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66 of 71 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Skillful blending of genres into something truly original!
I loved this book! There is something in it to appeal to every reader. A little horror, a little SF, a little mysticism, even a touch of romance.

The main character, David Valentine, is an elite soldier on a near future earth that has been turned on its ear. Man is no longer at the top of the food chain--he has become prey to turncoat humans, genetically created...

Published on September 28, 2003 by Dawn Smoker

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44 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of Paper
When I originally heard of this series I thought that it would be one that I'd liked, however after reading the first one, The Way Of The Wolf, I'm greatly disappointed.

Knight creates an interesting and somewhat unique idea for a world, and borrows from Lovecraft somewhat, which is a good start. However he spends way too much time giving you background info...
Published on August 29, 2006 by Kevin J. Hurtack


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66 of 71 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Skillful blending of genres into something truly original!, September 28, 2003
By 
Dawn Smoker (Mechanicsburg, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
I loved this book! There is something in it to appeal to every reader. A little horror, a little SF, a little mysticism, even a touch of romance.

The main character, David Valentine, is an elite soldier on a near future earth that has been turned on its ear. Man is no longer at the top of the food chain--he has become prey to turncoat humans, genetically created monsters called grogs, the menacing, vampiric Reapers and the alien Kurian masters. He is of the first generation never to have known life without the fear of the Reapers.

The book shows his development from childhood, through his training, and into young adulthood. He is chosen by a good Kurian, a Lifeweaver, to become a Wolf, an elite warrior with the finely honed senses and strength of a wolf. His job--to help destroy the minions of the Kurians and protect the safety of the Free Territory.

The post-apocalyptic world and the characters of this book ring true. You see the best and worst of human nature close up. And although the world under the Kurians is a violent and unpredictable place, there are still flashes of happiness and humor and love as humanity survives and adapts to life under the world's new masters. And David is a true hero that anchors this at times grim and violent book with a human heart.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves a well-spun, fast-paced adventure tale!

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35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An awe-inspiring, truly impressive debut novel, February 16, 2004
E. E. Knight's Way of the Wolf: Book One of The Vampire Earth is one of the most impressive debut novels I have ever read. I'm not sure why the author uses a pen name; if I had written a novel this original and absorbing, I would want my real name plastered across it in gigantic letters. Roc has released the book in its science fiction line, but the story strikes me as dark fantasy with militaristic overtones. Proudly drawing on the work of many great authors of the past - men such as Robert Howard, C.S. Forester, and Louis L'Amour - Knight creates a wholly original world that lives and breathes in the imagination of the reader. Readers should not see the reference to vampires in the title and simply dismiss this book as "yet another vampire novel." The vampires in command of Earth in the year 2065 are like no vampires you have ever encountered, and they do not even take an active part in the proceedings recorded in this first volume of a truly noteworthy new series.

Way of the Wolf introduces us to David Valentine, a young Lieutenant in the Southern Command and an extraordinarily human and likeable hero in a post-apocalyptic world. The mythology Knight constructs for this series is rather complex, but basically the earth is, in 2065, under the control of vicious minions from the planet Kur. Long before civilization was borne on the planet, a race of pre-Entities discovered the means for traveling between worlds, arriving on Earth but dying out before the dawn of human history. Another race eventually discovered the secrets of the Interworld Tree, and creatures from the planet Kur invaded and took over the earth after discovering they could essentially live forever by feeding on the auras of other living creatures (namely, human beings). Lifeweavers have long opposed the Kurians, but they exist on earth in numbers insufficient to challenge the Kurian New World Order directly. Their knowledge is passed on to human heroes such as the Wolves, however, men and women who patrol the boundaries of humanity's threatened refuge in the middle of what used to be America. The Kurians have created the ever-dangerous Grogs to help enforce their rule, and some humans (Quislings) have chosen to serve the New World Order rather than perish. It is the Reapers, however, who pose the greatest threat to mankind. Reapers are brutish vampiric creatures able to detect and hunt down human beings; they feed on the blood of their victims while also serving as the conduit for their Overlords' absorption of human auras.

This book basically describes David's life from the time in which his family is killed up through his first year of service in the Wolves. We follow his career from his induction into the order through a number of scouting missions, mourn alongside him the terrible loss of several good comrades, and marvel at his ingenuity, instinct for self-preservation, and innovative offensive skills in a number of deadly situations. Eventually, fate leads him to a farm in a Kurian-controlled zone, and here he experiences "normal" life to a degree he has not known since the time before his parents' deaths. Love now enters the mix alongside bravery, duty, and honor, making this an even more poignantly human tale. All of this leads up to a riveting conclusion, one which satisfies the reader while setting the stage for what is to come next in the series. I can't wait to rejoin David Valentine in the forthcoming second volume of The Vampire Earth.

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28 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Debut that reads like an old pro at the top of his game, October 1, 2003
By 
Michael J. Bell "roland-of-gilead" (Kansas City, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book caught my eye from the cover blurb - "Welcome to the year 2065 - Earth is under new management."

And indeed it is. Combining sf and horror, Mr. Knight postulates a post-apocalyptic America controlled by a species of interstellar vampires. The book is reminiscent of early Heinlein, with a young heroic protagonist and some clever use of didactics in describing how the few surviving and rebellious humans form various primitive societies to fight back. It has the atmosphere and style of a book like Tunnel in the Sky, but is more graphic in its depiction of sex and violence, as befits its theme.

Knight's strengths are his world-building and characterization. The reader becomes immersed in this world, and given the basic concept of invading vampire-like creatures, it's extrapolation from that point is both believable and chilling. At the same time, the protagonist David Valentine is a very likable hero with a tragic background, who has to make some difficult choices. There are many people who have decided that cooperating with the vampire-like Kurians is the only way to get along. Valentine isn't one of these people.

