The Best of Tomes of The Dead
The Best of Tomes of The Dead

The Zombie Apocalypse Starts Here...


The masters of flesh-munchingly, gut-wrenchingly, eyeball-poppingly great zombie fiction bring you three of the best books from the first years of the critically-acclaimed Tomes of The Dead line.


The Words of Their Roaring by Matthew Smith


In a London ovverun by the zombie hordes, former thief Gabe O'Connell's loyalty to his employer Harry Flowers is challenged when a routine job goes south and he uncovers the full extent of the gang lord's plans for the city.


"The world of horror fiction may have just found its equivalent to Tarinto." - Whispers of Wickedness Magazine


I, Zombie by Al Ewing


John Doe has been dead for ten years. If the price is right, he'll kill for you, steal for you, or save your life for you. There's no mystery you can't hire him to solve... expect for the secret behind his own existence. A secret that could end all life on Earth.


"Right from the bullet-soaked opening up until the downbeat ending, Ewing keeps things moving so fast that I literally couldn't stop and get off." - Graeme's Fantasy Book Review.


 Anno Mortis by Rebecca Levene


Beautiful and deadly, the gladiator Boda is brought to Roma in the reign of Caligula, where she uncovers a plot to breach the barrier between life and death. For all that she hates her captors and their decadent city, she may be the empire's only hope.


"It's the sort of book for which the term 'romp' or the phrase 'rip-roaring adventure' was coined." - Nostalgia for Infinity


 

About the Author
Rebecca Levene has been a writer and editor for fifteen years. In that time she has storylined Emmerdale, written a children's book about Captain Cook, several science fiction and horror novels, a novelisation and making-of book for Rebellion's Rogue Trooper video game, and a Beginner's Guide to Poker. She has also edited a range of media tie-in books. She was associate producer on the ITV1 drama Wild at Heart, story consultant on the Chinese soap opera Joy Luck Street, script writer on Family Affairs and Is Harry on the Boat? and is part of the writing team for Channel 5's Swinging. She has had two sit-coms optioned, one by the BBC and one by Talkback, and currently has a detective drama in development with Granada Television.
Books You Might Like

Back