Print and ebooks from top genre authors: Keith Brooke, Eric Brown, John Grant, Garry Kilworth, Stephen Palmer, Kaitlin Queen, Iain Rowan, Anna Tambour, Robert Freeman Wexler, and Neil Williamson.
More than a dozen Amazon bestsellers and over 20,000 copies sold in our first year!
NEW:
More titles soon from Eric Brown, Stephen Palmer, Molly Brown, Paul di Filippo and other authors.
Buy infinity plus books at:
Latest feedback
Iain Rowan's Nowhere to Go shortlisted for
Spinetingler magazine's
Best Short Story
collection award.
Fantastic SF Site review for Nowhere To Go: "Rowan is a very fine writer... Crime enthusiasts must not miss the book: this is noir at its very best."
Excellent interview with Muezzinland author Stephen Palmer at SFF Chronicles
A great reader review for Memesis: "Brooke is a master story teller...another great collection from Keith Brooke, a writer who deserves wider recognition. I'd recommend it highly."
5* reader review for Iain Rowan's Nowhere To Go: "Great collection of 11 short stories. Had a hard time putting it down, I kept trying to read faster to turn the next page."
Paul D Brazill loves Iain Rowan's Nowhere To Go: "Every story in this collection is a gem... classy and clever Brit Grit at its best."
Great reader review of Neil Williamson's The Ephemera at Smashwords: "Williamson is one of the best Scottish short story writers alive today... There isn't a poor story here."
Lovely review of Iain Rowan's Nowhere To Go: "I read the book from front to back. Rowan offers an amazing fluidity of narrative"
"If Roald Dahl had written science fiction, he would have written this kind" - Amazon review of Keith Brooke's Liberty Spin.
Great review of Kaitlin Queen's One More Unfortunate (a top-ten seller at Amazon) at amazon.com: "twists and turns galore ... the taut tale-telling rattles along at good speed; and the solution to the mystery is both startling and satisfying. Recommended."
And here's a lovely write-up of what we're doing at Amazon's Omnivoracious blog.
Our authors so far:
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infinities by infinity plus and friends (FREE) [Apr 2011] infinities is an anthology; it's a sampler; it's a catalogue for works published by infinity plus and our friends in the writing world. And it's free. Authors are: Eric Brown, John Grant, Anna Tambour, Keith Brooke, Garry Kilworth, Iain Rowan, Kaitlin Queen, Linda Nagata, Scott Nicholson, Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Steven Savile. |
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The Accord "One of the finest novels of virtual reality yet written" (SF Site) A tale of love, murder and revenge that crosses the boundaries between the real world and virtual reality. When Noah and Priscilla escape into the Accord, Priscilla’s murderous husband plots to destroy the whole Accord and them with it. Where does the pursuit of revenge stop for immortals in an eternal world? |
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Lord of Stone Bligh, a young foreigner, drawn irresistibly to the civil war in Trace, has rejected religion, yet appears to be possessed by one of the six Lords Elemental. Bligh thinks he's going mad, but if he is then it's a madness shared by others... A fantasy novel about the death of magic. |
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Five volumes of collected short fiction by Keith Brooke ($2.99/£1.99 each) [Dec 2010] From fantasy to horror, science fiction and the downright weird. Five ebooks collecting the short fiction of an author described by Locus as "in the recognized front ranks of SF writers". Extras include specially-written afterwords and previously unpublished stories. |
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The Angels of Life and Death From cyberpunk visions of post-human futures to traditional tales of alien encounter and time travel, ten science fiction stories from the two times winner of the BSFA short story award. |
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Approaching Omega The mission to locate an Earth-like planet for colonisation has failed, three of the five colony sleeper hangars have been destroyed... Time to adjust mission parameters. Time to begin experimentation. Classic SF from international bestseller Eric Brown. |
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Ghostwriting by Eric Brown ($2.99/£1.99) [Mar 2012] Over the course of a career spanning twenty five years, Eric Brown has written just a handful of horror and ghost stories – and all of them are collected here. Ranging from the psychological horror through fantastical horror to almost-mainstream, Ghostwriting is Eric Brown at his humane and compelling best. |
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Meridian Days by Eric Brown ($2.99/£1.99) [Aug 2011] Meridian, twenty light years from Earth and with just a tiny scattering of inhabitable islands, seems the perfect place for to escape the tragedy of his past. When he meets Fire Trevellion he is drawn into a world of corruption and murder that is far darker than his past. Soon it's all he can do just to survive... |
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Penumbra by Eric Brown ($2.99/£1.99) [Dec 2011] When a young tug pilot's career is ruined by a collision in Earth orbit he has no choice but to accept a commission to fly an eccentric ship builder to a planet far from the trade routes. Discovering alien ruins on the planet and the hulk of a missing generation ship they are thrown into the centre of a conspiracy that reaches back centuries. A key novel from one of the UK's favourite SF writers. |
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A Writer's Life by Eric Brown ($2.99/£1.99) [Dec 2010] In a departure from his science fiction roots, Eric Brown has written a haunting novella that explores the essence of creativity, the secret of love, and the tragedy that lies at the heart of human existence. |
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Qinmeartha and the Girl-Child LoChi by John Grant ($2.99/£1.99) [Mar 2011] Tarburton-on-the-Moor - just another sleepy Dartmoor village. Or so it seems to Joanna Gard, until the fabric of the place begins, like her personal life, to unravel. In this disturbing tale of clashing realities, Hugo- & World Fantasy Award-winner John Grant skilfully juggles a strange cosmology with images from the darker side of the human soul. Includes bonus novella "The Beach of the Drowned". |
