by Mark Alpert
The Fury family has lived in hiding for thousands of years, marked as witches, the women in the family in the family have a genetic abnormality that give them extended lifespans. The men of the family are not so lucky they have a normal lifespan and are infertile. In the present day, the Furies h...
Mark Alpert takes the readers to a secret culture that has hidden within the USA since the Europeans traveled to North America and it has been their seclusion that has ensured their survival. For centuries and in different regions throughout the world the Furies have lived amoung us, they worked w...
The Furies are a family who live on the very edges of society. After centuries of being hunted and massacred as witches, they have pulled away and try to live peaceably. When John first meets Ariel, he is over come by her beauty. What he doesn't know is this meeting will put him right into the mid...
I consider myself lucky having found The Furies on NetGalley. All I promised to do is read it and give my fair and honest opinion. So here is it:What I liked: I enjoyed Mr. Alpert's change from witches to Furies. It was and is an interesting concept. He made it more so by adding some conflicts ...
When John Rogers meets a pretty girl in a bar, he has no idea what he's getting into, a clan war between two factions of mutant humans called Furies. Can John and Ariel escape the clan on their trail?I got this from Netgalley.This book was mostly a thriller with some urban fantasy and sf sprinkled a...
Publication Date: 22nd April by St Martin’s Press. Thank you to the author/publisher for the review copy via netgalley. For centuries, the Furies have lived among us. Long ago they were called witches and massacred by the thousands. But they’re human just like us, except for a rare genetic mutat...
A family of genetically divergent women have lived among us for thousands of years, their rapid healing and long life marking them as targets of fear and hatred. A seemingly chance meeting with a woman named Ariel drags John Rogers into both a hidden society and a family war. The narration is peda...