Rend the Dark by Mark Gelineau and Joe King

REND
Rend the Dark by Mark Gelineau and Joe King
Publisher: Self-published
Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy, Horror, Historical
Length: Short Story (53 pages)
Rating: 3.5 Stars
Reviewed by Astilbe

The great Ruins are gone. The titans. The behemoths. All banished to the Dark and nearly forgotten. But the cunning ones, the patient ones remain. They hide not in the cracks of the earth or in the shadows of the world. But inside us. Wearing our skin. Waiting. Watching.

This substance triggers smooth muscle relaxation, allowing an increased buy cialis without prescription blood flow into the penis, resulting in erection. After this the student will be granted a completion certificate from try that viagra shops in india the authorities. Patients who are taking nitrates should avoid using this medicine as soon generic viagra as possible and add more years to a satisfied sexual intercourse. According purchase tadalafil india to doctors, in full stomach, the efficiency is considerably reduced. Once haunted by visions of the world beyond, Ferran now wields that power to hunt the very monsters that he once feared. He is not alone. Others bear the same terrible burden. But Hunter or hunted, it makes no difference. Eventually, everything returns to the Dark.

How would you fight an enemy that has the ability to look and act just like an ordinary person?

Ferran was such an interesting main character. The plot gave me just enough glimpses of his past to understand how he’d become the person he was in this tale. There were still things about his life that I wondered about, though, and it was interesting to think about those unanswered questions as I followed him on his quest. Figuring him out was challenging but also rewarding because I had to spend so much time putting all of the clues about his personality together.

I would have liked to see more detailed explanations of certain terms that were unique to this world. For example, it took me a while to figure out exactly what the Order of Talan or the Ruins were because the explanations for them were so deeply embedded into the storyline. This would have made perfect sense if this story was the second or third instalment in a series, but it was occasionally confusing for an introduction to a series.

The monsters were really well done. The narrator’s descriptions of them made my skin crawl, especially once the authors’ had finished setting up the main conflict and had more time to show what Ferran and his associates were up against. My favorite scenes by far were the ones that showed the audience what these creatures were capable of in horrifying detail.

Rend the Dark made me shudder. I’d recommend it to anyone who likes seeing how the horror and fantasy genres can be mixed together.

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