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Fallen

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Noah returns in the series "full of fearsome beauty, conflict, and wonder . . . as engrossing as it is epic"--from the author of Leviathan (Tosca Lee, New York Times-bestselling author).

Humankind was commanded to fill the earth and subdue it, and they have obeyed. In doing so, many have forgotten their Creator; thus, Noah of Eden, a preacher of righteousness, has spent the last few centuries as a wanderer in the world, proclaiming the old, true ways.

His mission is interrupted when a brutal, mysterious enemy fans the embers of lust for power into flames of war. Gathering companions, he races to avert disaster where he can, while realizing that--in more ways than he could have imagined--the earth, and everything in it, is fallen.

Praise for Leviathan

"This exciting story about the event that changed our world and the unforgettable man Noah, who God used to make it come to pass, will captivate your interest." --Tim LaHaye, #1 New York Times-bestselling co-author of the Left Behind series

"Huffman has woven a richly textured and engrossing biblical what-if tale. Prepare for a thrilling journey into the antediluvian world!" --Mark Andrew Olsen, bestselling coauthor of Hadassah, author of The Watchers and Ulterior Motives

"A captivating tale of Noah's earlier years, combining romance, riveting action, and exhilarating adventure." --Tim Chaffey, author of the Remnant Trilogy

412 pages, ebook

Published October 26, 2021

About the author

R M Huffman

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Profile Image for Matt Starr.
Author 1 book17 followers
September 9, 2022
The entire middle as Noah and company travel through and evangelize in Atlantis, meet the other main characters, and determine their next course of action is tedious. To me, whose favorite books are all classic pulps.
And the cut-aways to Eden only lift the monotony after the Zuthi attack, and by then Noah has left Atlantis anyway.

And I’ll be honest, this is a frustrating problem to have for me because the middle is where I got the Tolkien-esque grandeur of the pre-flood world. Laying the groundwork is the only way to have that feeling, but it takes SO LONG.

Though, there is one scene in the middle of the book which might just be my favorite. Gilyon finds a hidden cave wherein a demon is performing ritual sacrifices. He kills it after it tries to tempt him.
It was bad@$$ and I loved it.

And, moving on to the rest of the things I loved.
Dedroth turning death-row prisoners into not-quite-zombies who are obedient to him in the sewers of Atlantis had got to be one of the best ways to reintroduce a character I’ve seen in a long time. It’s chilling and Lovecraftian and amazing.

Lastly, the final battle, and particularly when Gilyon kills a spinosaurus by himself, was great.

It’s hard to go wrong with cosmic horror followed by a giant-on-dinosaur war.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
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