Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Burn Cycle #2

Die Untoten von Veridon

Rate this book
Jacob Burn zieht Schwierigkeiten regelrecht an. Er ist ein Gesetzloser, verbannt von seiner wohlhabenden Familie. Sogar seine Verbrecherfreunde und Feinde meiden ihn. Zu allem Überfluss erhält er einen heiklen Auftrag. Jacob soll ein seltsames Phänomen untersuchen: Die Toten von Veridon erheben sich aus ihren Gräbern, und offenbar hat dabei jemand mit Dampftechnik nachgeholfen ...

333 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 31, 2011

5 people are currently reading
293 people want to read

About the author

Tim Akers

52 books167 followers
Tim Akers was born in deeply rural North Carolina, the only son of a theologian. He moved to Chicago for college, where he lives with his wife of thirteen years and their German shepherd. He splits his time between databases and fountain pens.
- PyrSF

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
43 (22%)
4 stars
80 (42%)
3 stars
54 (28%)
2 stars
9 (4%)
1 star
3 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Jason.
1,179 reviews288 followers
September 25, 2012
4 Stars

This book and series is a steampunk blast of fun to read. I enjoyed this book as much as I did the first even though we get less backstory and less about our protagonist Jacob Burn. If you like well imagined steampunk novels that are heavy in the action, this is a series for you. There are plenty of cool gadgets, machines, mech-people, and unusual places and devices. Wilson, a former friend and cohort of Jacob is an Anansi, a spider person, complete with many hidden legs and is often referred to as a “Bug”.

The writing is detailed and a whole lot of fun:


“I looked down at the blade in my hand. The black blood of the revenants was slick along its length, pooling and dripping onto the deck of the raft. As it fell it coagulated before my eyes, crystallizing into tiny gears that clattered noisily at my feet. I stared at the snowflake-delicate gears swirling peacefully in the pools of water left behind, mixing with the blood of the crew who had died in the fight, along with my own, leaking from numerous cuts and bruises.”


Much of this book centers on the race of the Fehn. They are an underwater race of a worm like species that reanimate and possess the drowned dead. A whole series could be written about this unique and cool specie of humanoids that are down right creepy and scary. This novel had a great feel to it from the damp and wet feel that these creatures bring to the novel.

I loved these two books and cannot wait to read more about Jacob Burn. I highly recommend them!




Profile Image for Psychophant.
546 reviews21 followers
July 11, 2012
This is the second Veridon book, picking up two years later from the previous one.

It keeps up the mix of the high and low of the city, with non-stop action and worldbuilding yaking a second place to cool ideas and a bit extra action.

Yet it gets three stars because the ending feels rushed, and even incomplete. There are cliffhangers and then there are just questions that should have been answered and they are not. Also, as in the first book, the secondary characters are more interesting than the main one, which goes well till we are left alone with him.

Still a worthwhile (and quick) read.
Profile Image for Edith.
15 reviews
January 28, 2019
It’s not fair to the author to read the second book in a series first, but in this case, it saved a little time. The first person narrator is a self-described criminal whose style of narration is breathless sentence fragments. Most of the characters sound the same, except for the Mother Fehn, a truly inspired creation. There are HBO-worthy levels of carnage, which is not enough to interest me in reading the first book. The plotting would have been more interesting, and the narrator more appealing, if more of the characters had been left standing at the end.

Read this book if steam-punk and original world-building are of interest. (It is reminiscent of Gene Wolfe in the latter respect, always a flattering comparison.) The character named Wilson is also a well-presented original creation. If Akers ever wrote a prequel using Wilson‘s backstory, I‘d probably be tempted.
Profile Image for Alastair Broadhurst.
3 reviews1 follower
August 7, 2018
The ending was rushed, without concluding many of the major plot points or major characters stories. Considering it is considered the final in the series this was rather disappointing. The first book is a better read with a smoother pace. It feels like the author ran out of time for this book.
Profile Image for Nathan Keffer.
12 reviews8 followers
February 20, 2022
Fun book, Kind of an abrupt ending but intrested to see if the universie continues
Profile Image for Ange.
14 reviews17 followers
August 17, 2013
Ich habe noch nie ein Buch gelesen, das so sinnbefreit und in seiner Unsinnigkeit so arrogant war wie dieses. Wunderbar. Handlungsstränge werden aufgeführt, aber nicht erklärt, Schnecken kotzen sich selbst zu Papier und der Übersetzer hat noch nie davon gehört, dass "Grey" ein wunderbarer englischer Vorname ist und NICHT ÜBERSETZT WERDEN MUSS.

Abgesehen davon sollte der Autor sich bitte informieren, bevor er Dinge schreibt.
zB: "Ich hingegen fiel. Gerade tief genug, dass es wehtat, als ich mit einer Hand das Eisenfiligran zu fassen bekam, das den ersten Stock zierte. Es tat sogar sehr weh. Die Haut meiner Hand riss auf, meine Schulter wurde gezerrt [...]. Benommen und mit vor Blut glitschigen Fingern rutschte ich ab, [...]. Mit den Stiefeln voraus landete ich auf dem Boden. Meine Knie gaben nach. Ich rollte mich ein[...]"