Much of the action takes place in the midwest, particularly what is known as the Ozark Free Territory. As a life-long Missourian, I felt that Knight's descriptions were very apt and he seemed to capture this area of America very well.

Knight's writing is assured and detailed, the pacing excellent. This does not read like a first effort. Do yourself a favor and give this new kid on the block a try. You won't be sorry.

Way of the Wolf is the opening novel of what's being billed as the Vampire Earth series. I can't wait for the sequel, Choice of the Cat, due out in May of 2004.

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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mad Max plus Frankenstein plus an Indie publisher!!!, July 1, 2002
This is one of those books that makes you look up and say "damn, it's two o'clock in the morning and I just can't stop reading this book,oh well I'll just finish this chapter." E. E. Knight weaves an incredibly detailed tapestry of science fiction, horror, and extremely lifelike action! If you like sci-fi, or just plain action, then this is the book that will make you get fired because you are late for work the third time this week. Yes, it is that good. The author is able to transport the reader to a bizarre, almost Lovecraftian, future that is chock full of alien vampires, their human lackeys, and the resistance, an alien "tuned up" group of humans who has been enhanced by the alien invaders arch nemesis, their brother aliens, who object to their life-sucking lifestyle. The mission of the resistance is to regain control of earth, one piece at a time, while holding on to the small patches of "free" land that the alien vampires don't control. One word of warning, once you start reading this book, you will be hooked until the bitter end. This book stays focused on a central character who lost his family to the "quisling" human lackeys of the aliens, and follows in his fathers footsteps to become a "Wolf", and take the battle to the enemy. Great character developement, and a solid plot that gallops along at a fast pace throughout the entire book. I finished this book in two days, and I would trade my brass ring for the next book in the series. I can say without reservation that this is the best book I have read in the last 5 years and one of my all time favourites. Bravo E. E. Knight. More, More, More!!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Innovative approach to an old legend, July 14, 2006
By 
C. Janning (Dallas, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Knight has taken a surprisingly different approach to tie the science fiction/space opera story line to another fiction favorite, the vampire legends. In this book earth has been invaded by an alien race. Turns out this is the second time around and the invaders, who feed on life force, are the forgotten source of the vampire legends. The real innovation is that the story line is not at all in the horror genre, rather it is a military fiction/space opera story of the human resistance to this invasion. It is refreshing to see an author come up with a very well thought out and new story line for a science fiction fantasy line. I eagerly look forward to his future books on the Vampire Earth.
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44 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of Paper, August 29, 2006
When I originally heard of this series I thought that it would be one that I'd liked, however after reading the first one, The Way Of The Wolf, I'm greatly disappointed.

Knight creates an interesting and somewhat unique idea for a world, and borrows from Lovecraft somewhat, which is a good start. However he spends way too much time giving you background info over and over again. There's no character development at all. In fact the main character Valentine has no real personality and is very one dimensional. Overall there is no real plot to this story, it is a series of episodes spliced together and when you think he's going to start taking it beyond the training sessions or background info but it always ends too soon.

A story that goes no where.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Undecided, December 25, 2007
This book left me with many mixed emotions. The episodic nature of the chapters made the narative seem fragmented and would completely take me out of the story. I love the concept but the execution was too off-kilter for me to say that I actually enjoyed the book. I am seriously debating whether to try another in the series to see if the clumsiness of "Way of the Wolf" is due to it being a debut novel or if the style is just that way. Definitely borrow this book before you buy it. (or get a cheap used copy)
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Lackluster Start to a Great Series, August 15, 2009
By 
Margaret Fiore (N. Granby, CT USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I came to Way of the Wolf by a round-about path. I had read the first four books of EE Knight's Dragons series (which is excellent in every way, but that's another story), and was of course interested in his other series.

Unfortunately, Way of the Wolf was not so hot. I wonder how old Knight was when he first wrote it, but didn't care enough to go find out. (Mid-teens would be my guess.) Characterizations were all too frequently flat-out plummy descriptions, and characters were 2-dimensional.

If I had stopped at this book, I would never have bothered to write a review... But I didn't. I read the next book. And the next. And... And I have to say that you can watch the writer and the world concept grow by leaps and bounds as you go on.

This may not be a great book. But it is the start to a great series.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb military/horror book, can't wait for the next one!, December 12, 2001
By 
Scott C Sigler (Northville, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This book is an awesome mix of genres -- horror, sci-fi, military, suspense and action-adventure. The hero, David Valentine, is drawn into the violent world of The Wolves, an elite Special Forces outfit in a post-apocalyptic world where humans are little more than cattle. The author slowly spins a convincing tale of an apocalypse that's been brewing for thousands of years, and drops you into that tale 40 years after all hell breaks loose. The author has a way of taking vampire legends, twisting them slightly, and presenting you with a fully believable, realistic explanation for all vampiric powers (super strength, invulnerability, bloodlust, etc). Just but this, you'll love it.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars I Shouldn't Like it But I Did, May 16, 2006
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This novel has so many elements of novels I don't like. It is based on an RPG. The characters are not deep. The plot is slow to develop.

But.

I really liked this novel! We learn very little of what really motivates Valentine but it still works. I think the thing I liked the most was the building suspense whenever the reapers were around. It reminded me of Frodo hiding from the dark rider in Fellowship of the Ring.

Overall, the story grew on me as I read. The first 2-3 chapters I kept looking at the cover to see if it was a novel for some RPG because it seemed to be telling how the "character" was "rolled". But, after it got going it was a real page turner.

Definitely a good read.
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Way of the Wolf (Vampire Earth Series)
Way of the Wolf (Vampire Earth Series) by E. E. Knight (Audio CD - January 15, 2010)
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