For God spared not the angels that sinned… On May 21st, 2007, seven graduate students in Religious Studies set out from the University of Colorado in search of God. Armed with only their faith and the scriptures, they rented a small cluster of cabins on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains. None of them were ever heard from again. …but cast them down to hell… On October 29th, 2009, a disarticulated femur is discovered in a mountain lion’s den. Forensic testing confirms that the bone belongs to one of the missing seven, triggering a massive search of the surrounding wilderness. No other evidence is found. …and delivered them into chains of darkness… On November 13th, the families of the missing students rent the same cabins and attempt to recreate the final days of their loved ones in hopes of divining their fate. Only this time, thanks to an unusual bacterium isolated from the femur, they know where to look. Nothing can prepare them for the truth. …to be reserved unto judgment. This is their story. The story of what they found, what they lost…and what remains.
Michael McBride was born in Colorado and still resides in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains. He hates the snow, but loves the Avalanche. He works with medical radiation, yet somehow managed to produce five children, none of whom, miraculously, have tails, third eyes, or other random mutations. He writes fiction that runs the gamut from thriller to horror to science fiction...and loves every minute of it.
This novel is a many leveled search/adventure. The search for lost loved ones, the search for angles, the search for truth and meaning. The setting is in Colorado's Rocky Mountains in isolated cabins in a blizzard.
Mr. Mcbride obviously knows of what he speaks as the setting is most convincing. The story is fast paced and the fear builds rather quickly, not only the terror of being exhausted from trudging through the snow in the mountains, but a building terror that is built as the story develops.
Another top quality mystery thriller from Mike McBride who certainly knows how to ramp up the tension in the manner of a James Rollins or Matthew Reilly classic.
On May 21st 2011 seven graduate students in Religious studies set out from the University of Colorado in search of the dark angels cast out of heaven and irrefutable proof of God, armed with only their faith and the scriptures, they rented cabins at Mount Isolation on the western side of the Continental divide. Their family & friends tracked their progress via daily blog updates, the last being made on July 11th, None of them were ever heard from again.
Over two years later a land holder and game hunter tracking a cat discovers a bone at its lair, a bone from one of the seven kids, a discovery that has relatives of the students once again in the mountains looking for their children, looking for closure. This time they’ve got more to go on and this time there’s going to be some stunning revelations.
I've seen a lot of reviews complaining about McBride's choice of subject matter, but as a FICTION book, I found this to be quite enjoyable. The suspense builds up steadily right from the beginning, throwing in a few unexpected twists along the way. While some people were obviously not happy with the conclusion provided here, I felt it was quite a clever change of pace. Although I suspected part of it earlier on, the action keeps building throughout the entire story, keeping you riveted on the words until the very end.
The author builds suspense nicely. This could easily have been written as a large novel. The research was well done and the plot thought through carefully. The weather, location and even the cat add to the generally creepy atmosphere. The plot builds to a climax quickly and the author's character development and skillful use of setting combined with cultural allusions make this a good read. I would recommend this as a solid, fun, quick read.
The writing was great, suspenseful without needing cheesy monsters or other silliness. Would probably make a great movie. One of the better books I've read in a while.
Short and fast read, perfekt for a day sitting on the balcony in the sun drinking iced tea.
Not sure I want to lable the as horror, more like a thriller with some gore. Suspensful it was though! I did not see that ending coming.
A group of seven people are out in the bush trying to locate relatives that vanished 2 years earlier without a trace. It is november and a storm is coming. The missing persons were all young christians looking for fallen angels (like looking for trouble if you ask me)
Sure it had some flaws, but for a novella is was just fine and entertaining.
Most of the plot was implausible. Five adults followed a cop into the mountains during a winter storm to find the remains of their families who had disappeared at least 2 years prior. Then there's all this build-up, leading to more deaths and finding 2 survivors. Those survivors had killed their 5 friends and 4 of the 6 in the search party to protect a secret that would disprove the existence of God. Except what they found didn't seem to have anything with God, unless I missed something. I'm so confused with the very rushed conclusion.
I wish I hadn't read this book first because I've heard good things about this author and the beginning had potential. But then it just sort of petered out into a puzzling, juvenile and pointless attempt to invalidate the religious beliefs of millions and millions of people. I don't know if the author just decided on the spur of the moment to jump on a currently popular bandwagon and then casually tossed this out after diligently researching sci fi television and maybe comic books? But I know I wish I had my time back.
Excellent! I was hooked on page one, where the suspense started, and never let up until the very last page. Good character build-up, interesting subject, moved right along to a very surprising ending. Totally enjoyed this one and would highly recommend it. A really good mystery!
Im not a biblical scholar, so forgive me ..but they found exactly what was written in the Bible? Fallen angels awaiting judgement. I dont see how that would have derailed any beliefs. I was raised Christian...and you get forgiveness if you ask. Clearly they hadnt been dealt with yet. And the face of God was that vague shadow play on Mars? 🤦♀️🤦♀️🤦♀️ Michael you have really interesting concepts but this was really silly!!!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A great writer has started a story that seems reasonable to begin with then it grabs you making you think there’s more to the story than missing people The main characters lead to a very interesting find of a supposedly religious nature which I find disturbing Well written entertainment
While many of his other books were really good for some reason this one did not do it for me. I just did not get drawn into the storyline. For me there was too much description of surroundings or other activities that did not seem relevant. That being said it will not stop me form getting his other books.
As always with this author, the book never stops. It is intense from start to finish. He really understands and makes the reader feel the cold. I don't feel I really got to know the characters well, or the missing students. I'm left with some unanswered questions and feel the book could be fleshed out more. I really liked Oscar.
Quick read. Not a lot of meat to the story. I read some negative reviews, especially about the religious slant. Ignore them. All in all a quick read with a satisfying conclusion. Thank god!
Very interesting read but it falls just short of being perfect. The twist ending is great but doesn't have as much impact since this isn't a full length novel. Overall still a really good read
After group looking for God, disappear without a trace, family members begin a search with no rewards. Years later a bone is found from one of the group and family members go in search of answers. What they find will change everything! Good story, that builds the suspense nicely.
This reminded me why I love McBride as an author. I really liked this one. The ending disappointed some people, but not me. I thought it suited the book well. I want another one just like this!