Forsaken (A Unit 51 Novel)
Forsaken (A Unit 51 Novel) book cover

Forsaken (A Unit 51 Novel)

Mass Market Paperback – Box set, April 24, 2018

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Pinnacle
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0786041602
Dimensions
4.2 x 1.1 x 7.5 inches
Weight
8.8 ounces

Description

"McBride blends intricate science fiction and visceral horror in his frightening and sharp second Unit 51 novel…McBride immerses the reader in the lead-up to a catastrophic, gruesome détente. The dangers from adversaries both human and supernatural will draw readers to the next book of the series.”xa0— Publishers Weekly “An incredible follow-up to the phenomenal SUBHUMAN, from an author whose imagination knows no boundaries.xa0 Michael McBride just keeps getting better and better.” — Horror After Dark "It’s a terrific sequel, brimming with menace, action, and suspense." — Mystery Scene “A breathless, oxygen-deprived framework intensifying the terror of the written word” — The New York Journal of Books “Michael McBride writes kick-ass, non-stop action with the best of them. Forsaken is a book that demands your attention from the moment the first death happens and doesn’t let up until it’s over.” — SciFi and Scary “McBride seamlessly blends scientific thrills with plenty of action, globe-hopping adventure, and some moments of delicious horror, all of which add up to a gripping read…” — High Fever Books Michael McBride was born in Colorado and still resides in the shadow of the Rocky Mountains.xa0He 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 otherxa0random mutations. He writes fiction that runs the gamut from thriller ( Remains ) to horror to science fiction ( Vector Borne, Snowblind ) . . . and loves every minute of it. He is a two-time winner of the DarkFuse Readers' Choice Award. You can visit him at author.michaelmcbride.net. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Forsaken A Unit 51 Novel By Michael McBride KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP. Copyright © 2018 Michael McBrideAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-0-7860-4160-2 Contents Title Page, Copyright Page, Dedication, ACKNOWLEDGMENTS, PROLOGUE, BOOK I: MODERN DAY, 1 - BARNETT, 2 - EVANS, 3 - ROCHE, 4 - JADE, 5 - BARNETT, 6 - TESS, 7 - ANYA, 8 - BARNETT, 9 - JADE, 10 - KELLY, 11 - EVANS, 12 - TESS, 13 - BARNETT, BOOK II, 14 - ROCHE, 15 - ANYA, 16 - TESS, 17 - KELLY, 18 - DUTTON, 19 - EVANS, 20 - BARNETT, 21 - ROCHE, 22 - DONOVAN, 23 - BARNETT, 24 - JADE, 25 - TESS, 26 - ANYA, 27 - BLY, 28 - KELLY, 29 - CARSON, 30 - EVANS, 31 - BARNETT, 32 - ROCHE, 33 - JADE, 34 - BARNETT, 35 - MOIRA, 36 - KELLY, 37 - ANYA, BOOK III, 38 - RUSSO, 39 - TESS, 40 - EVANS, 41 - ROCHE, 42 - JADE, 43 - KELLY, 44 - ANYA, 45 - BARNETT, 46 - EVANS, 47 - ROCHE, 48 - JADE, 49 - TESS, 50 - KELLY, 51 - BARNETT, 52 - EVANS, 53 - ROCHE, 54 - JADE, EPILOGUE, Teaser chapter, CHAPTER 1 BARNETT Subterranean ice caverns, Forward Operating Base Atlantis, Queen Maud Land, Antarctica, March 24 "This way, sir." Director Cameron Barnett fell into stride beside Special Agent Rick Donovan. The earthen walls of the tunnel were smoothed by eons of running water, which had taken a serious feat of engineering to divert so they could drain these passageways. Residual puddles splashed underfoot and echoed ahead of them beyond the range of sight. LED lights were mounted to the ceiling and spaced so far apart that they had to walk through walls of darkness between the glowing auras, but they were already taxing the limits of their ability to produce enough electricity, especially with the increased demand provided by the discovery of new tunnels seemingly on a daily basis. "What do we know about it?" Barnett asked. "Nothing at this point." The two men veered to the left and into a narrow corridor. The outlet was so small they were forced to crawl more than a dozen feet, which was made even more awkward by the full-body isolation suits. The Plexiglas shields covered the better part of their faces and upper chests, revealing only a hint of their black fatigues. Barnett stood and checked the seals around his wrists and hood. Such precautions might have seemed like overkill, but with everything he'd seen in the years since cofounding Unit 51, he'd learned to never leave anything to chance. "How much farther?" "Maybe a hundred feet through that tunnel to the left." Barnett didn't wait for his escort, who carried a SCAR 17 semiautomatic assault rifle slung over the shoulder of his yellow suit, and headed directly toward the passage. He hadn't been this deep into the warrens before, but he made it his business to commit every new inch of the map to memory as they discovered it. As with each new cavern they explored, they'd placed a small black mousetrap in an inconspicuous place, just in case they got lucky and finally caught the escaped rodent belonging to his former microbiologist, Dr. Max Friden. Assuming it wasn't dead already, which he sincerely hoped. It had been infected with the same alien microorganisms as the creature responsible for the deaths of their earlier scientific team, but they hadn't seen any sign of it since first penetrating the research complex, following the extraction of the survivors. The sloped ceiling was spiked with stalactites that grew longer and longer until they became columns where they reached the ground at the back of the chamber, leaving barely enough room between them for