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Original Title: Berserk
ISBN: 0843954302 (ISBN13: 9780843954302)
Edition Language: English URL http://www.timlebbon.net/
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Berserk Mass Market | Pages: 337 pages
Rating: 3.67 | 1806 Users | 121 Reviews

List Of Books Berserk

Title:Berserk
Author:Tim Lebbon
Book Format:Mass Market
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 337 pages
Published:January 3rd 2006 by Leisure Books (first published 2005)
Categories:Horror. Zombies. Fiction. Fantasy. Paranormal

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Those who go for cold, queasy horror will embrace the latest shocker from Stoker-winner Lebbon (Fears Unnamed). When a dangerous military experiment on England's Salisbury Plain goes fatally awry, the authorities hastily and secretly bury the bodies of a dozen soldiers and a few other victims. The body of one soldier, Steven, is supposedly returned to his parents, but the coffin is empty. Ten years later, Steven's still grieving father, Tom, locates the place of burial. But when Tom excavates the site, he discovers not his son's remains but the moldering corpse of a little girl animated by a peculiar form of life. Lots more nastiness follows. Fans who prefer their horror to have a sense of humanity should look elsewhere.

Rating Of Books Berserk
Ratings: 3.67 From 1806 Users | 121 Reviews

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Dont go looking, King said, standing. I saw the bodies. And I know the truth. What truth? Tom asked, and then the comment he had heard the previous day came back to him just as King spoke.They kept monsters there, he said. And before Tom could hit him with any more questions King had left the pub and disappeared into the night. Vote: ☆☆☆ 1/2 Essentially Stephen King's Firestarter with laboratory created vampires, lots of action and a strong Dean Koontz-style vibe.It started very good, since that

Another excellent Tim Lebbon book! I had a lot of fun following this story of a grieving father who finds out his son might actually be alive and winds up digging up a mass grave and discovering the mummy of a supernatural little girl and going cross-country on the run from a military man who wants to kill him and the girl. That's about the most regular way I can describe this crazy story. When the protagonist is digging up the mass grave, it's kind of like the reverse of the scene in PET



Ten years ago Tom's only son was listed as a casualty of friendly fire and sent home in a sealed casket. One day he overhears a couple of military men talking in a bar and he learns that his son's death might involve something more sinister. He begins a quest to discover answers.I picked this book up because of the cover. The picture of the little girl is crazy scary. And nothing is scarier than an evil child.Good story but I felt like I was on a long car trip through the flat plains of Kansas.

A vivid and compelling story of one man's obsession with his son's death, and another's long-held conviction that he made a mistake in not finishing the job of wiping out something he viewed as 'evil'. While there were some usual horror clichés; the eternal battle between the forces of good and evil and so on, the build-up allows room for ambiguity, aside from the main protagonist I wasn't sure who I should be rooting for, further adding to the frenetic pace of the story. A truly exciting read

I'm a big fan of Tim Lebbon and I have read a lot of his books, I was initially drawn in by The Rage Wars and have enjoyed his work since. This however didn't feel like it was his...The story is ok, standard military experiment cover up type scenario. One bloke left trying to fix the issue the army caused and an unsuspecting man stuck in there middle of it all. Where I didn't like it and it didn't read like his work was the whole telepathic mummified girl. The constant "daddy" and her telling

When I was a teenager I used to be into these sorts of horror books, the kinds I'd find in the paperback section of the used bookstores, the ones that didn't seem to be that popular otherwise, but their covers (usually) spoke to me because there'd be a freakish-looking child on the cover, or some other sort of terrifying image. Things like John Coyne's Hobgoblin or Whitley Strieber's Billy. I usually would find a few before or during family summer vacations to read on the road. Authors like John