Kim Lakin-Smith

Science Fiction and Dark Fantasy Author

New Review of Tourniquet over at The London Vampire Group.

September 01
by Web Admin 1. September 2008 16:42

Another review of Tourniqet has been posted over at The London Vampire Group's website:

"For those of you who like gothic novels set in the near future - but gothic not in the classic sense, I might add - with lots of detail and twists and turns, this is one for you."

Read more here:


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Review of The Killing Fields.

August 18
by Kim 18. August 2008 14:50

A new review of the anthology Celebrations has been posted over at The Fix:

“The Killing Fields” by Kim Lakin-Smith does exactly what its title implies. A whirling dervish of a story set in Shropshire Hills, “reduced to a rabid war zone by gang violence, mafia-owned cartels and vigilantism,” Regan and her sidekick, an eleven-year-old girl eke out a marginal existence in the aftermath of a near-future civil war. It’s fast, brutal, and as nihilistic as anything written since Michael Moorcock introduced Jerry Cornelius
By Colin Harvey

Celebrations can be purchased from Amazon for just £9.99


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Review of Heart Song.

July 29
by del 29. July 2008 00:11

A new review of the anthology Myth-Understandings featuring Kim's short story "Heart Song" has been posted over at The Fix:

"I’m not familiar with the mythological background of “Heart Song” by Kim Lakin-Smith, but it definitely reads like a fairy tale. A jilted lover, Juho, sits on the edge of an old well, pouring out his heartache (and hurt pride) in music as he plays his kantele. With his eyes closed, he doesn’t see that the girl who joins him climbed out of the well, nor does he apparently have the good sense to realize she’s not just an ordinary peasant girl. Pirho is a pitiful creature, who once accidentally dropped a spindle into the well, and threw herself in after it for fear of her mother’s retaliation. Now she lives in Vanaheim, a limbo world somewhere between life and death, and she has traded her heart to Mother Reija in exchange for the lost spindle. Mother Reija has sent her up to the surface world to bring back the essence of Juho’s music.

This is a harsh world, where a young girl would drown herself rather than face the loss of a spindle. Juho may simply be a product of his environment. Still, if Juho’s arrogance and gratuitous cruelty are indicative of his usual behavior, then it’s no wonder the fair Eeva dumped him. I feel he richly deserved everything that happened to him; in fact he got off easy."
by Jan Clark

Myth-Understandings can be purchased from Amazon for just £9.99


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Tourniquet reviewed in BTN.

August 19
by Kim 19. August 2007 00:30

BTN the glossy magazine placed a review of Tourniquet in their August issue. Read the review BTN Review
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About Kim Lakin-Smith

Kim Lakin-Smith is a science fiction and dark fantasy author obsessed with alternative histories, urban dystopias, gaspunk, hot rods, and dirty rock 'n' roll. Her debut novel, Tourniquet (Immanion Press) was published in 2007 and her short stories have been published in several anthologies and magazines.