the men to squeeze into the rugged hole at the base of the rear wall. The light on the far end shimmered from standing water so cold that Barnett's entire body clenched when he slid down into it. He cleared his mind so as not to form any preconceptions. If there was one thing he'd learned on this job, it was that an open mind was critical when it came to rationalizing the inexplicable. The tunnel terminated at the base of a crevice so narrow he could barely force his shoulders through. He emerged into a frozen cavern the size of a two-car garage and paused long enough to gather his bearings. He was roughly a quarter-mile southeast of the main entrance beneath the pyramid and seventy feet below the bed of the drained lake. Donovan sloshed from the orifice behind him. "Through that crevice over there," he said The walls were coated with a layer of ice so thick it appeared almost blue and refracted the brilliant glare of the lighting array in such a way as to grant it the opacity of diamond. The nature of the running water and the pressure at this depth combined to keep this cavern relatively dry and just warm enough to cause the ice to grow incrementally thicker with each passing year. His team hadn't even been able to enter the passageways concealed behind it until their third day of going at it with flamethrowers. Even now, the ice created an illusion reminiscent of a hall of mirrors, which made it appear as though there were no way through, until he found himself standing in the mouth of a tunnel so tight he had to turn sideways. He was barely five feet in when the muscles in his lower back tightened and goosebumps rippled up the backs of his arms. He stopped and scrutinized his surroundings. His primal instincts had been honed to a razor's edge during his years as an Army Ranger and an intelligence operative with the NSA, and served as an early-warning system he trusted with his life. "Sir? It's —" Barnett raised his hand to silence Donovan. Something wasn't right. The sound of dripping water echoed from ahead of him with a metronomic plink ... plink ... plink. He could feel the heat from the adjoining cavern even through his isolation suit. "Who's in there?" he whispered. "Berkeley and Jonas." Every one of his men had been selected as much for their mental prowess and discretion as their physical abilities, which was the reason they'd been brought to his attention in the first place. Not only were they all highly trained intelligence officers, they were battle-tested under conditions that would have broken lesser men. Berkeley had survived in the Koh-i-Baba Mountains outside of Kabul for more than a month after his platoon was ambushed and Jonas had single-handedly kept a half-dozen wounded soldiers alive under a collapsed building in Fallujah for three days while he tunneled through the rubble to freedom. Barnett had memorized the dossier of every man in his unit for this precise reason, so that when placed in a situation of complete uncertainty his actions would be appropriately measured. And he knew, based on his observations, that both men were already dead. "Give me your rifle," he whispered. "Sir?" "Now." Barnett reached behind him, without taking his eyes off the sliver of light at the end of the crevice, until Donovan thrust the rifle into his hand. He braced it across his chest and sighted over his shoulder as he inched sideways, one silent step at a time. The isolation hood dulled his senses. He couldn't smell anything and worried it masked the sounds at the lower range of hearing, but the last thing he wanted was to end up like Dr. Dale Rubley, or his former partner, Hollis Richards, whose remains they had yet to find despite six months of exhaustive searching. Plink ... plink ... The view into the cavern widened with every step. There was no sign of movement, at least not from what he could see, although an inestimable amount of the cavern remained hidden from sight. His position was too compromised to risk a direct confrontation, so he hastened his advance. The ice abruptly gave way to a cavern smaller than the last, although it was hard to accurately gauge its size since the ice had effectively sealed off the back half. His men had widened the existing passages through it with their flamethrowers and essentially cleared out enough space for the body strewn across the ground. Its isolation suit was torn and the flesh underneath it rent by such deep lacerations that Jonas's face was nearly unrecognizable behind his cracked, crimson-spattered visor. There was so much blood that the pool underneath him had yet to freeze all the way through. Two rifles lay beside him. Neither appeared to have been fired. "What in the name of God ... ?" Donovan said. "Call for backup." Barnett tuned out Donovan's voice as he spoke into the transceiver and focused on the carnage. At a guess, his man couldn't have been dead for more than twenty minutes. He knelt and examined the remains. Jonas's wounds looked like they'd been inflicted by a wild animal, although he could think of no species capable of overcoming two highly trained soldiers without them being able to fire a single shot in their defense. Indistinct tracks led deeper into the cavern. Most were smeared by what he assumed to be Berkeley's dragged body. Barnett stood and seated the rifle against his shoulder. Whatever animal did this might still be in there with them. He followed the passage deeper into the ice until it became too narrow for him