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Simon R. Green

Author of Something from the Nightside

210+ Works 37,156 Members 749 Reviews 123 Favorited

About the Author

Science fiction and fantasy author Simon R. Green was born in 1955 in Bradford-on-Avon, England. He received an M.A. in Modern English and American Literature from Leicester University. He is the author of the Deathstalker series, a member of the British Fantasy Society, and occasionally does some show more Shakespearean acting. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Includes the names: Simon R. Green, Green R. Simon, Simon R. Greene

Also includes: Simon Green (3)

Series

Works by Simon R. Green

Something from the Nightside (2003) 2,579 copies, 105 reviews
Agents Of Light And Darkness (2003) 1,726 copies, 45 reviews
Nightingale's Lament (2004) 1,508 copies, 28 reviews
Hex and the City (2005) 1,469 copies, 29 reviews
The Man With The Golden Torc (2007) 1,372 copies, 29 reviews
Paths Not Taken (2005) 1,362 copies, 29 reviews
Sharper Than A Serpent's Tooth (2006) 1,359 copies, 23 reviews
Hell To Pay (2006) 1,251 copies, 21 reviews
Mean Streets (2009) — Contributor — 1,172 copies, 43 reviews
Blue Moon Rising (1989) 1,114 copies, 14 reviews
Deathstalker (1995) 1,070 copies, 17 reviews
The Unnatural Inquirer (2008) 1,057 copies, 22 reviews
Just Another Judgement Day (2009) 919 copies, 17 reviews
Daemons Are Forever (2008) 871 copies, 13 reviews
The Good, The Bad, And The Uncanny (2010) 806 copies, 18 reviews
Swords of Haven (1999) 771 copies, 7 reviews
Deathstalker Rebellion (1996) 764 copies, 7 reviews
Deathstalker War (1997) 695 copies, 3 reviews
The Spy Who Haunted Me (2009) 668 copies, 11 reviews
A Hard Day's Knight (2011) 660 copies, 16 reviews
Drinking Midnight Wine (2001) 644 copies, 9 reviews
Beyond the Blue Moon (2000) 610 copies, 6 reviews
Deathstalker Honor (1998) 589 copies, 3 reviews
Guards of Haven (1991) 556 copies, 4 reviews
Deathstalker Destiny (1999) 549 copies, 4 reviews
From Hell With Love (2010) 523 copies, 9 reviews
The Bride Wore Black Leather (2012) 508 copies, 15 reviews
Deathstalker Legacy (2002) 482 copies, 2 reviews
Shadows Fall (1994) 437 copies, 2 reviews
Ghost of a Chance (2010) 436 copies, 24 reviews
Deathstalker Return (2004) 412 copies, 3 reviews
Deathstalker Coda (2005) 367 copies, 2 reviews
For Heaven's Eyes Only (2011) 353 copies, 5 reviews
Down Among the Dead Men (1993) 350 copies, 3 reviews
Blood and Honor (1993) 349 copies, 6 reviews
Live and Let Drood (2012) 300 copies, 1 review
Hawk & Fisher (1990) 278 copies, 4 reviews
A Walk on the Nightside (2004) 276 copies, 3 reviews
Twilight of the Empire (1998) 259 copies, 1 review
Ghost of a Smile (2011) 247 copies, 7 reviews
Casino Infernale (2013) 239 copies, 2 reviews
Mistworld (1992) 228 copies, 3 reviews
Property Of A Lady Faire (2014) 214 copies, 3 reviews
The Dark Side of the Road (2015) 208 copies, 14 reviews
The God Killer (1991) 202 copies
Winner Takes All (1991) 201 copies, 2 reviews
The Bones of Haven (1992) 183 copies, 1 review
Wolf in the Fold (1991) 181 copies, 1 review
From A Drood To A Kill (2015) 170 copies
Guard Against Dishonor (1991) 159 copies, 1 review
Ghost of a Dream (2012) 158 copies, 5 reviews
Ghostworld (1993) 152 copies
Tales from the Nightside (2015) 149 copies, 6 reviews
Hellworld (1995) 137 copies
Dr. DOA (2016) 135 copies, 1 review
Spirits From Beyond (2013) 126 copies, 2 reviews
Moonbreaker (2017) 116 copies, 2 reviews
Dead Man Walking (2016) 113 copies, 4 reviews
Once in a Blue Moon (2014) 109 copies
Night Fall (2018) 108 copies, 2 reviews
Voices From Beyond (2014) 98 copies, 3 reviews
The Best Thing You Can Steal (2021) 95 copies, 4 reviews
Tales of the Hidden World (2014) 95 copies, 6 reviews
Very Important Corpses (2016) 87 copies, 8 reviews
Jekyll & Hyde Inc. (2021) 83 copies, 3 reviews
Forces From Beyond (2015) 82 copies, 4 reviews
Death Shall Come (2017) 81 copies, 10 reviews
Into the Thinnest of Air (2018) 69 copies, 8 reviews
Murder in the Dark (2018) 60 copies, 6 reviews
For Love of Magic (2023) 59 copies, 1 review
Into the Nightside (2008) 52 copies, 2 reviews
Till Sudden Death Do Us Part (2019) 49 copies, 6 reviews
Haunting the Nightside (2008) 48 copies, 2 reviews
The Dark Heart of the Nightside (2008) 47 copies, 2 reviews
The House on Widows Hill (2020) 46 copies, 6 reviews
The Holy Terrors (2024) 45 copies
Night Train to Murder (2020) 45 copies, 4 reviews
A Matter of Death and Life (2022) 44 copies, 3 reviews
Haunted by the Past (2022) 37 copies, 1 review
What Song the Sirens Sang (2022) 35 copies, 1 review
Buried Memories (2021) 31 copies, 3 reviews
Hyde & Seek (2024) 29 copies
Stone Certainty (2025) 25 copies, 1 review
Damned If You Do in the Nightside (2010) 24 copies, 1 review
Not of This World (2023) 20 copies
Which Witch? (2025) 19 copies, 1 review
Where Is Anybody? (2024) 18 copies
Pit of Despair (2012) 10 copies
For Better or Murder (2026) 7 copies
Dorothy Dreams (2013) 6 copies
El laberinto de la locura (1999) 4 copies
Las garras de Shub (2000) 3 copies
Street Wizard 2 copies
Las lágrimas de Dios (2001) 2 copies
Apertura Golgotha (1999) 2 copies
Encrucijada (2000) 1 copy
La toma de Mistworld (2000) 1 copy

