Happy James Reece Day, everyone!

Finished Scott Reardon’s The Prometheus Man, making it the 10th book I have read this year. It didn’t have the intensity of it’s sequel, The Dark Continent, but was very satisfying nonetheless. 📚

The updated, but still incomplete @robkroese shelf. Awaiting my physical copy of The End of All Things to complete the Counterfeit Sorcerer series, and I seem to have mislaid Mercury Shrugs, The Wrath of Cons, and a pair of Dis books.

Retrophisch Review: The Dark Continent

The Dark Continent coverEvoking plot elements from Justin Cronin’s The Passage, Scott Reardon’s The Dark Continent opens with CIA agent Karl Lyons looking for an ultra-black government project gone awry, one he had been a part of but was now on the outs with. The heavily obscured project, Prometheus, has taken a turn for the worse: on an abandoned oil rig off the coast of Alaska, scientists have begun injecting human subjects, and not just any human subjects. These are the worst of the worst: rapists, serial killers, death row inmates. Sound familiar, readers of The Passage?

Yet Reardon has his own twist on what happens to the test subjects, one that comes across as far more believable than Cronin’s vampires, but is just as terrifying. Defying the odds to escape from Chinese imprisonment, Karl joins forces with Tom Reese, the protagonist from Reardon’s first book, The Prometheus Man. I should note that I hadn’t read this first novel before diving in to The Dark Continent, but it was not an issue. Reardon gives enough backstory from the first book sprinkled throughout the second to get you up to speed and keep you engaged. After the test subjects escape, Karl and Tom must enter the heart of darkness the killers have created in middle America to take down the enhanced humans before they end life as we have become accustomed to it.

This was probably not the best choices of books to read during a pandemic and the inherent fears that go along with one, but I could not put it down. It is a “just because we can do something doesn’t mean we should” thriller that grabs hold of you and doesn’t let go. From the beginning, I was deeply invested in Karl and Tom, and Kronin (a nod to Justin Cronin?) has to be one of the scariest fiction characters since Cormac McCarthy’s Chigurh. Reardon has crafted an engaging, suspenseful story that should make one think while being entertained.

4.5/5 fins, definitely recommended

I’m two-thirds of the way through Scott Reardon’s The Dark Continent, and it’s probably not the kind of book to be reading in the middle of a pandemic, but man, I cannot put it down. 📚

Today I finished that rat bastard @robkroese’s The End of All Things, the conclusion of his fun Counterfeit Sorcerer fantasy series. Delightfully entertaining, I highly recommend it. 📚

“Chris, if you like it so much, why are you being mean and insulting to Rob?”

He knows why.

My next band name is going to be Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare.

Look, my reading queue is already years deep, so I seriously doubt I’m buying anything in the Smashwords Read an Ebook Week Sale. But a brief glance through some of the selections reveals two things: now I know where all the romance writers are, and everyone on Smashwords appears to be using the same half-dozen cover artists. 📚

I went to a @MarkGreaneyBook book signing, and ended up in an impromptu @BigFatGeekPod meetup with @theCGspalding!

I really need to finish @TheBrometheus’ Valkyrie book, because @MarkGreaneyBook’s latest arrived today.

Photo of hardcover book "One Minute Out" by Mark Greaney