to pass. The bloody tracks on the ground were sloppy, smudged, and already frosted white. Those ascending the sheer wall of ice were even less distinct, although the punctures and gouges from what appeared to be claws were readily apparent. As was the hole leading up into the frozen ceiling, through which he could see only darkness. CHAPTER 2 EVANS Teotihuacan, 25 miles northeast of Mexico City Dr. Cade Evans squirmed through the earthen tunnel, which was barely tall enough for him to raise his head. He was beginning to feel as though he lived underground. Six months ago, researchers at Teotihuacan had only known about two of these subterranean tunnels. It seemed like every day now they discovered a new branch in this warren they had taken to calling Mictlan, the Aztec name for the underworld, although it reminded Evans more of a primitive subway system. How anyone could have conceived of such an ambitious project so long ago, let alone convinced other human beings to excavate these tiny, suffocating tunnels, was beyond him. He had to turn his head sideways to squeeze into the southwest cavity. There were four main chambers, much like a giant heart, buried at the precise center of the sprawling primitive complex known as Teotihuacan, the name given to the once formidable Mesoamerican metropolis by the Nahuatl-speaking Aztec warriors who discovered the ruins hundreds of years after their desertion. It meant "birthplace of the gods," although to this day no one knew who built it or where they went, only that something terrible must have happened during its final days for more than a hundred thousand men, women, and children to abandon it seemingly overnight. The lights mounted throughout the network of tunnels were fueled by a solar generator on the surface. While it might have been green-friendly and less costly to fuel, it barely powered the LED bulbs, which cast a bronze glare across the bare earth. Evans's sweat poured through his brows and stung his eyes. He smeared it away with the back of his wrist, leaving a muddy smudge across his forehead and the bridge of his nose. "If it were any more humid down here, I'd have to wear a wetsuit," he said. Dr. Juan Carlos Villarreal glanced up from where he had painstakingly cleared the dirt from a mural featuring a stylized rendition of the feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl. It appeared to have been painted onto a chunk of plastered adobe, but as far as Evans knew, they had yet to encounter anything resembling a wall down here. "That might not be a bad idea, anyway," he said. "At least not where you are going." "What's that supposed to mean?" Villarreal merely smirked in response and resumed his task. The main corridor between chambers was tall enough for Evans to rise to his full height. He stretched his back as he walked between the four chambers, where various other researchers and graduate students excavated the gridded floor, sifted through the dirt, and catalogued their findings. Like the main road above him, colloquially termed the Avenue of the Dead, the tunnel was arrow-straight and aligned precisely fifteen degrees east of true north. They speculated it ran from the main gates of Teotihuacan all the way to the Pyramid of the Moon. Together with the Pyramid of the Sun to the east and the Temple of the Feathered Serpent to the south, the three structures were arranged in the exact same pattern as the stars in Orion's Belt, a fact Evans believed was of no small significance. On September 20th of the previous year, an earthquake had struck this area with enough force to cause sections of the road and the surrounding structures to collapse and reveal these hidden tunnels. And yet, strangely, the event went undetected at monitoring stations in Mexico City, a mere twenty-five miles away. Coincidentally, similar seismic events had been reported in Egypt and England, where the Pyramids of Giza and the Thornborough Henges of North Yorkshire, respectively, had been built in this exact same configuration. These seemingly unrelated events all occurred within minutes of the activation of the pyramid under Antarctic Research, Experimentation, and Analysis Station 51, which Evans did everything in his power not to think about. Of course, the presence of Dr. Anya Fleming served as a constant reminder. She poked her head out of the circular hole in the ground ahead of him. He had to shield his eyes from the light on her hard hat. "I was beginning to think you weren't coming," she said. Anya was one of the sweetest people on the planet, but she reminded him of the Energizer Bunny after a six-pack of Red Bull, which at times could be a little overwhelming. He envied her the exuberance of her youth, just not at six o'clock in the morning. "What did you find?" She grinned and ducked back into the hole. Evans walked to the edge of the pit and watched her headlamp flash across the bare walls as she descended the aluminum ladder. The hole had been concealed beneath several feet of stone and dirt. They had only recently finished clearing the rubble at the bottom to reveal the passages fifteen feet straight down. The ladder shook as he descended, his clanging footsteps echoing from the depths. By the time he reached the bottom, Anya was already flat on her belly and slithering into the arched orifice. Her light silhouetted her prone form, which was considerably smaller than his, and even then she barely fit inside the tunnel. She spoke over her