logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code

Edward M. Erdelac - Community Reviews back

sort by language
runner
runner rated it 8 years ago
The two stars are for the three short stories in this collection that I enjoyed...."Lucky" by Del Howison follows a female truck driver Ray, the tough life she has chosen and the somewhat sad ending makes for excellent reading."Roadkill" where our narrator is travelling home to wife and family in Ch...
Injoy's Blogs + Book Reviews
Injoy's Blogs + Book Reviews rated it 9 years ago
Andersonville by Edward M. Erdelac is a horrifying book about a prisoner of war camp during the civil war. I gave it five stars. It's about Lourdes Barclay who ends up there & is treated brutally. There is something evil & paranormal taking place there in addition to the cruelty of men against men...
It's a Mad Mad World
It's a Mad Mad World rated it 10 years ago
Andersonville Hydra | Aug 18, 2015 | 272 Pages Readers of Stephen King and Joe Hill will devour this bold, terrifying new novel from Edward M. Erdelac. A mysterious man posing as a Union soldier risks everything to enter the Civil War’s deadliest prison—only to find a horror beyond human reckonin...
Reclusive Reads
Reclusive Reads rated it 10 years ago
Camp Sumter.....the worst prisoner of war camp in the history of the Civil War. A festering hellhole that broke men...body, mind and soul. A place where the evils men do are the key to unleashing an evil long forgotten. One that lies uneasy,beneath the blood soaked earth. An evil that a single brave...
100 Pages A Day...Stephanie's Book Reviews
Camp Sumter or Andersonville is already hell on Earth for the Union soldiers. Starvation, unsanitary conditions and fighting between the prisoners means that survivors are surrounded by constant death. For Barclay Lourdes, a black soldier, Andersonville provides even more struggles. Barclay’s firs...
Bob @ Beauty in Ruins
Bob @ Beauty in Ruins rated it 11 years ago
Clocking in at over 500 pages, with 25 stories, Kaiju Rising: Age of Monsters is a somewhat daunting read. Assembling that many authors to write about giant monsters is an awesome feat all on its own, but to do it as a Kickstarter project is just mind-boggling. Tim Marquitz & Nickolas Sharps are abs...
CarlAlves
CarlAlves rated it 11 years ago
After Death starts off with a cool premise, what happens after a person dies. Sometimes the stories occur immediately after death, sometimes it’s during a much longer time line. There is a mix of big name horror authors and lesser known ones, and overall a really good flow to the anthology. One of t...
Book Professor
Book Professor rated it 12 years ago
How does the pacing of the story feel? When we first received the book, some of us at the book club were expecting for the some of the stories to be slow or uninteresting. We were wrong. Every story is able to captivate the reader even if it doesn't change his or her perception about death. Why woul...
The Reading Cat
The Reading Cat rated it 12 years ago
What were the main relationships explored in this book? If someone commits suicide, society's first reaction is that the person was selfish. There is blame and in the case where death comes naturally no matter how old the person is, the sadness is still there. In some ways, this book is a reaction ...
Dantastic Book Reviews
Dantastic Book Reviews rated it 12 years ago
With a bullet lodged near his heart and the Hour of the Incursion just days away, the Rider and his small group of stalwart friends do everything in their power to stop Adon from rousing the Old Ones and ending existence. But whose side will Lucifer take in the conflict? And which of the Rider's f...
Need help?