer’s Assistant by Jeffery Ford

The Fantasy Writer’s Assistant is one of the weirdest and best collections I’ve ever experienced. Humans on a strange planet dress as old movie stars for celebrity-obsessed aliens. An interviewer has tea with a very odd Jules Verne. A writer obsessed with a mysterious Kafka story finds himself at odds with the writer Jeffrey Ford. And many more tales straight out of Twilight Zone episodes written by Borges.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/39748.The_Fantasy_Writer_s_Assistant_and_Other_Stories
The Wish Doctor by Arlen Feldman
A charming tale about an expert in contracts for binding djinn who finds himself summoned to the royal palace to study the most important contract of his life and find the hidden trap.
Link: https://www.baen.com/wish_doctor
Non-fiction
The Big Five Publishers Have Killed Literary Fiction by Elizabeth Kaye Cook and Melanie Jennings
Is consolidation among the big publishers slowly killing off literary fiction? And can the small presses save it?
Link: https://www.persuasion.community/p/the-big-five-publishers-have-killed
New Star Pushed Over the Ledge
The world of CanLit was shocked and puzzled when publisher New Star suddenly announced it was shutting down. Now it seems a dispute with the BC Arts Council may have led to the closure.
Link: https://shush.substack.com/p/new-star-pushed-over-the-ledge
Read an excerpt of The Dead Hamlets in The Civilian Reader

If you haven’t yet read The Dead Hamlets, the second book in my Cross series of supernatural thrillers, The Civilian Reader has an excerpt up. https://civilianreader.com/2025/01/24/excerpt-the-dead-hamlets-by-peter-darbyshire-poplar-press/
You can read an excerpt of The Mona Lisa Sacrifice here: https://civilianreader.com/2025/01/13/excerpt-mona-lisa-sacrifice-by-peter-darbyshire-poplar-press/
Read an excerpt of The Mona Lisa Sacrifice in The Civilian Reader

Interested in a preview of The Mona Lisa Sacrifice, my first book in the Cross series? Check out The Civilian Reader for an excerpt!
Change your normal this year

It’s the start of a new year and there is no better time to change your normal. Unless your normal state is working well for you, in which case carry on! Here is a list of 10 things I have found helpful in changing my normal.
- Choose a theme for the year. This can be anything — The Year of Fitness, The Year of Saying Yes, The Year of Saying No, The Year of Family. Whatever you choose will help give you a direction for that year and help inform your decisions, which in turn will help you change your normal. I’m opting for the Year of Creativity this year.
- Whatever your goals are for the year, put a system in place that will help you achieve them. Goals are great but if you don’t know how you are going to achieve them then you probably won’t. Put a good system in place and the goals will take care of themselves. Hint: The more enjoyable you make the system, the greater the chance you’ll be able to stick to it.
- Stop drinking. This was a life-changer for me, as I lost weight, became fitter, developed greater emotional stability and focus — and became more present in my life. I stopped drinking in 2019 and I’ve never regretted it.
- Exercise more. I don’t mean you have to go to the gym and throw a car’s worth of weights around — although power to you if that’s your thing. Exercise can be as simple as walking to work instead of taking transit or going for a walk at lunch with colleagues or friends. I find that whenever I’m stressed, I go for a walk and my mood immediately improves.
- Connect with family, friends and colleagues more. I’ve made a real effort to try to connect with people more, even if it’s just a lunchtime walk at work, and I’ve found the effects have been great for my mental health. I’ve rekindled old friendships and developed new ones, and all the social connection has simply made me feel better as a person. The stronger your social foundation, the stronger your foundation overall.
- Practice gratitude. I try to practice gratitude every day, ideally first thing in the morning to set the tone for the day. I find that if I can begin the day with something to be grateful for it helps me to see the good in other things or events throughout the day rather than focus on the negative. It makes me happy, and happiness comes with all sorts of advantages. It’s important to remember that gratitude doesn’t just have to be about the big things in your life. Often I am grateful for spending time with a friend at lunch or a beautiful morning. And sometimes I even grateful for the hard moments in life, for helping me to become a stronger, better person.
- Choose happiness. When we choose happiness, we are choosing to process the world in a certain way — to see the possibilities rather than the roadblocks. That gives us more opportunities and advantages — and more chances at greater happiness!
- Practice compassion – including self-compassion. I’ve found I’m less likely to hold a grudge or get caught up in negative emotions if I can manage some compassion toward the person who is causing me problems. Most people don’t set out to make life difficult for other people, after all. Sometimes it just happens because of challenges they are facing outside of their control. Practicing compassion helps me keep my inner peace and hopefully prevents me from becoming the difficult person. More importantly, I’ve learned to practice self-compassion. I used to beat myself up for not being perfect, for not having a handle on my anxiety, etc., but now I remind myself that I am a human being subject to innumerable stresses and forces outside of my control. And when I practice self-compassion, I am more likely to rest and recharge or otherwise take the steps needed to look after myself, which means I am more healthy and resilient in the long run.
- Focus on what you can control and accept what you cannot. Life will put plenty of challenges and obstacles in your path. They are neither good nor bad. They simply are. What they mean to you will depend on your own mindset, so develop one that serves your happiness rather than your anxieties.
- Always remember that how you spend your time is who you actually are. When you waste time on mindless activities or something you don’t particularly care about, you are actually wasting your life. Every action you take is a vote for the sort of person you will become.
I hope all your change is for the positive this year!
(Pic is of me changing my normal a few years back.)
Related Reading List
Here are some books I’ve found very useful in helping to change my normal. I hope they can do the same for you.
New Cross editions make list of best book covers of 2024

