"You never know until you're tested." -- Doyle, "Hero"
Since he arrived in Los Angeles, Angel's mission has been to help the helpless. He has saved countless innocents in his city. However, one escaped his Doyle, the half-demon who came to Angel on a vision quest. Doyle sacrificed himself and in turn reconciled his internal conflict toward his own demonic heritage, leaving Angel and Cordelia to carry on with the good fight. And fight they do.
But as the group squares off against evil in the City of Angels,
little do they know that back in Sunnydale, trouble is brewing. A shakedown of snitches yields Someone other than Buffy has been slaying -- and whoever it is, he or she is strictly after half-breeds, going so far as to lie in wait to attack. It doesn't add up, and the Scoobies are stumped.
But back in L.A. the picture becomes clearer when Angel Investigations is visited by an unexpected guest....
Thomas E. Sniegoski, often credited as Tom Sniegoski is the author of more than two dozen novels for adults, teens, and children. His teen fantasy YA series Fallen was adapted into a trilogy of monstrously successful TV movies by ABC Family Channel. His other books for teens include Sleeper Code, Sleeper Agenda, and Force Majeure, as well as the upcoming series The Brimstone Network. The author's first adult novel, A Kiss Before the Apocalypse, hit the shelves in 2008, with its sequel, Dancing on the Head of a Pin to be released in 2009.
Sniegoski's work for younger readers includes Billy Hooten: Owlboy, and the fantasy quartet OutCast, which he co-authored with Christopher Golden. OutCast is in development as a film at Universal. Sniegoski and Golden have also collaborated on the adult dark fantasy series The Menagerie, and multiple creator-owned comic book series, including The Sisterhood, which is being prepped for a feature film by InterMedia, and Talent, currently in development at Universal after a major bidding war.
As a comic book writer, Sniegoski's work includes Stupid, Stupid Rat Tails, a prequel miniseries to international hit, Bone. Sniegoski collaborated with Bone creator Jeff Smith on the prequel, making him the only writer Smith has ever asked to work on those characters. Sniegoski and Golden also wrote the graphic novel BPRD: Hollow Earth, a spinoff from Hellboy.
Sniegoski was born and raised in Massachusetts, where he still lives with his wife LeeAnne and their Labrador Retriever, Mulder. Tom recently completed the new young adult novel, Legacy, which is set to be released in October of 2009.
Monster Island is by far my favourite piece of Buffy/Angel related fiction and I could read it over and over again, no problem. My main reason for enjoying it is that I love the Angel tv series (possibly more than I love Buffy!) and, even though this is a cross-over involving both parties, I've always found it much more rooted in Angel itself. I love the way the book is written- the characters, the scenery, the battle sequences and just the story itself -and cannot fail to be sucked in every time I start to read the first page. The story follows General Axtius, the father of Angel's fallen companion Doyle, as he leads a Nazi type group of pure-blooded demons in exterminating the half-breeds of all species. His actions are first picked up in Sunnydale before he himself makes an appearance in Los Angeles and Buffy and Angel are forced to put aside the past and work together. What happens next? Read it!
To be honest, this is a book I had started over 5 years ago. Was more than halfway through but for some reason I put it down and never picked it back up again but I picked it up to finally finish it and it was pretty easy to get back into the story. Kinda.
I am a huge, huge Buffy fan and I need all the books. I had a more than half of them until mom made me choose and get rid of them *sobs*
Anyway, I am usually not one to like the mixed Buffy and Angel into one book but for this one, it worked really well.
I just wish I had read it all from beginning to end to be really able to review it properly. So I will, at some point, pick it back up and read from beginning to end and I will redo a review for it once I finish it.
Well, it's a nice enough Buffy/Angel crossover, but somehow doesn't capture the "voice" of the series and characters as well as many of the other books; there's too much of a rushed feel, and we're told too often that the events are important and world-changing rather than letting the readers see or feel it for themselves. The Willow/Tara relationship is well written, but some awkwardness in the bid triangle. Not bad, but not among the best.
A book only intended for die hard Buffy fans. Not sure how it would fit in chronologically. Angel and Cordelia and working in LA. Spike has his chip courtesy of the Initiative. Willow and Tara are together and empowered by witchcraft. A Fascist group of demons is set on an ethnic cleansing plan to eliminate all half breeds. The Scoobies join forces with Angel Investigations to end the threat. Entirely too many demon breeds included in the story but action packed to say the least.
As a huge BTVS and Angel fan, this was such a fun book! It reads like a real cross-over episode and I loved seeing all my favorite characters in the universe coming together. It dragged a bit at some parts and probably could have been a bit shorter, but a book that brings you in for one more adventure in the Buffy universe makes it worth taking the scenic route.
The main issue I had with this was that the author really couldn't handle all the characters. There was too many. Awesome crossover idea but poorly executed. The dialogue didn't sound like the characters and the story really dragged towards the end.
whoa season six whoa well surprised again but was i really? Probably the only reason I read Buffy season 6 book was because Christopher Golden wrote this book.
One of the few BtVS novels to truly capture the soul of the show. Even though it is not true canon, it postulates events that could have easily been part of the show (crossover movie anyone?). And, as always, Christopher Golden does a phenomenal job of writing the relationship between Willow and Tara, which is arguably the hardest to capture (given the traumatic way in which it ended for fans). One wonders if the writing partnerships between Golden and Amber Benson (co-creators of "Ghosts of Albion") have given him insight. No matter what, it works. (See also "Dark Congress," one of the last licensed BtVS novels to be published.)
This is a good book for Buffy/Angle fans. I always enjoy when I get to see the cast of both shows mixed together and share an adventure. The story line is also good, and the book is much longer/detailed than some of the shorter Buffy and Angel books that are made for younger readers. But like most cross overs between them, you end up feeling annoyed/sad when it ends because then Buffy goes back to her world and Angel goes back to his. We know from the start that its going to happen since the books cant effect the show, but its still frustrating!
If you miss the Angel and Buffy TV series,then you'll probably enjoy reading the books about the title characters. This particular novel is well written, and has an interesting plot. The gang from Sunnydale and the Angel crew from Los Angeles join forces to save half-breed demons! I do have a problem with this book. I learned a long time ago that just because a novel is lengthy and hardbound doesn't make it better then a paperback story of average length. This 400+ page story could have shed about 100 pages and lost nothing enjoyment wise. It is still easily worth three stars!
Now that's what I call a Buffy/Angel tie-in novel! That was brilliant! I really enjoyed that! It was loads of fun, the storyline was great, the characters were done perfectly and the combining of the Buffy and Angel characters working together was really well done! Top draw!
Now I understand fan-fic! Man, so enjoyable to revisit these characters (and have the two groups interact!), especially since their characters were so spot-on.
One of the better Buffy fiction books. Agree with the comments that it captures the essence of the show, but is not a masterpiece of American literature.