Los Angeles homicide detective Jake Hull confronts a serial killer who slays his victims--petty street hustlers, late-night entertainers--with a wooden stake, in the belief he is ridding the city of a plague of vampires
Michael Reaves is an Emmy Award-winning television writer and screenwriter whose many credits include Star Trek: The Next Generation, Twilight Zone, Batman: The Animated Series, and Gargoyles. His novels include the New York Times bestseller STAR WARS: Darth Maul- Shadowhunter and STAR WARS: Death Star. He and Neil Gaiman cowrote Interworld. Reaves has also written short fiction, comic books, and background dialogue for a Megadeth video. He lives in California.
This one really drags. The characters are all stereotypes moving through a milieu of Los Angeles street life that reads as if it were lifted straight from movies about Los Angeles street life. All of this could be forgiven if it moved quickly and was done with style. However, there was too much uninteresting characterization and hardly any action at all.
This one really drags. The characters are all stereotypes moving through a milieu of Los Angeles street life that reads as if it were lifted straight from movies about Los Angeles street life. All of this could be forgiven if it moved quickly and was done with style. However, there was too much uninteresting characterization and hardly any action at all.
The best part of this book was Jake Hull. He was my favorite :P This book wasn't as much of a "sucking good read" as the cover made me hope it was XD Oh well.
This was an Ok book. I wasn't bored, like I genuinely wanted to finish it, it wasn't boring or anything. While the plot did make sense, it lacked some flavor, like there was nothing special. But overall, I would read it again, if I was absolutely bored and had no other book around.