Immortality Has Met Its Match...
Ever since the Ring of Fire, the world's vampires have seen their mortality. They won't live forever after all ? not if the angels who created them decide to snuff them like candles.
What do the angels want? What did their command to "restore balance" truly mean? For most, the angels' decrees mean mass murder and mass turnings ... but the humans aren't sheep, and won't just lie down and take it forever.
As Deacon Maurice tries to maintain order with Reginald by his side, panic consumes the Vampire Nation. The center begins to fall apart and chaos grows like cancer. But as war between vampires and humans threatens, Reginald begins to discover strange new abilities within him: to navigate through blood history like no other vampire before him. To glamour those who can't be glamoured. And seemingly, to stop time itself.
Fear has reached its tipping point. War is close. Reginald might hold the key to the angels' mystery ... but whatever could help him intervene just might be too late.
Keep on reading Johnny B. Truant's blockbuster series, and you'll never look at vampires (or vampire stories) the same way again.
★★★★★ "I annihilate these installments like Reginald takes down taquitos. The series keeps getting better." -- Hilary
★★★★★ "I simply love this style of humor, Reggie rocks on and finds new friends and of his own style of complex skills sets. Yes sir five stars and I purchased all five books." -- C.E. Wright
★★★★★ "One would never think you'd root for an obese, out of shape vampire ... one would be wrong. Reginald is still an unexpected, yet inspiring hero. I just started ready the series last night and am already through book 3 of the series ... finding it hard make me self stop reading 'cause I want/need to know what happens next." -- M E Pulliam
★★★★★ "I was hooked when I heard the _concept_ of this series... now look what you've done! Probably the best installment to date, totally LOVE the intensity and 'reality' of the Vampire Nation (seriously? Fangbook... I laughed SOooo hard with the parallels to today's society and the vainglorious presumption of the culture at large)." -- Leanne Overlander