shoulder as she crawled. "All of the rain we've had during the last few days softened the ground enough that we were able to break through the end of the tunnel without nearly as much effort as we expected. And what we thought was just rubble was actually stones mortared together and sealed behind a wall of lime plaster." "Have you been down here all night?" "Is it morning already?" In its heyday, every building in the entire city had been plastered with lime and painted bright red. In fact, they'd required so much lime to keep the buildings looking new that they'd consumed the entire surrounding forest, burning it day and night, to fuel the fires required to make the plaster, effectively altering the landscape. The mysterious rulers of this advanced civilization even commissioned murals of their gods and sacred events to be painted on the walls inside every home, in what researchers believed were the first overt examples of statist propaganda. "The seal. Is that what I saw Juan Carlos working on up there?" "Did it have a really pissed off-looking Quetzalcoatl?" "Yeah." "That's the one." Evans's helmet scraped the dirt overhead. His heart leaped into his throat as clumps of dirt and rock rained down on his extended arms. The ground was disproportionately muddy. He glanced up and realized that Anya was positively soaked. Her jeans were so wet they were almost black. He recalled what Villarreal had said and shuddered at the prospect of encountering standing water in such tight confines. The San Juan River cut straight across the Avenue of the Dead. If they accidentally broke through and tapped into it, they could flood the entire subterranean labyrinth. That is, if it didn't collapse on them first. Anya's light dimmed as it diffused into a much larger space, from the depths of which he heard the sound of dripping water. The temperature steadily dropped, causing his skin to prickle with goosebumps. It smelled damp and musty, like a cave, which was exactly what it was. A splashing sound from ahead of him. He wriggled from the tunnel and found himself staring out across a circular pool. Anya bobbed several feet out, her head barely breaching the surface. "Careful," she said. "It's deeper than it looks." Evans twisted his torso and slid his legs down into the cold water. His feet sank into the sediment, all the way past his ankles. The mud released bubbles that burst around him and produced the vile stench of rotten eggs. "Sweet Jesus. What's in God's name is that awful smell?" "Decomposition," she said. "Watch out for all of the bones around your feet." "Oh, is that all? I was worried it might be something gross." Their lights reflected from the brown water, creating golden sparkles on the stalactites above them. Stone heads protruded from the rounded walls like the numbers on a clock. They had the same faces as those adorning the Temple of the Feathered Serpent, only somehow more realistic and unnerving. Each featured the head of a dragon jutting from what looked like a giant daisy. Quetzalcoatl, the feathered serpent god, who throughout history had been worshiped by such disparate Mesoamerican cultures as the Teotihuacan, Maya, Aztec, and Inca. "Juan Carlos said the Teotihuacano believed that man was born from the dark waters beneath a mountain," Anya said. "He thinks this chamber was designed to replicate their creation myth and that they conducted sacred rituals in here." "The kind of sacred rituals that require human sacrifices?" "Is there any other kind?" "I was hoping you'd found the burial chamber of one of their kings." (Continues...) Excerpted from Forsaken by Michael McBride . Copyright © 2018 Michael McBride. Excerpted by permission of KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • “McBride writes with the perfect mixture of suspense and horror
  • that keeps the reader on edge.” —
  • Examiner
  • IT HAS SURVIVED
  • At a research station in Antarctica, scientists discovered a strange and ancient organism. They thought they could study it, classify it, control it. They couldn’t.
  • IT HAS THRIVED
  • Six months ago, a secret paramilitary team called Unit 51 was sent to the station. They thought the creature was dead, the nightmare was over. It wasn’t.
  • IT HAS EVOLVED
  • In a Mexican temple, archeologists uncover the remains of a half-human hybrid. They believe it is related to the creature in Antarctica, a dark thing of legend that is still alive—and still evolving. They believe it needs a new host to feed, to mutate, to multiply. They’re right. And they’re next. And the human race might just be headed for extinction  . . .
  • “Highly recommended for fans of creature horror
  • and the thrillers of Michael Crichton.”
  • The Horror Review
  • “Thriller powerhouse McBride begins his Unit 51 series . . . neatly executes a sudden shift of mood and tone toward frantic horror when the story flips into a race to escape from savage human-alien hybrid predators in a confined space, evoking feelings of shock and terror.”
  • Publishers Weekly
  • on
  • Subhuman
  • “This novel is for everyone who’s still a little scared of the dark . . . a very good sci-fi/thriller; I’ll read whatever McBride writes next.” —Ken Raymond
  • ,
  • The Oklahoman
  • on
  • Subhuman.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(269)
★★★★
25%
(224)
★★★
15%
(135)
★★
7%
(63)
23%
(206)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Archeological Alien Horror Fantasy—Total Bloodbath of a Novel