1. Woher kommt das Blut? Es liest sich, als würde ihm, gleichzeitig zur Schulterzerrung, die Haut an der Hand aufplatzen. Haut ist dehnbar. Haut platzt nicht, nur weil man sich die Schulter ausrenkt.
2. Warum hat er vor Blut glitschige Finger? Selbst WENN die Haut platzen und bluten würde, würde das Blut hinunter zu seinem Handgelenk laufen, nicht aufwärts zu seinen Fingern. Blut ist kein Lachs zur Laichzeit!
3. Wenn er vom ersten Stock aus fällt und auf den Füßen landet, sich aber nicht sofort abrollt, um den Druck des Sprungs abzufedern, hat er sich normalerweise die Beine gebrochen. Applaus.

Oder später: Da schießt er mit einer Schrotflinte auf eine Glaskuppel. Von unten. Scherben über Scherben fallen herunter. Niemand im Raum wird auf mysteriöse Weise aufgeschlitzt oder sonst irgendwie getötet. Wow.

Oder die lange, lange Szene, in der er - unter Drogen gesetzt, Drogen, die in der Lage waren, zwei Menschen auszuschalten - dem Täter problemlos die Stirn bieten kann (auch wenn sie sich "zwei Minuten lang" anstarren. Junge. Zwei Minuten sind lang. Zähl bis hundertzwanzig, einfach nur dazustehen und sich nicht zu rühren und dabei böse zu starren, ist lang, zehrt an den Nerven und ist unlogisch). Inklusive "Oh, er will das Mädchen vergewaltigen, das eben noch gesagt hat, es braucht keinen Helden, es braucht aber sehr wohl einen Helden, btw." Inklusive "Ich gehe erst, nachdem ich sicher gestellt habe, dass sie gut zugedeckt ist, damit man ihre nackten Beine nicht sehen kann, und ihr Bruder BEQUEM LIEGT." Und er lässt sie bei den Ordnungshütern zurück. Von denen wir eben erst festgestellt haben, dass sie a) nicht vertrauenswürdig, b) inkompetent und c) nicht gerade gewaltlos sind. Toller Held, ich wette, das Mädel ist fünfmal vergewaltigt worden, bevor es aus seiner Ohnmacht erwacht.

Und der Schneckensupercomputer.

Und überhaupt alles.

Und die ganzen, furchtbaren Klischees, mit denen er das Buch aufbaut, mit denen er krampfhaft versucht, Stimmung zu machen. In den Händen eines fähigen Autoren hätte es sogar funktioniert, bei ihm klingt jedes Wort nur wie selbstgerechtes Egostreicheln und Wichsen auf seine eigenen "intelligenten" Dialoge.

... im Ernst, ich war selten so verdammt wütend auf ein Buch.
Profile Image for Benjamin Kahn.
1,733 reviews15 followers
February 27, 2019
Wow! What a disappointment. I really enjoyed the first book in this series and had high expectations for this one, and it looked like it was going to live up to them early on. About midway through the book, our protagonist, Jacob Burn, starts to ruminate about his relationship with his father and with Emily, his girlfriend that died. I started to get bored. After that, the book started sliding badly, not enough action, plot not really going anywhere, Burn kind of all over the place - I'm leaving, no I'm not, I'm going here, now I'm going there. He shows up at one house randomly, as a result of proximity, which happens to be where a significant character lives.

The plot isn't great and get worse as it goes on. A little too much Burn not making plans but always making the right guesses, outsmarting all these conspirators who've been plotting for years just by being in the right place at the right time and figuring things out. And the ending, quite simply, sucks. Nothing's really resolved and none of it is particularly satisfying.

To be honest, the may I feel about this book right now, two stars is probably generous, but I did enjoy the book in the early going.
Profile Image for Steven Davis.
Author 49 books12 followers
October 9, 2016
I read this straight after book 1, and it just wasn't as good. There's a really interesting story lurking in the wings in this world, and we've seen bits and pieces of it, which might be the Burn Cycle 2, or might just be left in the wings as a barely acknowledged threat (which as plot ideas go, is brilliant). Don't get me wrong, it's still good. But it took longer to get into, despite being familiar with the world from book 1, and didn't seem as engaging, although there are still shocks and surprises in there.
13 reviews
May 10, 2014
Another enjoyable read from Tim Akers. This book had a different tone from the first one. The danger felt much more immediate this time and less slow political intrigue. The ending left something to be desired for me. A lot of things left open to interpretation. If you enjoyed the first book you will definitely enjoy this one.
Profile Image for Kerry.
727 reviews1 follower
February 14, 2016
Published 2011. "Heart of Veridon" was such a good book. "Dead of Veridon" was much the same right up until the end and then disappointment set in. It felt rushed, and unsettled. There were major points left hanging. There's not much to go on to consider a finishing third book to end it all as this is described as the terminal novel for the series of two. Such great hopes...
Profile Image for Enso.
184 reviews38 followers
February 7, 2013
A decent sequel but I found the book less engaging than the first book, Heart of Veridon, and its ending did not really resolve things. I assume it is set up for a third book but I found it well written but less original than the first one.
Profile Image for Mike.
37 reviews1 follower
March 24, 2013
On the second visit to Veridon, you'll find that Burn is still an incorrigible badass, the city is still a labyrinthine mystery-box and the world out there is out for blood.
2,477 reviews17 followers
November 22, 2014
Another four until the end, when the book stops, only half wrapped-up. I wish he'd stop doing that. Probably some clever technique I'm not sophisticated enough to appreciate.
Profile Image for Lirio Dendron.
446 reviews1 follower
April 6, 2017
Not my stuff! The 'hero' stumbles on and on through the story, not understanding what's happening, and so I didn't either
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.