Shades of Blood and Shadow – Book Review
Shades of Blood and Shadow is intelligent horror, which doesn’t mean it sacrifices emotional punch.
Shades of Blood and Shadow is intelligent horror, which doesn’t mean it sacrifices emotional punch.
This is the best zombie novel I’ve read to date. It even knocks Brian Keene’s classic take on the undead, The Rising, out of its top spot.
When David Pierce, a young out of work, and seemingly blacklisted, hydropower engineer is offered a dream job in the frozen waste of Jackson, Quebec City, Canada to oversee troubleshooting for a new hydro power plant he leaps at the second chance the new job offers.
Bodacious babes, dastardly demons, sociopathic sadists, and a maniacal mastermind combine forces in Hank Schwaeble’s novel Damnable.
Zombies: Encounters With the Hungry Dead compiles 32 diverse and diverting stories that encompass the undying allure of zombies. They seldom endear but they do endure.
Revolvo, an interestingly loopy and recursive tale that could be set in Canada or could be set in any metropolitan center concerns a caveman skulking around and killing in a major metropolitan city.