Home
Home | Your Account | Order History | FAQs | Contact Us
  Member Login
You have 0 item(s) in your Shopping cart.
You have 0 item(s) in your Wish List
Using the Apple iPhone/iTouch with WebScriptions
Using the Amazon Kindle with WebScriptions
News & Updates
=Mission of Honor= by David Weber
=The Lotus Eaters= by Tom Kratman
=The Legacy of Gird= by Elizabeth Moon
more...

Search:



  John Joseph Adams
  Aaron Allston
  James G. Anderson
  Poul Anderson
  Christopher Anvil
  Catherine Asaro
  Chuck Asay
  Neal Asher
  Nancy Asire
  Robert Asprin
  Paolo Bacigalupi
  Jim Baen
  Kage Baker
  Margaret Ball
  Laird Barron
  Elizabeth Bear
  Greg Bear
  Clare Bell
  Gregory Benford
  Nigel Bennett
  Ben Bova
  Steven R. Boyett
  Leigh Brackett
  Marion Zimmer Bradley
  Jeff Bredenberg
  Poppy Z. Brite
  Damien Broderick
  Mary Brown
  M. M. Buckner
  Lois McMaster Bujold
  Jaqueline Carey
  Lillian Stewart Carl
  John F. Carr
  Jeffrey A. Carver
  Paul Chafe
  Jack L. Chalker
  A. Bertram Chandler
  C. J. Cherryh
  Julie Cochrane
  Hal Colebatch
  Stoney Compton
  Glen Cook
  Rick Cook
  Seamus Cooper
  Sharon Cooper
  Larry Correia
  John Dalmas
  Ellen Datlow
  L. Sprague deCamp
  John DeChancie
  Virginia DeMarce
  Andrew Dennis
  Bradley Denton
  Gordon R. Dickson
  William C. Dietz
  Thomas M. Disch
  Chris Dolley
  James Doohan
  L. Warren Douglas
  David Drake
  Dave Duncan
  Doranna Durgin
  Rosemary Edghill
  George Alec Effinger
  Greg Egan
  Harlan Ellison
  P. N. Elrod
  Terry England
  Linda Evans
  Philip Jose Farmer
  Bill Fawcett
  Leslie Fish
  Eric Flint
  Michael Flynn
  Judy Forward
  Robert L. Forward
  Leo Frankowski
  Dave Freer
  David Friedman
  Esther Friesner
  Randall Garrett
  Roberta Gellis
  Mark Geston
  Scott Gier
  James C. Glass
  Tom Godwin
  Arlene Golds
  Paula Goodlett
  Roland Green
  Martin Harry Greenberg
  Dave Grossman
  James E. Gunn
  Ellen Guon
  Joe Haldeman
  Edmond Hamilton
  Matthew Harrington
  Robert A. Heinlein
  John Helfers
  John G. Hemry
  P. C. Hodgell
  James P. Hogan
  Cecelia Holland
  Sarah Hoyt
  Matthew Hughes
  Dean Ing
  Graham Joyce
  Richard Kadrey
  William H. Keith Jr.
  Caitlín R. Kiernan
  Jeffery D. Kooistra
  Marilyn Kosmatka
  Paul Kozerski
  Tom Kratman
  Henry Kuttner
  Mercedes Lackey
  Jay Lake
  John Lambshead
  John Langan
  Joe R. Lansdale
  Keith Laumer
  Tim Lebbon
  Sharon Lee
  Fritz Leiber
  Murray Leinster
  Edward M. Lerner
  Holly Lisle
  Brian Lumley
  Nathalie Mallet
  Barry N. Malzberg
  Mark O. Martin
  Anne McCaffrey
  Jack McDevitt
  Charles C. McGraw
  Shirley Meier
  Steve Miller
  Elizabeth Moon
  Modean Moon
  Howard L. Myers
  Larry Niven
  Ted Nolan
  Andre Norton
  Jody Lynn Nye
  Norvell W. Page
  Jerry Pournelle
  Cherie Priest
  Hank Reinhardt
  Mike Resnick
  John Ringo
  Richard Roach
  Spider Robinson
  Selina Rosen
  Joel Rosenberg
  Rudy Rucker
  Fred Saberhagen
  Pamela Sargent
  John Scalzi
  Elizabeth Ann Scarborough
  James H. Schmitz
  Martin Scott
  Mark Sebanc
  Michael Shea
  Charles Sheffield
  Mark Shepherd
  Susan Shwartz
  Robert Silverberg
  Dan Simmons
  William Mark Simmons
  Cordwainer Smith
  L. Neil Smith
  Walter Spence
  Wen Spencer
  Ryk Spoor
  D. W. St. John
  Marc Stiegler
  S. M. Stirling
  Johnathan Strahan
  Charles Stross
  Tim Sullivan
  Michael Swanwick
  Howard Tayler
  Travis S. Taylor
  Mark Teppo
  Brian M. Thomsen
  Mark Tier
  Harry Turtledove
  Mark L. Van Name
  Patrick A. Vanner
  A. E. Van Vogt
  Vernor Vinge
  Karl Edward Wagner
  Lars Walker
  David Weber
  T. K. F. Weisskopf
  K. D. Wentworth
  Steve White
  Liz Williams
  Walter Jon Williams
  Michael Z. Williamson
  Robert Charles Wilson
  Timothy Zahn
  Roger Zelazny
$AltText


$AltText

Previous  Up  Next" 
Dead Easy
by William Mark Simmons

Apocalypse Pretty Soon!

