The prehistoric Earth is dying. Thunderclouds roll across the skies, cloaking the land in darkness. The seas crash and boil as the rain turns to acid. The remnants of the Silurian race place themselves in suspended animation, deep below the surface. One day they will awaken and reclaim their world. The TARDIS has landed on the Galapagos Islands, a desolate outcrop of rocks shrouded in mist and fear. In the settlement of Baquerizo Moreno, there are rumours that prisoners have been mysteriously disappearing from the gaolhouse. A fisherman has been driven insane by something he saw in the caves. And the Doctor and Evelyn are not the only new arrivals; there is also a young natural philosophe by the name of Charles Darwin. This story takes place between "The Trial of a Time Lord" and "Time and the Rani."
In the not-too-distant future, in a London wracked by war, famine, economic collapse, and chaos, two warring families--the Volsons and the Conors--vie for control, until a proposed agreement to cement an alliance with the marriage of young ...
"Looks like everyone loves Odin these days," said Siggy. "Except me..." He noticed that the sacrifices were not just human. Siggy sighed and led his son downhill. dag agqerman I pissed on the walls three times before — 373 — Bloodtide.
Originally published: New York: Mysterious Press, 1993.
In the not-too-distant future, in a London wracked by war, famine, economic collapse, and chaos, two warring families--the Volsons and the Conors--vie for control.
One evening, sitting on a bollard at the end of the dock, she started cursing—every salty phrase she'd learned in half a dozen languages. A potbellied little gringo stopped to watch her. He had a crippled arm, she saw, poor fellow.
‘Think Jack Reacher fronting Line of Duty’ Ian Rankin
PART II Fifteen-year-old Sigurd, son of King Sigmund, is the last surviving member of the Volson clan.
An Incident at Bloodtide is the 12th book in the Mongo Mysteries, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
Bloodtide
‘The best police procedural I’ve read in years’ Jane Casey ‘Grabbed me from the first page’ Ian Rankin