City of the Lost
By Stephen Blackmoore
By Stephen Blackmoore
By Stephen Blackmoore
By Stephen Blackmoore
Part of Eric Carter
Part of Eric Carter
Category: Urban Fantasy | Crime Fiction
Category: Urban Fantasy | Crime Fiction
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$22.00
Jan 03, 2012 | ISBN 9780756407025
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Jan 03, 2012 | ISBN 9781101563137
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Praise
“The gritty streets of CITY OF THE LOST are filled with snappy dialog, and fascinating characters, as well as a rollercoaster of a plot that doesn’t slow down from beginning to end. This is the zombie crime novel we didn’t know we were all waiting for.”
— Seanan McGuire, author of DISCOUNT ARMAGEDDON
“CITY OF THE LOST is the best kind of paranormal noir: gritty, breakneck-paced, and impossible to put down. Joe Sunday is a new antihero to watch, and the next installment can’t come soon enough.”
— Caitlin Kittredge, author of THE IRON THORN
“Bruja, demons, bloodsuckers, the living dead and bucketloads of bloody magic – you’ll find all of those in CITY OF THE LOST, but the real magic is how Blackmoore deftly breathes secret supernatural life into the City of Angels. This is an auspicious debut that’s at turns violent, hilarious, and tragic. Can’t wait make a return trip to Blackmoore’s voodoo version of L.A.”
— Chuck Wendig, author of BLACKBIRDS
“For a debut author, Stephen Blackmoore knows perfectly well how to snatch up his readers and barrel away with them from page one. In Joe Sunday, he’s created the perfect hard-boiled anti-hero – an inexorable protagonist who’s short on tongue-wagging and long on visceral brutality, yet is totally sympathetic due to his singular narrative voice. Oh, yeah. He’s also dead. CITY OF THE LOST is one hell of a fast and thoroughly enjoyable ride. The perfect book for fans of crime noir, urban fantasy, and horror. One of my favorite reads of the year.”
— John Hornor Jacobs, author of SOUTHERN GODS
“The funhouse reflection of L.A. Blackmoore conjures is at once vibrant, seedy, and mysterious – streets so mean, they feel as though plucked straight from Chandler’s DT nightmares. CITY OF THE LOST effortlessly blends the grit with the fantastical, and paints a world in which magic is to be feared – but not nearly so much as the people behind it.”
— Chris F. Holm, author of DEAD HARVEST
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