The portents are lining up for the biggest supernatural showdown of all time and—as if the Big Easy didn't have enough problems with another hurricane on the way—New Orleans is due to be the epicenter. Or, more precisely, the storm is vectoring in on half-vampire (but fresh-blood-eschewing) Chris Cs�jthe and his rag-tag coterie of outcast monsters. It seems Cs�jthe's epic mating with a werewolf lover has produced a child who holds the destiny of several worlds in the balance. And everyone who is anyone—vampire lord, were-pack leader, and the odd sea monster god and immortal elven princess—wants to twist this fabled progeny to his or her own power-hungry purposes.

The latest thrill-packed, wisecracking entry in the popular "Halflife Chronicles" by witty (and nitty-gritty) goth master, Wm. Mark Simmons!

"[O]ne of those rare novels that combine levity and the supernatural in just the right balance."
Chronicle on Wm. Mark Simmons' Habeas Corpses.

Published 6/1/2007
SKU: 1416521321
Ebook Price: $6.00 

Habeas Corpses
Habeas Corpses
Dead On My Feet
Dead On My Feet
One Foot in the Grave
One Foot in the Grave
One Jump Ahead
One Jump Ahead


W200706 June 2007 WebScription
W200706 June 2007 WebScription
$15.00
W200812 December 2008 WebScription
W200812 December 2008 WebScription
$15.00
   





Product Rating: (3.59)   # of Ratings: 22   (Only registered customers can rate)

(Only registered customers can rate)

1 - Terrible
2 - Bad
3 - OK
4 - Good
5 - Great
0% 50% 100%

Sort: New to Old RE-SORT COMMENTS:

Showing comments 1-10 of 10
1. Robert on 1/29/2009, said:

For the most part I have enjoyed this series, but I get irritated with when an author seems to write himself into a corner and then magic happens and the plot jumps back 4 steps. This kind of discontinuity comes across as a cheap get out of jail free card.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
2. Mike on 2/13/2008, said:

A bit too much angst with too little humor. I enjoyed the prose and understand that this series has always been a bit dark, but this was darker than I expected or cared for.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
3. Nikhil on 10/27/2007, said:

Like a lot of others, I'm not a big fan of the ending. Seemed to pat. Seemed to deus ex machina. I can understand why. As Simmons himself said on his website, the unfortunate timing of Katrina coming when it did kind of changed things for him. I understand and respect that. But it took away from the story. I can only wish that he'd written it the way it was meant to. It's still not a bad book and certainly hasn't turned me off from reading any additional installments. But whereas every other book enriched the universe, the plots, and the characters he was building, this seems to take away from it. His coverage of various hindu subjects was kinda 'umm'. Not wrong, but lacking in depth. But that's a quibble I figure 99.9% of his readers won't have.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
4. Marcus on 9/7/2007, said:

Whilst the first two thirds of the book was very good, I found the last third lacking. It felt like the author had run out of time or enthusiasm at the end. The mumbo jumbo psycho babble solution is very dissapointing. It is such a pity as the rest of the series is consistently of a much higher quality.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (1 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
5. Robert on 7/15/2007, said:

While I can see why people have said that the end is less than stellar, I disagree. It is self-consistent, as well as consistent with the character of the protagonist. The fact that the author managed to salvage most of the promise of this story after being mugged by reality is quite impressive. Had Katrina not happened with all the mental baggage it brought, this would have been a stunning story. I look forward to the next one... assuming it doesn't manage to fortell any additional disasters.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
6. Stephen on 6/8/2007, said:

A bit weaker than the others in the series and the author seems to be suffering a bit from the urge to one up himself. That being said, it's still enjoyable, though I found that the most implausible thing in the whole book was that the hero, American and English lit freak that he is, was somehow totally unfamiliar with H.P. Lovecraft and the Cthulhu mythos.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
7. Bjorn on 5/28/2007, said:

I really enjoyed the first parts of this series, but the author now seems to be looking for more and more absurd and convoluted plots. Yes I know that vampires etc are absurd in themselves 8-), but the idea must be to have a kind of alternative internal logic, which unfortunately is more missing here than in the other in the series
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
8. Greg on 5/25/2007, said:

I think that the end pretty much killed the book. I was having fun reading it then all the sudden it seemed to get really depressing. The end felt tacked on like he was heading toward a epic story then stopped got bored and threw the ending togather. Katrina sucked on a level most people will never get. But the south is about life. We take the storms as they come sometimes they take away alot but we get up clean up what we can and rebuild what we can and get back to living. Hopefully the next book will bring our hero back to that reality and on with the work of cleaning up the mess he left at the end of this one. Greg
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (0 people found this comment helpful, 0 did not)
9. robert on 5/20/2007, said:

**1st half**This book is a little more long winded than the others, but so far it seems like a really good book.**1st half** That was what I posted after the first half of the book was released. Now after I finished the complete book, I am forced to give it a very bad review. It does not live up to the previous titles in the series. This book is funny and engaging in the first half, but sad and depressing in the second. The ending was anticlimactic and an all around let down. While some books and movies can be good with a bad ending, this is nor one of those. Sorry William Mark Simmons, you ruined the book by trying to please people about Katrina.
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (3 people found this comment helpful, 3 did not)
10. Thomas on 5/16/2007, said:

The fourth book in the series. This has been a fantastic series. This book could well end the series, I'd say more but I don't want to give spoilers! Worth the time to read if you enjoyed the first three. It started off as funny and as wacky as the first three, but becomes seriously trivial and banal. It falters as it butts head with the reality of Katrina, and probably would have been better if it had not had to be rewritten to deal with the horror of our reality. Still, it's a pretty good book, from a great author. Tom Chism
Was this comment helpful? yes no   (2 people found this comment helpful, 1 did not)
Showing comments 1-10 of 10
                                         Copyright © 2007 WebScription.net All Right Reserved.

Site Map