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Iron Angels

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New York Times best-selling author Eric Flint takes on urban fantasy: A bizarre kidnapping case leads FBI Special Agent Jasper Wilde into the mysterious world of a strange religious cult, even stranger criminals and an ancient evil. Set in the Windy City of Chicago and in rusty, industrial East Chicago
A bizarre kidnapping case leads FBI Special Agent Jasper Wilde into the mysterious world of a strange religious cult and even stranger criminals. At the scene of the kidnapping itself, a frightening apparition is seen. Then, a hideously-mutilated corpse is found nearby. Something wicked has come to the nornal-seeming Chicago suburbs.
It doesn t take longbefore the FBI agents realize that something truly extraordinary is unfolding in northwest Indiana and that, whatever it is, the area s huge steel industry is somehow at the center.
Jasper is joined by Supervisory Special Agent Temple Black.Blackhas recently been put in charge of a new unit, the Scientific Anomalies Group, created to analyze and handle peculiar cases which might be on the periphery of national security.
Another cult is discovered, although this one seems to be opposed to the criminal activities taking place. Further investigation, however, just produces more in the way of mystery. The agents consult with scientists and theologians, but no one has any idea what might be producing the situation.
Until, finally, the cults erupt in open warfare. As the FBI agents race to intervene and finally put a stop to the horrors, they come to understand and accept that something very ancient and very evil has surfaced in the world or, perhaps, something that is very, very alien.
About Eric Flint:
Another engaging alternate history from a master of the genre. Booklist
. . . an old-style police-procedural mystery, set in 17th century Germany. . . . the threads . . . spin together . . . to weave an addictively entertaining story. . . . a strong addition to a fun series. Daily News of Galveston County
This alternate history series is a landmark Booklist
[Eric] Flint's1632universe seems to be inspiring a whole new crop of gifted alternate historians. Booklist
reads like a technothriller set in the age of the Medicis Publishers Weekly"

384 pages, Hardcover

First published September 5, 2017

28 people are currently reading
176 people want to read

About the author

Eric Flint

250 books877 followers
Eric Flint was a New York Times bestselling American author, editor, and e-publisher. The majority of his main works were alternate history science fiction, but he also wrote humorous fantasy adventures.

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5 stars
33 (21%)
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34 (22%)
3 stars
51 (33%)
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22 (14%)
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13 (8%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews
Profile Image for Grayson.
1 review
September 29, 2017
The highest compliment I can pay this book is that once I started reading, it was nearly impossible to put down. It had just the right amount intrigue to carry me from one chapter to another. Although it was more of FBI thriller than I'm used to, it never gets bogged down in the functions of the FBI and gives interesting glimpses into procedures and terminology. For my usual tastes it could have leaned harder into the supernatural but the foundations in the real world served to highlight the spectacle of the supernatural portions, making them even more compelling. The characters read like real people not just sketches of archetypes. The leading duo never falls into lazy cliches of a Mulder/Scully or romantic entanglement, functioning as a solid realistic professional friendship that is so hard to come by.
Profile Image for Kristene Perron.
Author 11 books82 followers
July 17, 2017
FBI Special Agent Jasper Wilde thinks he's hot on the trail of a kidnapper, but his world is about to be turned upside down. A crazy cult, a secret society, strange apparitions, unexplained murders, and plenty of pop culture jokes abound as Wilde and his new, temporary supervisor, Temple Black race to solve a mystery and... possibly save the world from evil.

This was a tight story that kept me gripped right up to the final page. Wilde and Black have electric chemistry and every character earns their place on the page. As a reader who has some experience with "real life" action, the attention to detail was appreciated--right down to the new cars designed to compensate for inexperienced drivers and not break traction!

And while this story was a lot of fun, there are also some astute observations about human nature (good and bad) thrown in. I'm looking forward to more of Wilde, Black and the Special Anomalies Group.