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Take No Prisonersby John Grant ($2.99/£1.99) [Jan 2011] In the fifteen superbly literary stories of this, his first collection, Hugo- and World Fantasy Award-winning author John Grant goes to places other fantasy and SF writers have yet to find on the map. As a special bonus, this new e-edition of Take No Prisoners includes two novelettes from the author's Leaving Fortusa cycle: "The Hard Stuff" and "Q". |
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Warm Words & Otherwise: A Blizzard of Book Reviews by John Grant ($2.99/£1.99) [Sep 2011] A bumper collection – over 150,000 words! – of book reviews, many of full essay length, by the two-time Hugo winning and World Fantasy Award-winning co-editor of The Encyclopedia of Fantasy and author, among much fiction, of such recent nonfiction works as Corrupted Science and (forthcoming) Denying Science. |
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Phoenix Man by Garry Kilworth ($2.99/£1.99) [Apr 2011] The man who learned to walk on water and one who discovered how to beat fire, a visionary who sees a world filled with people quite unlike his own, a man who can soak up anything that's thrown at him. Thirteen eclectic stories of discovery and wonder – five of them original to this collection – from a writer described by New Scientist as "the best short story writer in any genre". |
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Hallucinating by Stephen Palmer ($2.99/£1.99) [Dec 2011] Europe, 2049. Nulight, a Tibetan refugee and notorious underground record company owner, emerges from an obscure Berlin night club realising that an alien invasion is imminent. Or is he hallucinating? A unique vision of future invasion and future music from the author of Memory Seed and Glass. |
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Muezzinland by Stephen Palmer ($2.99/£1.99) [Nov 2011] Life has changed in the mid 22nd century. The aether is a telepathic cyberspace. Biochips augment human brains. AIs, concepts, even symbols can be dangerous. Mnada is heir to the Ghanaian throne, yet something has been done to her brain that has made her insane, something to send her fleeing north across jungle and desert towards the mysterious place called Muezzinland. |
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The Rat and the Serpent by Stephen Palmer ($2.99/£1.99) [May 2012] Imagine a film made in black-and-white. Now imagine a novel written in black-and-white. The Rat And The Serpent is a dark phantasmagoria related entirely in monochrome. Read this and enter a world portrayed as never before in the field of fantastic literature. |
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One More Unfortunateby Kaitlin Queen (ebook: $3.99/£2.99; print: $11.99) [Dec 2010] Relentlessly drawn back to a circle of old friends and enemies, Nick Redpath has all kinds of issues to deal with. But first he must prove that he didn't murder his old flame, Geraldine Wyse... Kaitlin Queen is the adult fiction pen-name of a best-selling children's author. This is her first crime novel. |
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Nowhere To Goby Iain Rowan ($2.99/£1.99) [Mar 2011] Eleven stories of murder, obsession, fear and--sometimes--redemption. Featuring stories published in Alfred Hitchcock's, Ellery Queen's and more. Rowan's short fiction has been reprinted in Year's Best anthologies, won a Derringer Award, been voted into readers' top ten of the year, and been the basis for a novel shortlisted for the UK Crime Writers' Association's Debut Dagger award. Also: Derringer Award-winning story "One Step Closer" is now available as a free self-contained ebook. |
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One of Us by Iain Rowan ($2.99/£1.99) [Mar 2012] Anna is one of the invisible people. She fled her own country when the police murdered her brother and her father, and now she serves your food, cleans your table, changes your bed, and keeps the secrets of her past well hidden. When she used her medical school experience to treat a man with a gunshot wound, Anna thought it would be a way to a better life. Instead, it leads to a world of people trafficking, prostitution, murder and the biggest decision of Anna's life: how much is she prepared to give up to be one of us? Shortlisted for the UK Crime Writers' Association Debut Dagger award. |
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Monterra's Deliciosa & Other Tales & by Anna Tambour ($2.99/£1.99) [Jan 2011] Magic Lino, the real story behind the one told by Robert Louis Stevenson, a chef dying of ennui, gathering bluebirds, paying with candywrap. More than 30 stories and poems from an author described by SF Site as "one of the most delightful, original, and varied new writers on hand". Includes 17,000 words of bonus material. |
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Spotted Lily by Anna Tambour ($2.99/£1.99) [Jan 2011] When the Devil drops into Angela Pendergast's bedroom in her sharehouse in inner-city Sydney with a contract in hand, her life has little better alternative so she signs. He's got only a Hell's week to fulfil his side, but in the meantime he must chaperone her -- or is it the other way around? Shortlisted for the William L. Crawford Award; a Locus Recommended Reading List selection. |
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Circus of the Grand Design by Robert Freeman Wexler ($2.99/£1.99) [Sep 2011] When Lewis rents a vacation house on Long Island he doesn’t expect to end up on a crazy circus train ride to nowhere. Travelling through strange and wonderful lands, he becomes lost amongst mad acrobats, sexy elephant riders, a magical mechanical horse, a giant woman and her savage, prehistoric rodent bears, an egotistical juggler, and...a fertility goddess who takes exceptional interest in him. |
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The Ephemera by Neil Williamson ($2.99/£1.99) [Apr 2011] Eighteen stories of impermanence, change, ephemera... from the ends of love affairs and the brief sanity of wartime convalescence, to the fading away of old languages and the dying of humanity itself. This edition includes four bonus stories, including one written specially for this collection, and each story has a newly-written afterword, from an author described by World Fantasy Award-winner Jeff VanderMeer as "a stylish new Scottish talent". |
| More titles from infinity plus authors coming soon! | |