JAMES ROLLINS on PANDEMONIUM: "PANDEMONIUM is pure genius, an otherworldly wonder as creative as the best of Jules Verne. It took hours for the adrenaline to wear off." I even teared up a couple of times in pure joy. ![]() For the last half I was frozen in place - I couldn't move, couldn't talk. (The final book in the Fragment trilogy, SYMBIONT, is under way.)įANGORIA on FRAGMENT: "I haven't had this much fun reading a science/adventure thriller since Jurassic Park. ![]() His debut novel, Fragment, was nominated for an International Thriller Award and a BSFA, and is published in 18 languages. Warren Fahy was previously a manager of a bookstore, wrote essays for royalty attending college, designed Internet movie databases for 5 companies, lead writer on Rock Star Games' Red Dead Revolver, helped coin the word "mullet" as a hairstyle for the Beastie Boys, and wrote comedy for robots in Hong Kong. New York Times best selling author of Fragment and the sequel, Pandemonium, and his just-released thriller of ideas in a high tech future, Magenta. " Now Fahy sets off an even more thrilling stampede of action and suspense, bursting forth from the hellish depths of. USA Today praised Warren Fahy's debut novel, Fragment, as "a rollicking tale will enthrall readers of Jurassic Park and The Ruins. Now they're rising up from the bowels of the Earth to consume the world as we know it. They think the danger is over until a ruthless Russian tycoon lures them to his underground metropolis, where they find themselves confronted by a vicious menagerie of biological horrors from their past―and by entirely new breeds of voracious predators. Biologists Nell and Geoffrey Binswanger barely survived their last encounter with terrifying, invasive creatures that threatened to engulf the planet. ![]() Cut off from the surface world, an entire ecosystem of bizarre subterranean species has survived undetected―until now. Deep beneath the Ural Mountains, in an underground city carved out by slave labor during the darkest hours of the Cold War, ancient caverns hold exotic and dangerous life-forms that have evolved in isolation for countless millennia.
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