Associated Works

Wolfsbane and Mistletoe (2008) — Contributor — 1,003 copies, 41 reviews
Home Improvement: Undead Edition (2011) — Contributor — 618 copies, 27 reviews
Down These Strange Streets (2011) — Contributor — 548 copies, 22 reviews
Powers of Detection: Stories of Mystery and Fantasy (2004) — Contributor — 548 copies, 18 reviews
Hex Appeal (2012) — Contributor — 439 copies, 46 reviews
Unusual Suspects: Stories of Mystery & Fantasy (2008) — Contributor — 433 copies, 10 reviews
The Living Dead 2 (2010) — Contributor — 354 copies, 9 reviews
The Way of the Wizard (2010) — Contributor — 221 copies, 6 reviews
Weird Detectives: Recent Investigations (2013) — Contributor — 167 copies, 5 reviews
Oz Reimagined: New Tales from the Emerald City and Beyond (2013) — Contributor — 166 copies, 12 reviews
The Monster's Corner (2011) — Contributor — 164 copies, 9 reviews
Armored (2012) — Contributor — 152 copies, 5 reviews
21st Century Dead (2012) — Contributor — 137 copies, 20 reviews
The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror 2011 Edition (2011) — Contributor — 131 copies, 7 reviews
Those Who Fight Monsters: Tales of Occult Detectives (2011) — Contributor — 131 copies, 9 reviews
The Mammoth Book of SF Wars (2012) — Contributor — 115 copies, 2 reviews
Dark Cities (2017) — Contributor — 109 copies
Magic City: Recent Spells (2014) — Contributor — 108 copies, 7 reviews
Out of Tune (2014) — Contributor — 88 copies, 37 reviews
Dark Delicacies III: Haunted (2009) — Contributor — 84 copies, 2 reviews
Operation Arcana (2015) — Contributor — 81 copies, 6 reviews
Swords Against Darkness V (1979) — Contributor — 70 copies
The Best Paranormal Crime Stories Ever Told (2010) — Contributor — 62 copies, 1 review
Dancing With the Dark (1997) — Contributor — 54 copies, 1 review
Street Magicks (2016) — Contributor — 36 copies, 2 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime 7 (2010) — Contributor — 32 copies, 2 reviews
Sword & Planet (2021) — Contributor — 28 copies, 3 reviews
Unidentified Funny Objects 8 (2020) — Author — 15 copies
Unidentified Funny Objects 9 (2022) — Contributor — 14 copies
Swords Against the Millennium (2000) — Contributor — 7 copies
Cemetery Dance Issue 60 (2009) 5 copies
Cemetery Dance Issue 55 (2006) — Contributor — 3 copies
Fantasy [2005 anthology] (2005) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

dark fantasy (185) Deathstalker (236) detective (343) ebook (576) fantasy (3,808) fiction (1,808) Hawk & Fisher (163) horror (422) John Taylor (201) Kindle (163) London (175) magic (320) mystery (692) Nightside (1,048) nightside series (225) noir (176) own (157) paperback (168) paranormal (488) read (409) science fiction (1,344) series (527) sf (197) sff (302) simon r. green (193) space opera (256) supernatural (368) to-read (1,588) unread (153) urban fantasy (2,193)

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Found: Older Fantasy Story - or a fever dream... in Name that Book (August 2023)

Reviews

791 reviews
I'm going to just come right out and say it at the very beginning.....get it out in the open....