If you're an X-Files fan or if you just love fast-paced action and supernatural thrillers, you're going to love this book. Go ahead, take a walk on the Wilde side!
Profile Image for Bret Smith.
14 reviews5 followers
October 29, 2017
I loved reading this book! What a wonderful collaboration between renown "1632" author Eric Flint and FBI Agent Alistair Kimble. This book combines crime fiction (with real FBI procedures and a glossary!), science fiction, supernatural elements and freaky cults! I found the character development to be topnotch as I grew to care about these characters. Highly recommended read and hoping for a follow-up novel!
Profile Image for Craig.
6,532 reviews185 followers
March 9, 2018
This is an interesting detective procedural, reminiscent of The X-Files, set in contemporary Chicago. It's quite different from Flint's popular alternate history works and space-opera stories. I found it to be an entertaining read overall, though some of the writing didn't seem up to his usual standards and the dialog was clunky in spots. It could have used another pass for polish, but it was a fun read.
Profile Image for Ron.
4,095 reviews11 followers
October 2, 2017
Eric Flint with Alistair Kimble has branched out into a contemporary FBI tale with supernatural/science fiction protagonists. A FBI agent in northwestern Indiana has an X-File like group named Scientific Anomalies Group (SAG) descend upon after his report on a kidnapped girl triggered their search terms. Over the course of the next week, there are a string of strange corpses found, attempted kidnappings, actual abductions, fires, strange guilds surfacing and all culminating in a battle with a cult trying to breach the membrane between worlds and summon monsters. Or are they strange aliens? Anyway, a good opening act that may turn into a series. So read now so you are ready when the second volume comes out!
Profile Image for Matt Witten.
Author 10 books168 followers
May 1, 2022
Supernatural horror mysteries aren't usually my thing, but I enjoyed this mystery co-written by horror author Eric Flint and FBI agent/writer Alistair Kimble. The horror mystery felt grounded by the real-world FBI sections of the book. An entertainingly scary read.
122 reviews5 followers
October 4, 2017
I couldn't get into this story. I felt like I was reading a rough draft. It had the potential to be better, but the execution was off. Someone should have done a better job of editing .
Profile Image for Glennis.
1,376 reviews29 followers
September 12, 2017
This is first in a new series with Eric Flint and newcomer Alistair Kimble. The action takes place in the Chicago area and it seems there is a cult kidnapping and sacrificing people to bring their god into our world. As Agent Jasper Wilde is joined by an agent out of the DC area that works for a division he has never heard of before they try and stop the cultists from killing anyone else and maybe stop whatever it is from coming into our world. They do find allies that have been fighting against these monsters for a long time and use their help to beat back the evil.

A solid good story and a nice beginning to what hopefully will be a long and fun series.


Digital review copy provided by the publisher through Edelweiss
Profile Image for Daniel Shellenbarger.
541 reviews20 followers
February 9, 2018
To be blunt, this is just not a good book, the characters are terrible and unlikeable, the story is poorly developed and goes in circles and the writing is painful. I've liked (and often loved) pretty much every Eric Flint book (and co-authored book) I've read, and I've read a lot of them, but I just plain hated pretty much everything about this book (well, apart from the setting, which I found weirdly intriguing since I have family who live in the area of northwest Indiana where the story takes place).
Profile Image for Cisca Small.
19 reviews
March 30, 2019
Alistair is a great balance to Flint. The books has the kind of details that readers have come to expect from Flint balanced with Alistair's real world experience.

If you like mysteries or crime novels then this is a must read.

Yes, its Urban Fantasy -but its not what we have come to expect out of the genre. So fresh to read UF with no romance subtext.
Profile Image for Tara ~.
121 reviews17 followers
October 29, 2017
I'd like to preface my review here by saying that this is one of my rare forays into reading a book that is science fiction. Normally I enjoy reading historical fiction, literature, and some non-fiction. However, the unusual subject matter of Iron Angels piqued my interest. This book combines law enforcement meets science fiction similar in a way that the X-Files did/do. The pairing of Jasper Wilde, an FBI agent located in Indiana with Temple Black, an FBI supervisor from the fictional Scientific Anomalies Group located out of the Bureau's CIRG (Critical Incident Response Group) made for interesting reading as they were often at odds, not only personality wise but background and perspective wise as well. It was fun reading their interactions, which were more than a bit prickly at first and at times, downright borderline hostile. It's a testament to the character development on how they eventually come together to do battle against and eventually conquer an otherworldly force of unimaginable power that is on the verge of invading our world. The constant action drives the story along quickly and gives the reader the sense of not knowing what will happen until the very end. This is my first book that I've read by veteran New York Times bestseller author Eric Flint and the newly minted author and FBI Agent Alistair Kimble.

My rating : 3 1/2 stars out of five.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Meg.
254 reviews5 followers
May 15, 2021
Okay, but for a non-american reader such as myself, there were a number of cultural references that honestly, I had no idea about, despite many years of being addicted to American tv shows. And when you meet one of these in the text, it's like hitting a brick wall and being knocked sideways. You're too busy thinking WTF to read on with enjoyment. Dead stop to the story.

