The debut of a bold new series of literary pulps! Genre
veteran Derrick Ferguson, series creator David W. Edwards and newcomer Arlen M.
Todd offer uniquely compelling takes on the Nightscape mythos. Superhuman
soldiers, secret animal cults, marooned alien gods, masked detectives,
crystalline ghosts and surreal apocalypse weapons—this one is chock-a-block
with pulp-inspired weirdness! The first novel, The Thousand-Eyed Fear, follows
a ragtag squad of teen soldiers on their WW1 mission to infiltrate a secret German
research facility and either steal or destroy the prototype for an advanced
tank. They discover much more than their military intelligence led them to
believe, however, and must find new strengths if they’re to stop the Kaiser
from gaining an unstoppable supernatural power. The companion novel, The Q for
Damnation, deals with the unexpected consequences of the first. On the eve of
WW2, France’s masked vigilante-detective, Monteau, must solve the murder of a
longtime friend—and fast!—in order to prevent the Nazis from obtaining a work
of art that could grant them control of every mind on earth. She relies on a
unique combination of combat skills and surrealist art techniques in her
desperate attempt to save a world on the brink.
Nightscape (Horror/Action/Adventure)
“Double Feature #1
By Derrick Ferguson, David W. Edwards & Arlen M. Todd
Imperiad Entertainment
ISBN #978-0692787373
Price $11.99
310 Pages
Rating 4-Stars
As the “Double Feature” indicates,
this volume contains two novels: The Thousand-Eyed Fear by Derrick Ferguson
& David W. Edwards and Q For Damnation by Arlen M. Todd. The book is well
edited and produced.
The first story takes place in WWI,
when the allies send a team of highly efficient youngsters, none over twenty,
to capture or destroy Germany’s super weapon, a huge tank. The team is led by
Lieutenant Nolan Quigg, and his Lost Boys. Nolan is almost a superman, with
great strength and mental ability, and the Lost Boys are specialists in their
fields. But there’s something else besides a tank they have to worry about. The
Germans have captured a Mimirodat, an alien of some kind that can make men feel
fear (it brings the fear plague). The Germans plan to use this power against
the allies to win the war. The story has a good plot and interesting
characters, but the story never really caught my interest, and the easy flow
just wasn’t there, causing me to stumble and lose track of the action at times.
The authors are established writers, so I’m guessing the problem lies in the
authors not jelling rather than any fault with either.
The second story has some run-over
from the first. It takes place prior to WWII, and the Nazis are still after the
power of the Mimirodat, this time contained in a painting. A French woman
vigilante called Manteau uses her position as head of a Marseille crime mob,
Unione Carse, to investigate crime, especially those that deal with the
supernatural. She’s in Paris after the last man involved in killing her sister
when such a crime comes to her attention, and she puts killing her sister’s
murderer on hold to solve this new case. Working with a local gangster named
Anatole Janvier, they are opposed by a ghost they call a fantome who is also
after the painting. This was a very good story, and captured my interest from
the beginning. Even though written more for the college level than the
mass-market pulps were aimed at, it’s still a good pulpy adventure. Forget the
purple prose, it isn’t here. Just over-look the highbrow language and
concentrate on the mystery. Highly recommended.
Tom Johnson
Author of THE MAN IN THE BLACK FEDORA
Thanks for the fine review, Tom. The next Nightscape Double Feature is already slated for November 2017. It will consist of two Lancer Quigg adventures--one set in pocket dimension off the coast of Egypt circa 1922 and another set in the S. Pacific in 1908 involving Lancer's parents, zombie pirates and Captain Nemo. I'm co-writing the first novel with Josh Reynolds of Warhammer 40K fame and writing the second solo (under a pseudonym as I did with this first installment). I'll be sure to keep you and your readers apprised of our progress :)
ReplyDeleteThat's great, David. If you publish any more Manteau stories let me know. That one kept me involved, and I liked the character. Couldn't really get into The Lost Boys, sorry.
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