![]() ![]() The full moon is here, and John’s overslept. The prologue starts out with a snarl of blood and hair as our first character, known only as John, struggles to grab raw meat from his refrigerator on his way down to a solid concrete basement, jolting and growling in pain as he goes. In any case, it took less than a day after starting to get hooked onto it (according to my Goodreads “progress updates” on it, I jumped from 3% completion to 36% in that time). ![]() ![]() As I’d never heard of Graeme Reynolds, I can only assume that it was either free or on sale while I was browsing werewolf books, or someone mentioned it in one of the Goodreads groups I’m in. I can’t remember why or how I heard about it. I got this book on my phone’s Kindle application a few years ago. It’s difficult to explain why this book is so fantastic without giving away everything (it’s one of those books in which small details come back to bite you later) (no pun intended) but given how many feelings this novel gave me, I feel as though I should at least make an effort.īut forewarning: many of the feelings I got can all be given the umbrella term “outraged delight.” Graeme Reynolds’ High Moor is one of them. ![]() There are few books I’ve read that managed to keep me reading even after the characters I was rooting for got torn to bloody ribbons. ![]()
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