Series: Book 2 in the Common series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fiction, Science Fiction
Summary
Vakov Fukasawa is a Reaper. An elite soldier injected with a
dangerous drug called stormtech: the DNA of a genocidal alien
race, the Shenoi. It makes him stronger, faster, more
aggressive. At a price. A price that, if the House of Suns cult isn't stopped, all
of humanity will have to pay. Vakov saved his estranged brother from the cult and killed
their leader. Now they want his head on a spike, and they're
hunting him and his friends down to get it, while continuing
their mission to awaken the Shenoi and plunge the galaxy into
mindless violence and chaos. There's a dangerous journey ahead,
but Vakov and his misfit crew of eccentric aliens, troubled
bounty hunters and rogue hackers will take any risk to stop the
alien awakening. Only there's one risk Vakov hasn't shared: the
one he himself poses. He got a terrifying glimpse of the Shenoi
in the depths of interstellar space, and the violent nightmares
he's suffered since suggest their DNA isn't just inside his
body - he might already be fighting them for his mind . . . Praise for Stormblood: 'Stormblood is a high stakes adrenaline filled adventure
featuring two estranged brothers suddenly on opposite ends of
an addict's war. And it's real damn good' Nick Martell, author
of THE KINGDOM OF LIARS 'A captivating military sci-fi debut. Stormblood tells a
splendid story about two brothers divided by war that is full
of comradeship, actions, and conflict' Novel Notions 'A magnificent and explosive adrenaline-fest . . . Szal's
debut is an absolute must read for fans of gritty,
action-packed, detective and military SF' Grimdark Magazine 'This frenetic, grisly sucker-punch of a book manages to be
everything you could want from sci-fi, while also carving out
its own niche with a rusty slingshiv.' Fantasy Book Review 'Vakov Fukasawa is a former soldier, addicted to the biotech
inside his own body that makes him constantly crave for action.
And there is plenty of action in this fast moving novel, but
not at the expense of ideas, or of humanity, or of vivid
descriptions of Szal's carefully imagined war-torn galaxy'
Chris Beckett