Like the one referencing some bloke called Dee Somebody. Who is he? What is he famous for (in America but not England)? Why is the author bringing this non-entity into my reading experience? Why should I care about some person who has f-all to do with the story (I don't)? See. I'm too busy thinking about f-ing Dee to get on with enjoying the story. If you are a fan of Dee, whoever he is, don't bother to tell me. I've spent more time on Dee than I ever wanted to. F. Dee and the horse he rode in on.
Profile Image for Griffin Barber.
Author 20 books34 followers
September 14, 2017
Tightly plotted, this book rocks steadily through an investigation that comes to a burning-hot conclusion! Federal agents, scientists, mad cult leaders, creatures beyond the veil: Iron Angels presents a story that reminded me of the very best of Delta Green.

The characters are intense, and their interactions entertaining and realistic. While it's obvious that Alistair has great depth of knowledge of investigations in general and Federal Bureau of Investigation tactics, policies, and procedures, the authors never let the story bog down in the, "Look how much I know" morass some authors of fiction generally, and more specifically, police procedurals, fall victim of.

I hope to hear more of Jasper and Temple, and even more of their interactions with Masters & Johnson.
1,455 reviews9 followers
October 26, 2017
The best way to write a tale abut the FBI investigating monsters in a Chicago suburb is for one of the writers, Alistair Kimble, to actually be a FBI special agent. Eric Flint adds the fantasy excitement to Iron Angels (hard from Baen) which starts with rescuing a girl kidnaped as a cult sacrifice. Beings from another world can enter ours and love the iron in human blood. Someone who has gone into their world comes back with powers. Jasper Wilde is a special agent working with local police. After rescuing the girl and seeing inexplicable things, is joined by Supervisory Special Agent Temple Black from a new x-files like department. Very exciting with probable sequels. Review printed by Philadelphia Free Press
11 reviews
June 5, 2024
Beginning was good and promising. Well written and the story was interesting. A good mix of character building and mystery. Unfortunately, the story went a direction I didn’t like. Unbelievable was the most disappointing part. The ancient cult was way out there. And characters acted out of their personality which further detached me away from the book.

The ending was epic. Just not believable enough for me.
Profile Image for James.
4,002 reviews34 followers
October 8, 2017
X-Files gets mashed up with Lovecraft. It's not over the top, it's remotely plausible that this bizarre stuff is still secret, i.e. only a few victims, not large portions of cities going missing. One of the villains saves someone, so they aren't the typical super-evil types, indeed I would say that they are more than a bit crazy rather than purely bad. A decent read and the start of a series.
Profile Image for Brian.
218 reviews1 follower
January 4, 2018
This fantasy/horror police procedural had a reasonable plot and the authors seemed to put a lot of effort into snappy dialogue. Unfortunately, I found the banter fairly leaden and sometimes the fast paced action just seemed disjoint.

The setting and characters have promise, if the authors can do a better job with them.
1 review
February 16, 2018
I am a sucker for team building and Kimble and Flint do a great job of putting together a team of fleshed out characters that you want to keep spending time with. I think Kimble's insider knowledge of the FBI helped with the world building-the use of lingo and terminology felt natural. I hope there is a second book in the series!
Profile Image for Redsteve.
1,391 reviews21 followers
February 5, 2018
An interesting concept, but the writing just didn't grab me (I'm a big fan of Flint's Ring of Fire series so I'm putting this on co-author Kimble). To much FBI procedural and bureaucratic infighting minutia and the "partner banter" seemed kind of forced. 2.5 stars.
Profile Image for Gail Morris.
419 reviews4 followers
December 28, 2018
This book is a sideways step from what I usually read from Eric but since I also like mysteries I got right into this book and could not put it down. I hope there will be more of this type and these characters.
Profile Image for Travis Heermann.
Author 66 books195 followers
February 5, 2021
This book is the X-Files meets monsters from another dimension, but where this book really shines is the in-depth knowledge about FBI culture and procedures woven into the fabric of the narrative.
Plus, there are cool extra-dimensional monsters! Fun stuff.
Profile Image for Daniel.
141 reviews24 followers
August 31, 2022
Not the best thing I have read that involved Eric Flint but overall a decent fantasy/crime novel. The story line ends on a clear note that it could become a series. If you like Lovecraft style stories you might like this.
510 reviews2 followers
September 20, 2017
I made it to Chapter 12, about page 90. Which is compelling as this isn't my genre. But I would recommend it to those who enjoy monsters in Chicago.
Profile Image for Marguerite Weith.
6 reviews2 followers
April 27, 2019
Was halfway through this book and didn't even really know what it was about. The characters are chasing something and still don't even know what.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 31 reviews

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