FORSAKEN (A UNIT 51 NOVEL) is the second “Unit 51” alien archaeological horror thriller (for the first, see [[ASIN:0786041587 Subhuman]]), and it works reasonably well as a standalone. However, the series ought to be be read in order, because FORSAKEN is a direct continuation of the first novel (in which Unit 51 scientists in the Antarctic discover a flooded pyramid beneath an icecap, unwittingly “activate” the pyramid, and by so doing spawn a horrific creature that seems bent on killing every human researcher it can find).

In FORSAKEN, a few of the Unit 51 survivors (along with a lot of newly recruited researchers) have returned to the Antarctic, drained the pyramid ruins, and resumed their study of the ancient civilization that built the pyramid and decorated its walls with picture writings. Central to their research is the now-caged creature, which survives on a diet of live pigs, and spends its days in total darkness, writing something mysterious on the walls of its super-protected underground prison. The Antarctic research site is atop a tangle of unmapped underground tunnels.

Other surviving Unit 51 researchers have scattered to Nigeria, Stonehenge, and Teotihuacan, where they are studying jungle ruins, crop circles, and the brutal murals inside a pyramid that contains a labyrinth of unmapped, flooded, booby-trapped tunnels. A series of simultaneous events in Antarctica and at the other sites causes the remaining survivors (except for those in Mexico) to return to the Unit 51 site In Antarctica, where events even more horrible than before await them.

FORSAKEN is a total bloodbath of a novel, where the thin “exploration” plot is driven by one bloody encounter after another between unwitting researchers (or their highly trained but ineffective military protectors) and bloodthirsty, semi-human creatures (or the creatures’ human worshippers). With each encounter, it’s mostly a matter of which character gets killed next, as nearly everyone gets killed eventually.

The book isn’t an easy read, because the bloody happenings are occurring simultaneously at two very different pyramid sites, and happening to two different teams of people—and the events are related from the individual viewpoints of different team individuals (e.g., Anya, Kelly, Barnett, Roche).

Thus the story is told in chapters that rotate among individual sites and the viewpoints of individual researchers at each site. Toward the end, I gave up and read all the chapters about the Evans team in order, then went back and read all the chapters about the Roche team in order, to make it easier to follow the events at the different sites.

The novel has a horrid fascination, and is exciting—though the writing is less than stellar. You’ll enjoy it if you have a taste for bloody archaeological alien horror fantasy. For me, one Unit 51 novel was interesting, but I’ll stop with one.
5 people found this helpful
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Engaging horror/thriller that fans of John Connolly will love!

FORSAKEN, by Michael McBride, is the second novel in his Unit 51 series. Six months earlier, a clandestine team of various scientists and archeologists put into motion events that triggered an ancient organism to re-emerge from the depths of Antarctica–with deadly consequences. After the events in SUBHUMAN, those that survived went back to their various fields, vainly trying to put the recent past behind them, thinking the worst was over.

