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Unbelievable....
Another solid entry from Chuck LoganI've read Chuck Logan from the beginning and he just gets better and better. His writing is strong and his characters stand out. His writing style is very staccato and immediate but the action is exciting and the plot is clever. This thriller is way better than many of today's genre that masquerade as thrillers. I recommend this book highly.
Chuck Logan does it again!!

Great start...
Oh, the deception!
The Price of BloodPhil Broker is an undercover cop, with almost twenty years in service to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal apprehension. He served some time in harness, but his inability to deal with tight structure and a rigid chain of command sent him into the murky, swirling waters of undercover law enforcement. Broker has become a master of the sleight-of-hand maneuver. He's a veteran of Viet Nam, but he's not by any measure a superhero, which makes him an intriguing protagonist.
Comes suddenly to his home, interrupting a sting, the grown-up daughter of his commanding officer in the last action Broker saw in Vietnam. Nina Pryce, who's father was posthumously cashiered amid charges of lethal incompetence and stealing treasure, has dumped her own army career while trying to clear her father's name. Now she wants Broker's help to rehabilitate her father, and not incidentally, her own career. Reluctantly, he decides to help, pushed into the effort by some very weird and dangerous characters.
Like Logan's other books, The Price of Blood brims with verisimilitude, action, a pell-mell pace and a pretty high body count. It's exciting, clean, and makes an exciting entertainment.


"In no place"
A Look at the World Through the Eyes of MooreThis was very enjoyable for me. I would recommend that everyone take a risk and read this one.
A Different Take

Among ShleppersShe is admired by at least two local men, but circumspectly never reveals the outcome of those relationships. She is stopped by police at the Tibetan border, and never reveals the subterfuge by which she successfully crosses.
And then, of course, there's all that claptrap about how travel is like performing karate exercises.
Real travel books reveal their author's strategy for surviving the awful and the exotic. Logan reveals only her longing to be back in California, kicking and slashing ghosts.
Longing for Lhasa and too shy to speak to the warriors
I loved it!The author did a wonderful job describing her journey; I felt as if I was right there with her through the entire trip!
Her determination and courage were so inspiring!
Thanks, Pam!


INTERESTING
This book was really an attention grabber!!
Wonderful book !!!

Not enough detail or information
Excellent Guide
Excellent Reference

didn't seem at all like Oz
Oz who?Why?
I think Christopher Golden, while writing this novel, forgot one major aspect of Oz's character: he's not a typical guy. And while I did believe in the dialogue, the thought processes were completely off. See Buffy ep: 'Earshot' if you wonder why. Someone who idly wonders if telepathy means he'll cease to exist as himself and instead exist only in the one who can read his thoughts does *not* spend all his time thinking about the surface problem. Yet not once did Oz's thoughts wander to anything more than missing Willow and solving his werewolf issues.
And that's just not who Oz is.
I did have one other problem with this novel besides that -- the obligatory 'serious battle'. Oz's journey was an inner one as well as an outer one, and I think Golden underestimated his readers by assuming he had to throw in several enemies to be defeated, when the more interesting story was Oz himself. A little more internal time in Oz's thoughts could have fixed the characterization, and, in my opinion, been a lot more interesting than yet another battle.
A story about what Oz was up to between when he left and when he returned in 'New Moon Rising' is a damned good idea.
I just wish someone who could have done the story justice had had it first.
~Erana
Twice (Thrice) Told TaleFirst he goes to Los Angeles, and then by boat to Fiji and Sidney, Australia. A plane takes him to Hong Kong where he meets Qing, the butcher, and his family. They are Kaohsiang fire demons, and friends of Giles. They are able (barely) to keep Oz locked up during the full moon. Then Oz heads off for magic transport to Tibet and discovers he has an unexpected companion. Qing's beautiful daughter, Jinan, also wants to study under Master Shantou, who is a great mage as well as the world's only werewolf therapist.
Even as Oz struggles to deal with his inner beast, he also finds himself hunted by Gib Cain, the werewolf hunter from Phases (BTVS - Season 2). And everyone is locked in a life and death struggle with Lord Muztag, a demon who makes grim a household word. "Patience is a virtue," Muztag exclaims, "And I don't have any of those." Count on a lot of seat of your pants excitement as Oz struggles with both his insides and his outsides.
This book is unusual (at least for me) because it is a novelization of a graphic novel, which was a compilation of a series of comic books. All written by Chris Golden, naturally. In the book, Golden spends considerable time filling in the originally sketchy beginning. This includes the entire trip to Fiji, and the Gib Cain subplot. As one might expect, the details are finer and the vistas wider. It is surprising that neither format suffers in comparison to the other. The extended text of the novel is just as enjoyable as are the comic graphics.
What is most special though, is the look we get into Oz's head. In BTVS, Oz is so laconic that we are lead to believe that he is the world's most laid-back werewolf. In 'Into the Wild', we find that is hardly the case. Becoming a werewolf has turned Oz into something he doesn't quite understand and he desperately wants to return to being the old Oz again. But there's no way back from that precipice. Now he must find a way to be more than man or beast. When Jinan tells him that she understands, because she too is a monster with a human veneer, Oz exclaims "No. You don't. What's in you? It's still you. The thing inside of me? It'll kill you if you give it a chance... You're running away from home when all I want is to finally be able to go home."


