
But she needs the help of her ex-fling, Steve the only honest cop she knows. When private detective, Rosa Bridger, took the case of tracking down a drug-addled starlet, she thought it would be a simple missing person's case. This book has it all.The year is 1942 and something deadly lurks in the shadows of the City of Angels. “Curse of the Blood Fiends” is old-fashion thrills, spills and fun. Filled with panache, his prose is controlled and creates a steady pace that never once lets up leading the reader to one of the most satisfying climaxes this side of a Saturday Afternoon Monster Matinee. Thorndyke has done is given us all the classic Universal Monsters and brought them together albeit in new and original ways culminating in several over-the-top clashes that had this reviewer cheering wildly.

Oh, and did we mention that her fiancee’s younger brother is attempting to revive a thousand year old mummy in the family’s mansion? Bridger, in trying to locate a lost starlet, uncovers a vampire nest in Beverly Hills where captive humans are being held as living blood banks to feed to undead. The city police find themselves overwhelmed with creatures far beyond their understanding and abilities to deal with.Īmidst all this action, we find Rosa Bridger, a lady P.I. All too soon Tinsel Town is being overrun with these nocturnal monsters. It seems Gross’ bite not only changes humans into werewolves, but it also transforms others in to vampires. Instead, after a series of depressing encounters, Gross turns into his new hairy persona and begins biting others. He flees the base and returns to his home in Los Angeles in hopes of finding a cure him of his beastly condition. No sooner is the compound discovered, then Gross is bitten by jungle werewolf and is then himself infected with the curse. The scientist is looking for a leaf based chemical that can revive the dead with the intent on using it to bring back fallen GIs and sending them back into combat as unyielding zombies. It is led by a well known big-game warden named Henry Gross. To that end they sponsor a mad scientist’s expedition to the Rain Forest of the Amazon. The time is World War II and the military is looking for any advantage it can muster to help us win our campaigns in both Europe and the South Pacific. Enough so that we really hope you’ll take this review to heart and run and get your own copy. Thorndyke’s “Curse of the Blood Fiends” lands solidly in that first grouping and with a tremendous splash. It leads us to a new door wherein we wonder what awaits on the other side something fantastically good, something mediocre or, heaven forbid, something gawd awful.


Receiving books from authors we are unfamiliar with is always an exciting event.