I’m delighted to see my Cross series of supernatural thrillers make the list of best book covers of 2024 from the Hamilton Review of Books! I do love these covers.
Productive Goblins – The December 2024 Bibliofiles edition

I went on a bit of a Christopher Buehlman binge in December, reading The Daughters’ War and then re-reading The Blacktongue Thief to compare them. Each of them is a brilliant read, as is Robert Jackson Bennett’s The Tainted Cup. I hope you like the books in this edition of the Bibliofiles as much as I did.
Fiction
The Blacktongue Thief by Christopher Buehlman

The thief Kinch finds himself sent on a mission by the Takers Guild to accompany Galva, a hardened veteran of the Goblin Wars, to a distant city that has been attacked by giants to… well, he’s not sure what he’s supposed to do there. But he knows better than to cross the Takers Guild, which seems to have its hands in everything behind the scenes.
What follows is a crazed and absolutely fantastic adventure where they make their way across a most hostile land, encountering monstrous goblins, strange magicians, a very cunning kraken, and a very peculiar blind cat. Kinch falls in love with a young witch and tries to redeem his troubled past, but nothing is what it seems in this book.
And the storytelling, oh gods, the storytelling! It’s equally dramatic, horrifying and comic, as Buehlman always hits the right notes to keep the reader reading on. Kinch is one of the best narrators to ever tell a fantasy tale, and this tale is as original as it is inventive on every single page. Every character has a great backstory and wonderful arc, the magic is weird and captivating, the action scenes are unpredictable and real, and you never know where the story will take you next.
The Blacktongue Thief is one of the best fantasy books to ever grace the genre. I can’t wait to read whatever comes next from Buehlman.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/55077697
The Daughters’ War by Christopher Buhelman

Goblins. Guts. Glory.
The prequel to Christopher Buehlman’s absolutely magical The Blacktongue Thief, The Daughters’ War is set in the Goblin Wars that form the background of the first Blacktongue book. The Daughters’ War follows the warrior Galva from The Blacktongue Thief through the bloody conflict that nearly ended humanity at the hooked claws of the goblins. It’s a very different book, however, as it falls more into grimdark or even horror fantasy than the fantasy caper of The Blacktongue Thief. Perhaps that’s fitting for a book about humanity’s desperate struggle against a race of hungry goblins that want nothing more than to enslave and eat them.
As different as it is, though, The Daughters’ War is another brilliant read from Buehlman, who has quickly become the envy of every other writer in the field. His invention of the war corvids used to fight the goblins — fierce giant birds created through dark magic — is one of the best additions to the fantasy genre in decades. And this is the best invocation of the horrors of war since Joe Abercrombie’s Heroes. As the army of Galva and her fellow dams — female warriors as the goblins have killed most of the men — move through ravaged cities and witness the devastation of the goblin hordes, the tension grows and grows until the inevitable battle. This is no Tolkien fantasy where a handful of noble hearts prevail against the horde, though. It’s war at its ugliest and most brutal, and sometimes the good guys — or good dams — don’t win. An absolute masterpiece of the genre.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/195790571-the-daughters-war
The Tainted Cup by Robert Jackson Bennett