I am a HUGE Simon R. Green fan! I loved his Nightside series and I have been a dedicated reader of the Ishmael Jones books since the first one. Green could write blurbs for toilet paper wrappers and I would buy megapacks just to read what he had to say.....

That being said....

I knew the minute this book popped up on my available-to-review list that I would love this book. I always do. Ishmael show more Jones. His sidekick Penny. The Organization. And......a haunted, creepy house. What's not to love?

And I was right, as usual. Green never lets me down. Great suspense, creepy and a fun, engaging read! The Ishmael Jones books are short -- about 120-150 pages each. The House on Widows Hill is the 9th book in the series. Jones is an alien. He's not exactly sure what type....or where he came from. He only vaguely remembers a crash...his ship going down. Then the onboard AI repaired him and wiped his memory so he could live as a human and survive until rescue. But no rescue ever came. Since he doesn't age -- he's been the same age since 1963 -- he trades protection and safety offered by a covert organization in return for handling strange cases for them. He and Penny have investigated some really really strange stuff.....and now, they are spending the night in an infamous supposedly haunted house. Their mission? Join a group of ghost hunters and determine if the house is really haunted. When one of the group mysteriously drops dead, Ishmael realizes this is going to be so much more than traipsing around with an EVP recorder and a body cam. This isn't reality tv.....Harrow House is real...and dangerous.

This story is a quick read as usual. Green expertly weaves a creepy story of suspense. He packs a lot into 150 pages! Lots of twisty-turny creepiness!

Great read!! Can't wait for the next adventure of Ishmael and Penny!
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{First of 5 Forest Kingdom series; fantasy} (1992)

Prince Rupert is the second son of the king of the Forest Land and has been sent into the Tanglewood on a quest to slay a dragon. He knows that the hidden purpose of the quest is to get rid of him so he won’t become a rival to his brother, Prince Harald, but he has an unquenchable sense of duty. So not only does he survive but he finds the dragon and rescues it from a princess ... and then the story really gets going.

'Rupert, you were
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supposed to bring back the valuable parts of a dead dragon and at least some of his hoard. Haven't you brought back any gold?'
'No,' said Rupert. 'There wasn't any.'
'What about the dragon's hoard?'
'He collected butterflies.'
They all stared at the sleeping dragon. 'Only you, Rupert,' said the Champion quietly. 'Only you ...'
'Haven't you brought back anything of value?' asked the King.
'Just this,' said Rupert, drawing his sword. Everybody studied the gleaming blade warily.
'It has a strong magical aura,' said the Astrologer dubiously. 'What does it do?'
'It summons rainbows,' said Rupert, just a little lamely.
There was a long pause.
'Let's talk about the Darkwood,' said King John.


The Tanglewood has always buffered the Forest Land from the Darkwood where demons and other evils live. Now, with the Blue Moon on the rise, the power of the Demon Prince is increasing, the Darkwood is spreading and the long night is threatening to cover the land. Only magic can hold it back, but magic has been disappearing as humans and human logic proliferate. Rupert returns to a castle under desperate siege and a court full of treachery. It seems that the only hope to save the kingdom - and the world - is the High Warlock, who was banished to the Dark Tower years ago. Which means that Rupert will have to brave the Darkwood again to bring him back.

This was a re-read and, more than likely, a re-re-read for me. I’ve found that this year I’ve been struggling with re-reads probably because there’s less sense of anticipation than the first time through. But I do remember being on tenterhooks the previous time(s) I read this because I didn’t know which characters to trust.

This sword-and-sorcery story was one of my favourites when I first read it (fairly close to its publication date); I like my heroes to show a little bit of vulnerability. It’s full of doom and (no, not gloom) dark humour, which appealed to me. I did find it a bit portentous this time - but I may add back half a star for nostalgia. A side note: I had read some of the Hawk and Fisher books before I read this the first time and Rob Hawke makes an appearance here; the two series are set in the same world (possibly reverse engineered, I felt) and were later amalgamated.

