The Brothers Cabal is smart, funny, and dark in all the right places.
Imagine Mycroft and Sherlock-if one were a polite vampire and the other were a surly necromancer-up against an army.
The Brothers Cabal is smart, funny, and dark in all the right places.
Join the Brothers Cabal as they fearlessly lie quietly in bed, fight dreadful monsters from beyond reality, make soup, feel slightly sorry for zombies, banter lightly with secret societies that wish to destroy them, and-in passing-set out to save the world.
As luck would have it, this exactly describes his brother.
What he really needs on his side is a sarcastic, amoral, heavily armed necromancer.
As Horst sees the lengths to which they are prepared to go and the evil they cultivate, he realizes that he cannot fight them alone.
Their plan: to create a country of horrors, a supernatural homeland.
Horst, the most affable vampire one is ever likely to meet, is resurrected by an occult conspiracy that wants him as a general in a monstrous army.
Again. -Christopher Farnsworth, author of Blood Oath Horst Cabal has risen from the dead.
Howard puts it all together and makes it look effortless.
Like Pratchett and Fforde, Jonathan L.
Imagine Mycroft and Sherlock-if one were a polite vampire and the other were a surly necromancer-up against an army of monsters and magicians.
The Brothers Cabal is smart, funny, and dark in all the right places.
Join the Brothers Cabal as they fearlessly lie quietly in bed, fight dreadful monsters from beyond reality, make soup, feel slightly sorry for zombies, banter lightly with secret societies that wish to destroy them, and-in passing-set out to save the world.
As luck would have it, this exactly describes his brother.
What he really needs on his side is a sarcastic, amoral, heavily armed necromancer.
As Horst sees the lengths to which they are prepared to go and the evil they cultivate, he realizes that he cannot fight them alone.
Their plan: to create a country of horrors, a supernatural homeland.
Horst, the most affable vampire one is ever likely to meet, is resurrected by an occult conspiracy that wants him as a general in a monstrous army.
Again. -Christopher Farnsworth, author of Blood Oath Horst Cabal has risen from the dead.
Howard puts it all together and makes it look effortless.
Like Pratchett and Fforde, Jonathan L.
Imagine Mycroft and Sherlock-if one were a polite vampire and the other were a surly necromancer-up against an army of monsters and magicians.
The Brothers Cabal is smart, funny, and dark in all the right places