Product Details
Children of Gaia & Uktena (Werewolf: The Apocalypse: Tribe Novel, Book 5)

Children of Gaia & Uktena (Werewolf: The Apocalypse: Tribe Novel, Book 5)
By Richard Lee Byers, Stefan Petrucha, Steve Prescott

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Product Description

The Garou, the bestial werewolves who fight to save the natural world, have their backs to the wall. In Tribe Novel: Children of Gaia, the storyteller Cries Havoc, robbed of his memories by the Wyrm, fights to become whole again. In Tribe Novel: Uktena, another songkeeper named Amy Hundred-Voices comes face to face with Lord Arkady, the Silver Fang accused of conspiring with the Wyrm. Can she turn him from his destructive path?


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1416740 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-03-18
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
RICHARD LEE BYERS is the author of more than fifteen novels, including the best-selling Dissolution, and Scarred Lands: Forsaken, The Shattered Mask, Soul Killer, The Vampire's Apprentice, Dead Time, Dark Fortune, On a Darkling Plain, Caravan of Shadows, Netherworld, and Dark Kingdoms. His short fiction appears in numerous anthologies.

STEFAN PETRUCHA is the writer of Topp's acclaimed X-Files comic. His work on that series has been republished in six trade paperbacks in the United States and abroad. He also writes the adventures of Mickey Mouse & Co. for Egmont Publishing in Denmark. He is also the author of "The Treatment of Dr. Eberhardt" in White Wolf's Inherit the Earth anthology and of Dark Ages: Assamite. His first novel, Making God, was published in 1997.


Customer Reviews

Loved THE CHILDREN OF GAIA book but no so much the UKTENA...4
The reason I give this one 4 stars and not three is because the CHILDREN OF GAIA part of it is really good. Cries Havoc is a great Metis, and his story is very felt, to put it in some way.

But the Uktena part of the book... didn't get to me. Maybe it was because they were introducing a new character halfway down the road, and that she felt so out of the story... Yes, she had some things in common with the main plot, such as the bad guy and the sphere Arkady ends up waiting, but I'm afraid that if this book hadn't been there, no one would have miss a thing about the plot...

Maybe my words are harsh but I couldn't see the time of ending this part of the book so I could move to the next.