Photo de l'auteur

Michael L. Martin Jr.

Auteur de Burn in Hades

1 oeuvres 10 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Michael L. Martin Jr.

Séries

Œuvres de Michael L. Martin Jr.

Burn in Hades (2011) 10 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Lieu de naissance
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Lieux de résidence
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Courte biographie
I spin in my office chair, ride shopping carts down the aisle, and tell lies for a living. I'm an author of fantasy novels who believes magic should always be magical because it's, well, magic. 

My tales combine fantastic monsters, magic and mystery with a dash of whimsy; and consist of characters who embark on dark journeys and fun adventures through wondrous worlds.

Membres

Critiques

Michael J. Martin takes his reader into an epic journey with Cross through Hades, hell, underworld or similar concepts come into mind: Burn in Hades. Michael L. Martin Jr. is an author of fantasy who believes magic should always be magical because it’s, well, magic. It’s Martin Jr. first book in The Life After Death Trilogy. Martin combines names and ideas about devils, demons, torture, first and second death, Charon, punishment to create his version of hell. Cross never forgives because he never forgets. He is the only one that remembers. Glimpses of his earthly – sinful – life as Charles Hill are interwoven in his journey to reach the last Toran and climb up to paradise. Cross didn’t drink from the river Lethe which causes complete forgetfulness. Not that he’s not haunted by evil spirits trying to hinder him from reaching his goal and steal memories. Paradise is guarded by a great wall that annihilates any soul that gets too close. No member of the damned has ever broken in. Creatures like gimlets, squals, Nothings cannot be trusted. The storyline is full of skulls, death, evil and unworthy friends. From the Egyptian Duat to an updated version of the Greek Charon to the magical calabash tree of the Mayan Xibalba. It’s the right place to throw “what the hell’s” and “who the hell” into conversations. Cross (Charles Hill), as well as other souls named Ms Blankface, The Raven, Clem Balfour (Tivoli) all are described in detail. Avoiding explicit Christian, Muslim, Jewish or pagan beliefs, it’s the last Toran (Torah meets Qur’an) they’re looking for. Objects are weapons and kind of money. Of course there are weapons, but mostly without any damage at all. Second death has to be a special occassion. Praying is done to The Great Goddess. Only once in the book God is mentioned, maybe an editorial mistake. The regions in the underworld are worked out on a great map. It’s the fantasy aspect that keeps the reader entertained and engaged. Will Cross be the one to open up the way to paradise?… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
hjvanderklis | Feb 26, 2012 |

Statistiques

Œuvres
1
Membres
10
Popularité
#908,816
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
1
ISBN
1