I'm very excited about this book!1. Getting your foot in the door (of a world that is so foreign to you that it may as well be OZ) and
2. Money negotiations (how does one actually sit down and talk money with people of this stature)?
Both of these extremely difficult issues are addressed along with so much more.
I found this guide to be an informative read as well as an honest straightforward peak into the world of celebrity fan clubs.
Kudos to Ms. Logan!
A Dream Come True!

ChillerPhil Broker, former undercover cop, guides 3 Twin Citians - a doctor, a lawyer and a writer - in by canoe to shoot a moose among the northern Minnesota lakes of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area (BWCA - no motorized craft allowed.) "Broker ... speculated that they wouldn't be out here unless it was a once-in-a-lifetime hunting trip. They had won a state lottery that allowed them to take a moose in the Boundary Waters in the 'greatest wilderness, big-game hunt east of the Mississippi.'"
"[The water] had never been warm. Even in summer. For thousands of years that gray water had cherished a geologic memory of its glacier mama." They encounter an unexpected October blizzard - akin to the Gales of November that bode ill for the crew of the Edmond Fitzgerald- and a life threatening situation. Two must paddle out to get help: "The doctor, he decided, was used to digital results and was holding nothing but an analog wooden paddle in his hands, so he was more frustrated than fussy. ... The time stretched out in front of them. Old-fashioned, unplugged, slow Real Time with no crowds, no traffic, sirens, TV, telephones, email, or Internet. Just the creak of the canoe, the hiss and slap of the bow cutting the chop, and the dip of the paddles."
A routine medical procedure goes awry and Broker makes a trip back to the Twin Cities area to investigate possibly sinister causes: "Broker had always taken back roads and harvest fields for granted, but now he saw that Washington County was running out of them fast. Not more than two miles from J.T.'s place the lumber skeletons of new houses haunted the farmland. That was global warming for you. The Minnesota winters used to keep the population down and the riffraff out."
This is a well-written thrill-packed chiller.
CHILLINGThis has an original plot, and it reminds me so much of such early thrillers as "Postman Always Rings Twice" and "Body Heat." Miss Jolene Sommer is one piece of work. The characters of Earl, Jolene's ex-stud, Miles the lawyer and Allan the doctor are also very well developed. Of course, Hank Sommer comes across very sympathetic, too, as he watches the people around him plot his demise.
Broker is a fun, no-nonsense hero, and since I haven't truly met his wife, Nina, I couldn't relate well to his marital plight...but what the heck??
THIS IS A GREAT BOOK..HIGHLY RECOMMENDED.
Forget John Grisham - try Chuck Logan

What it does, it does very well.
An Allegory for Mortality
Youth Obsessed Society