Sherlock Holmes detective stories meet fantasy in this tale of murder, contagion and leviathans. The Sherlock Holmes part is played by the quirky Ana, an intellectual who doesn’t leave her quarters if she can help it and instead lets her assistant Din do all the legwork for her. Din, the narrator, is an engraver, which means he can remember everything he encounters, even if he doesn’t understand it. The two are one of the most memorable pairings in fantasy fiction since Frodo and Sam. Or maybe Frodo and Gollum….
Ana and Din are brought in to solve the mysterious death of a military officer in a mansion where he doesn’t belong, after a plant has erupted from his body and torn him apart. It turns out he is not the only one to suffer such an affliction, and the deaths lead to a breach in a fortification that keeps the strange and deadly leviathans out of the land. Their investigation takes them deep into the intrigues of the empire, and the murder mystery also becomes a political thriller and class critique, with a touch of horror thrown in.
The Tainted Cup is an incredibly layered tale, where every detail is memorable — and every detail matters. It’s one of the smartest and most intriguing fantasy books ever written. I’m looking forward to following all the future adventures of Ana and Din!
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/150247395-the-tainted-cup
Dreadful by Caitlin Rozakis

What happens when Dread Lord Gavrax wakes in his castle/lair/laboratory with no memories of who he is but with an army of goblins at his disposal, an untrustworthy second-in-command, a captured princess in the dungeon, a village full of frightened servants and a group of other dark wizards that want him to take part in a ritual to summon something even worse than them? You get a fun, cozy fantasy that keeps you guessing while never taking itself too seriously.
Dreadful is a perfect read for these troubled times. The only real drawback is you’ll likely finish it too quickly and leave yourself wanting more.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/63051209-dreadful
Slow Productivity by Cal Newport

Are you suffering from burnout or overwhelm? Struggling to be productive in a world where pseudo-productivity seems to be the only thing that matters? (You know, looking busy rather than producing actual meaningful work.) Maybe you need to embrace slow productivity instead.
Newport looks at a handful of historical and contemporary figures to reveal their secrets to getting things done — Jane Austen, Steve Jobs, even Jewel. It all boils down to carving out periods of intense focus by eliminating distractions and other demands on your time. In short, focus on quality rather than quantity.
Of course, this is easier said than done depending on how you are trying to apply this to your life. There are a few strategies suggested here, but overall it’s more of a philosophical approach than it is a how-to guide. Newport presents the big picture of how much focus matters and then leaves it to the reader to determine how to change their lives to create a more focused approach to their projects that matter.
It’s not exactly new material — Newport has covered much of this ground before in his other books, particularly in Deep Work. But if you’re a fan of his work or you’re looking for ways out of the overwhelm cycle, then Slow Productivity should be on your reading list.
Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/197773418-slow-productivity
Unboxing the new books!
The new editions of my Cross series of supernatural thrillers have arrived so I made my first unboxing video! Check out the lovely new versions of The Mona Lisa Sacrifice, The Dead Hamlets and The Apocalypse Ark!
A supernatural thriller for a supernatural holiday

The Mona Lisa Sacrifice, the first book in my Cross series of supernatural thrillers, has made The Tyee’s holiday gift list! Very happy to see this. https://thetyee.ca/Presents/2024/12/05/Holiday-Book-Recommendations-Part-Two/
Update: The Mona Lisa Sacrifice also made the Fraser Valley Current’s Holiday Book Guide!