They were wrong.

“We . . . know . . . you . . . We . . . still . . . live.”

The different groupings, consisting of Dr. Cade Evens and Dr. Anya Fleming, Martin Roche and Kelly Nolan, and Dr. Jade Liang, believed that Cameron Barnett–the “silent partner” of Richard Hollis, the man who assembled them together in the first place–had eradicated the threat. However, that was only the story he chose to let them comfort themselves with.

“. . . an open mind was critical when it came to rationalizing the inexplicable.”

After the station in Queen Maud Land, Antarctica, is back up and running more securely than ever, our previous characters begin to notice signs in their current work that dredge up memories of what they encountered previously. Here, McBride does a phenomenal job in getting the readers intimately reacquainted with those first “met” in SUBHUMAN, as well as introducing some all new personalities into the mix.

One of the best things about this author’s style, is that he can take even the most complex aspect of jobs and theories, and get them across to his readers in a way they can understand and relate to in some manor. He gives enough information for us to assimilate and process without bogging us down with too much intel, that would be unnecessary to the momentum of the novel.

“. . . When has mankind ever been content to merely observe? . . . “

What starts out as more of a suspense/thriller novel begins to escalate in terms of apprehension and anxiety as each of the different factions uncovers “clues” leading back to their fateful discovery in Antarctica. Their combined finds quickly morph this narrative from thriller, to outright relentless horror that refuses to abate, never letting up long enough for the reader to disengage from the storyline.

“A cornered animal is infinitely more dangerous.”

The pace that McBride moves toward is more than simply frantic, it’s all-consuming and inescapable. I found the last two-thirds of this novel nearly impossible to put down for even a moment. Mentally I was still “with” the characters even when not actively reading.

“. . . Never in his worst nightmares had he imagined that something like this could happen . . . “

The variation in locations utilized here were written in such a way as to emphasize the stark differences, and yet simultaneously showcase the intrinsic similarities that connected everything together. For example, from the frigid wind and ice ravaged station in Antarctica, to the sweltering humidity and heat in a subterranean tunnel system located 25 miles from Mexico City, McBride manages to paint each area in a way that places the reader right in the center of it all. His descriptions have the power to make you shiver with cold while reading of the events in Queen Maud Land, and feel like mentally swatting insects and wiping off the perspiration dripping from your brow in the underground mazes in Teotihuacan.

“. . . he knew all about curses, which tended to be a whole lot more bark than bite, but this one was oddly specific . . . “

In FORSAKEN, McBride incorporates a variety of historical legends and some mythology, giving a certain amount of credence to what would, on the surface, be too fantastic to believe. This tactic of blending some of the past beliefs with our current scientific knowledge encourages the notion that this situation could be plausible.

“Nature abhors perfection. At its most basic level, nature’s essentially an agent of chaos . . . “

Of course, the realistic characters and the decisions they make along the way, contribute greatly to bringing this novel “alive” in the readers’ minds. When people behave in a manner consistent to what we would expect of them–under any circumstances–a plot becomes that much more grounded.

“You have a talent for stating the obvious.”

“As you do for overlooking it . . . “

Overall, an incredible follow-up to the phenomenal SUBHUMAN, from an author whose imagination knows no boundaries. Michael McBride just keeps getting better and better with each new release. I expect to see his name at the top of the “bestsellers” list!

“We are . . . not . . . done with you . . . yet.”

Highest recommendation!

Reading order: SUBHUMAN; FORSAKEN . . .
5 people found this helpful
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A Superb Crichton-like Thriller

I've been trying to decide how to review Michael McBride's Forsaken. It's the second novel of a series, beginning with Subhuman. I haven't reviewed Subhuman so I will say a few words about it first:

It's a Michael Crichton-like horror story built around hefty doses of science (though the author, like Crichton, registers a fail re the reality of anthropogenic global warming). If you can forgive him this lapse, it's a great tale, worthy of the master himself. It takes place on a remote Antarctic research station in the closing days of World War II and into the present (Nazis and horror always make a good starting point).

Forsaken picks up the tale in the present day with many of the characters of the first novel (though not all, for reasons you can probably guess). I have a few doubts about the decision-making paradigm being followed by some of the characters in this second book as compared to the first when nobody knew what kind of horror they were dealing with; it is otherwise a worthy sequel.

