GARDEN OF EDEN
By David Thompson
Dorchester, September 2011
Shakespeare McNair has always been happiest when living in
the fringes of the frontier, ever pushing the boundaries of exploration. When
an old friend tells him of a valley undisturbed by the hand of man, he just
can’t resist the temptation. And so he sets off to find it with Nate King,
Nate’s wife, and his own wife, Blue Water Woman. But they are about to find out
that every Garden of Eden has serpents lurking in the shadows. In this valley,
it’s a two-legged enemy – one that slays all intruders.
At long last Dorchester has published the latest two
Wilderness stories, Seed of Evil and Garden of Eden, in a single trade
paperback, the cost of which is very similar to what you would have paid if
both books had been published separately as regular sized paperbacks.
Both are available as ebooks too, with Seed of Evil having
been available this way for sometime, and that was how I read it when it first
came out and why I’m not reviewing it alongside Garden of Eden. My review of
Seed of Evil can be found here.
Garden of Eden provides a lot of suspenseful reading as the
King’s and McNair’s travel into an unknown valley and find themselves being
stalked by ‘something’. Fleeting glimpses and strange tracks bring rise to
fears and then a desperate struggle to escape the valley. You’ll have to find
out just what it is that lives here for yourself, as I don’t want to reveal who
or what they are here. I will say that I have seen comment by the author that
they are mentioned in books that deal with Indian Legends.
As expected from the Wilderness series this story offers
everything you could want: a fast moving story that’s filled with tension,
action, cracking dialogue, and lots of humour. This story also reveals more of
Blue Water Woman’s past, which leads to this usually in control woman being
taken over by a killing rage. Why? Again you’ll have to read the book to find
out.
Now, I, and the many, many other fans of this great
series can only hope that Dorchester doesn’t take quite so long to publish the
next two books in the series.
1 comment:
Steve, Thank you for your kind review. I enjoy doing an 'Indian legend' story now and then. There's a wealth of them to choose from. Those who like their stories more true to the Mountain Man norm can always attribute this one to another of Nate's 'tall tales'. It's makes for a great spooky Halloween read. :) David
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