Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Download The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2) Free Audio Books

Download The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2) Free Audio Books
The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2) Paperback | Pages: 384 pages
Rating: 4.18 | 1984 Users | 121 Reviews

Present Of Books The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2)

Title:The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2)
Author:Anonymous
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 384 pages
Published:April 1st 2009 by Michael O'Mara
Categories:Fantasy. Horror. Thriller. Fiction

Explanation Conducive To Books The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2)

Following a massive rampage that left the streets of Santa Mondega soaked with blood, the elusive supernatural serial killer known only as the Bourbon Kid is now himself being haunted. Hot on his heels are several vampire gangs, the Secret Service, a couple of werewolves, corrupt cops, and the Dark Lord himself, and none will rest until he is dead. But the Kid has a vengeance of his own to wreak, and young lovers Dante and Kacy, hapless bartender Sanchez, Peto the Hubal monk, and the mysterious Jessica will each be drawn into the escalating vortex of violence.

Define Books Supposing The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2)

Original Title: The Eye of the Moon
ISBN: 1843173034 (ISBN13: 9781843173038)
Edition Language: English
Series: Bourbon Kid #2

Rating Of Books The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2)
Ratings: 4.18 From 1984 Users | 121 Reviews

Weigh Up Of Books The Eye of the Moon (Bourbon Kid #2)
A must for fans of 'The Book with No Name'. It's written in the same style, has as much action (or violence, whichever way you want to look at it) and is as funny and fun as the first. It has some returning characters, Dante and Kacy, Peto the Monk, Sanchez and Jessica. And of course the Bourbon Kid. There are werewolves, vampire gangs, vampire cops and a new (or very old) Dark Lord. It lets you in on some back stories of some of the characters from the first book, as well as some of the

Self-aware, straight faced parody can be a good thing. It worked pretty well with this book's predecessor, The Book With No Name: it was funny, well aware of the ridiculousness of the plot and it had engaging characters.In The Eye of the Moon, the author decided to amp that up. Unfortunatly, it was a badly handled decision, and the plot turned really ridiculous and the characters became cartoony. (Not to mention some really glaring incongruences in continuity, but that's another problem.)Parody

I can't tell why exactly, but this one was better than its predecessor. Of course it had again some bloody (and other) effects, and I wouldn't use its language myself ever, but it was at least an amusing read. And concluding from the cliffhanger at the end, I'm sure, we'll see a third book by "Anonymous" :-P one day.

Holy crap, what a twisted ending! love it! If the ladies thought the zombie series was gruesome they have another thing coming with these books, full of action, blood & guts, guns, vampires, werewolves and even a mummy! who is this author?!

SO MUCH BLOOD!!! I like it a lot and i'm happy with the author bc he/she grew up so much, the writting was so good and i love the way that the autor mock himself/herself talking about the first one and giving little clues about, the characters grew up too, less big plot twist and more deaths that i didn't see coming, more gore and more exaggerated characters, the author is giving them a background and even a background to the city, a lot of the dead charcaters didn't deserve it and the book

Excellent. I agree with most of the other reviewers here - it's a superior book to the first in almost every way... the violence is better, the characters more defined and the humour spot on. Characters who bugged me in the first book have developed and have grown on me.Great opening chapter - good to see Elvis again!If you've read the first book and rated it 3 stars plus, you may as well read this - it's a star better than The Book With No Name.

Seems like the body count was even higher here than in The Book With No Name. It was still a fascinating story, but didn't seem quite as well thought out. The author tried to give Bourbon Kid a motivation here, whereas in the first book, it was just the way he was - which actually was more in the spirit of the book.I still really enjoyed it though, and had a very difficult time putting it down. It's wacky enough to appeal to my sense of the absurd, and only occasionally had me wincing from the

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