March 2021
4.5-5 stars
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I couldn't wait to complain about this book. That said, this reviews the dramatized version. Spoilers ahead.
To begin with, I couldn't help thinking, "This is Dr. Watson!" and making a comparison to the Graphic Audio dramatized versions of the Warlock Holmes series, which are brilliant, funny, and I highly recommend. But before I get into it, I'd like to thank the author, Simon R. Green, for this happy opportunity to rant and I apologize in advance for not reading any more of his oeuvre.
Now, show more is it a parody of the murder at the manor house trope? In that case, it's not funny enough. Oh, there's humor, like a butler (that buttles, not a gentleman's gentleman) whose employer insists on calling "Jeeves." The protagonist and narrator, Ishmael Jones, has cornered the market in deadpan. Also, in what sort of mystery does the detective sit in the assigned bedroom at night and wait for each suspect to sneak one by one out of their rooms and give him their opinions/alibis? See? This is why I assumed it was a parody.
The teaser at the end of one of the Warlock Holmes dramatizations gives most of the plot away: a detective whose shtick is he's an alien, a real one, i. e. not of this world; his boss, the Colonel of some mysterious organization, is dead before he arrives; and the killer is a vampire. The solution is a Chekhov's gun that I saw coming a mile away. You don't bring up the gold blood (What does that mean? Gold color? Liquid gold? And why couldn't the vampire tell by smelling him?) for no reason. Also predictable: everyone will die except the putative, or maybe just wannabe, girlfriend.
Everything is over-the-top. This is the worst snowstorm in British history - despite global warming. The wassail brew, or whatever, is undrinkable. Everyone hates everyone else (of course, it's Christmas). The victims are picked off one by one in 24 hours. One victim is stuffed up a chimney to cover up any clues. The vampire is a gloater, big time, and is not the sort to wear white tie and tails or sparkle in the sun (there's a relief).
Green deftly handles the modern day presence of cellphones which would have rendered most of Agatha Christie's plots null and void. The police are too busy or just unwilling to come out in the snow. The mysterious Organization is also delayed by the weather.
Someone might enjoy this. I'm not a fan of horror and started listening to the build-up in increments to keep from getting overwrought (which is telling - it is pretty gripping and I felt I had to finish it even though it had been free on Audible) and finally speeded up again when I was confident of the ending.
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Another great installment in the Nightside series. It picks up right where the last book left off, continuing the drama of John’s long, lost mom wanting to destroy the Nightside. It’s very dark, as usual, but more depressing than the other books because of its focus on the characters’ emotional issues. There’s also more romance, though it hardly feels romancy when the pair in question can’t touch each other, are extremely scarred both physically and emotionally, and almost never show more put down their shotgun. Regardless, I enjoyed going deeper into the characters personal lives, and I like that no one is entirely good or entirely bad. Everyone lives in shades of gray, especially John, whose choices in this book can be viewed as either cruel and selfish or as necessary evils in pursuit of a noble purpose - or maybe a little of both. I was also excited to finally have some of the many mysteries cleared up even though the story is definitely not wrapped up. Green drops a huge clue towards the end that’s clearly the answer to how everything will be fixed, but the protagonist has yet to realize it. I’m looking forward to reading book six to find out what happens next. show less

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Associated Authors

Kat Richardson Contributor
Richard Rohan Director, Script Adaptor, Director & Script Adaptor
Matt Stawicki Cover artist
Dan Smith Script Adaptor
Peter Holdway Narrator
Steve Wannall Narrator
Eva Wilhelm Narrator
Eva Wilhelm Narrator
Ken Jackson Narrator
Lolita Horne Narrator
Holly Adams Narrator
Chris Stinson Narrator
Jeff Allin Narrator
Rob McFadyen Narrator
Henry Kramer Narrator
Rob McFadyen Narrator
Kay Eluvian Narrator
Thomas Keegan Narrator
Jenna Sharpe Narrator
John Kielty Narrator
Marni Penning Narrator
Peter Stanley Narrator
Khaya Fraites Narrator
Jeri Marshall Narrator
Jonathan Barkat Cover artist
Donato Giancola Cover artist
Paul Young Cover artist
Jon Sullivan Cover artist
Judith Lagerman Cover designer
Marc Vietor Narrator
Ginger Legato Designer
Julie Rogers Text designer
Judith Murello Cover designer
Ray Lundgren Cover designer
Judy Murello Cover designer
Jem Butcher Design Cover designer
Elke Sigal Designer
Will Lee Cover designer, Cover artist
Sanjulian Cover artist
Chris McGrath Cover artist
Greg Call Cover artist
Romas Kukalis Cover artist
Gideon Emery Narrator
Peter Mennim Cover artist

Statistics

Works
210
Also by
34
Members
37,156
Popularity
#492
Rating
3.8
Reviews
749
ISBNs
901
Languages
11
Favorited
123

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