This story is more globe-spanning, from England to Mexico to, again, Antarctica and it exposes more of the author's worldbuilding. There is no lack of action for it, however. This is a thriller that will keep you on the edge of your seat, reluctant to turn the next page, definitely not a book you will want to read late at night when you are alone in the house.

I do agree with another reviewer regarding the lack of character development. None of the characters are really likable, leaving you feeling less invested in the outcome (there are a couple I positively hoped would die, and quickly) and the most likable (Roche) is the most enigmatic and difficult to understand. I don't know if this is the author being deliberately cagey or if the action is just that much more important to him than the people it acts upon.

I'd definitely recommend it to any Crichton fans out there, or to anyone who likes thrillers or horror or just science-based fiction in general. Five stars.
4 people found this helpful
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Awesome read!

Awesome read !! Reminds me a little of of James Rollins Subterranean and Excavation. FORSAKEN is better than SUBHUMAN, but you need to read subhuman first to understand what's happening. I would love to order more books by Michael McBride but most of his novels are kindle format only. I don't use a kindle and honestly have no desire to. I hope there is more coming in the Unit 51 series, and soon. Forsaken left the ending with there is more to come.
3 people found this helpful
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confusing and stupid story

I wanted to like this and hoped for a good creepy story but no way--it has so many hard unheard of words in it you can't pronounce and the plot was just ridiculous and hard to follow, maybe because I didn't read book 1 but no matter I didn't like this one at all, got tired of trying to make sense of it.
3 people found this helpful
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Quetzalcoatl Creatures and Humans Transformed to Grays

Forsaken continues the exploits of Unit 51, a deep government team, dealing with unexplained alien phenomena. This book at least goes into other parts of the globe, but still in two main locations. Antarctic and Mexico.

This book was a little easier to read than Subhuman, with somewhat less scientific jargon. The pace at times was good, at times slow. Story in Antarctica was again similar to a Crichton/Carpenter partnership. The Mexico scene was more sluggish, with some Indiana Jones thrown in, as they explore the ruins in Teotihuacán, in a maze of of water and booby traps, trailed by gunmen bent on killing them.

Entertaining, easier to read, but not as suspenseful as Subhuman. We have humans transformed into grayish creatures, then another subject that may be alien, as well as the voracious feathered crocodile creatures that have been awakened.
1 people found this helpful
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Lots going on!

Yikes, bit of deja vu happening here!

Kelly, Roche and the rest of the team are just trying to live their lives when they get dragged back into their nightmares of 6 months earlier. This time, in Antarctica and in Mexico. Both storylines are thrilling and scary and I like the way they were intertwined here.

I was hoping that everyone would get through ok, knowing, of course, that there would be dead and mutilated bodies everywhere but no idea how horrific it would get.

My heart was in my mouth, more than once.

Highly recommended.

4.5 stars from me. Off to read the next book in the series :)
1 people found this helpful
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Long is the way and hard, that out of Hell leads up to light. - John Milton

If you haven't read SUBHUMAN, the first book in the Unit 51 series, you definitely should. I re-read it to refresh my memory before starting this book and enjoyed it just as much the second time through.

Characters from book one are in this offering too, along with new characters. Events bounce back and forth between the pyramid at Teotihuacan, Mexico and the pyramid uncovered in SUBHUMAN at what is now called FOB Atlantis, an underground base in Antarctica.

There's all kinds of excitement and info thrown at the reader in both these books - archaeology, astronomy, monsters, gods, arctic survival, booby traps, and more. Oh, and more monsters.

Unit 51 is a quasi military organization formed to look into the unexplainable, especially as it pertains to extraterrestrial life.

This book was very fast-paced, gory, and left itself open for a book three at the end.

I received this book from Kensington Books through the Amazon VINE program in the hopes that I would read it and leave an unbiased review.
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Three Stars

It was okay
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Confusing Msihmash of Myth, Legend & Science

this is a confusing collision of myth, legend and cience. It is another riff on an aliene agenda. Fast paced and bloody it hops from charcter to character and time and locale. This is the second of the serieis. I did not read the first book and perhaps I would have like ti more had Iunderstood the backstory going in. If you like bloody sci fi and have the patience to committ to a series, you might enjoy the book. I found it frenetic, uneven and unsatisfying but conceded sci fi is not my favorite genre.
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