E. E. Knight
Book 8 of Vampire Earth
Language: English
ISBN
Fantasy Fantasy fiction Fiction General Horror Horror Fiction Kentucky Occult & Supernatural Science Fiction Valentine; David (Fictitious Character) Vampires
Publisher: Roc
Published: Jan 2, 2009
The tense eighth installment of Knight's Vampire Earth series (a welcome improvement over 2008's Fall with Honor) continues David Valentine's adventures in 2076 as the invading Kurian Order decides to exterminate rebellious Earthlings. The Southern Command authorizes Valentine to wage a guerrilla war with the goal of creating a Kentucky freehold. His ragtag battalion (including some controversial Quisling and alien Grog recruits) must deal first with a power plant outage that blacks out Evansville and Owensboro and then a blizzard and the Kurians' plot to unleash a ravies epidemic on the human herd. Knight keeps the conflict interesting but says too little about the inscrutable Kurians, who are like magicians, always diverting attention from the operating hand. Even readers familiar with the series would welcome a glossary and more background on the various alien races. (July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
"Gritty realism, Lovecraftian villains, and boffo action scenes."-S. M. Stirling, national bestselling author of The Scourge of God
Description:
From Publishers Weekly
The tense eighth installment of Knight's Vampire Earth series (a welcome improvement over 2008's Fall with Honor) continues David Valentine's adventures in 2076 as the invading Kurian Order decides to exterminate rebellious Earthlings. The Southern Command authorizes Valentine to wage a guerrilla war with the goal of creating a Kentucky freehold. His ragtag battalion (including some controversial Quisling and alien Grog recruits) must deal first with a power plant outage that blacks out Evansville and Owensboro and then a blizzard and the Kurians' plot to unleash a ravies epidemic on the human herd. Knight keeps the conflict interesting but says too little about the inscrutable Kurians, who are like magicians, always diverting attention from the operating hand. Even readers familiar with the series would welcome a glossary and more background on the various alien races. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
"Gritty realism, Lovecraftian villains, and boffo action scenes."
-S. M. Stirling, national bestselling author of The Scourge of God