V-Wars
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About this ebook
The plague begins silently during a scientific expedition in Antarctica. The melting ice releases a millennia-old virus, which spreads, poisoning the air we breathe and triggering long-dormant genes in the “junk DNA” of the human populace. It is the gene that once created the vampire—the very biological origin of what we came to believe, throughout recorded history, was only a legend.
Now that the virus has been unleashed, people around the world are changing. The danger level is incalculable. The cure is unknown. And the diseased are among us, hiding in plain sight, waiting to hunt. From the sudden contagion of patient zero to the terrifying worldwide battle between us and “the others,” the Vampire Wars are just beginning.
Conceived by New York Times–bestselling and Bram Stoker Award–winning author Jonathan Maberry, V-Wars features “frontline” reports from various “hot zones” across the globe. Joining Maberry are notable contributors including Nancy Holder, Yvonne Navarro, James A. Moore, Gregory Frost, John Everson, Keith R. A. DeCandido, and Scott Nicholson. The result is a frighteningly authentic compendium of intertwining tales that creates a unique document of mankind’s response to this sudden, cataclysmic threat to humanity.
Jonathan Maberry
Jonathan Maberry is a New York Times bestselling author, five-time Bram Stoker Award winner, and comic book writer. He writes in multiple genres including suspense, thriller, horror, science fiction, fantasy, and adventure; and he writes for adults, teens, and middle grade. His works include the Joe Ledger thrillers, Glimpse, the Rot & Ruin series, the Dead of Night series, The Wolfman, The X-Files Origins: Devil’s Advocate, Mars One, and many others. Several of his works are in development for film and TV, including V Wars, which is a Netflix original series. He is the editor of high-profile anthologies including the X-Files books, Aliens: Bug Hunt, Out of Tune, Hardboiled Horror, Baker Street Irregulars, Nights of the Living Dead, and others. He lives in Del Mar, California. Visit him at JonathanMaberry.com and on Twitter (@JonathanMaberry) and Facebook.
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Reviews for V-Wars
46 ratings8 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is for the audiobook.
In this book, vampires are people who are infected with a virus. Infected people had different physical and physiological changes depending on their race and ethnicity. I liked that there were differences among the vampires and I was emotionally involved with some characters. It was fun listening to the story, I like the pacing and I like all the narrators. I truly enjoyed this one! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5V WarsJonathan Maberry et alThe vampires are coming and life as we know it will never be the same.Something has caused a change in much of the world’s population. It isn’t known what, but it could be that global warming and the melting of ancient ice has triggered the transformation of human into vampire. Maberry has brought together a number of skilled authors who each give us their version of what is happening in the new world. There are many kinds of vampires. It now seems that all the myths and legends from ancient times are based on truth. A person’s ethnicity determines what they will become. In “Love Less” a TV host becomes a Wardulak, a Russian vampire who can only feed from loved ones. In “Stalking Anna Lei” a Jiangshi or Chinese Hopping Vampire, is searching for his younger sister. A Werewolf, or Loup Garou, is campaigning for a political post in “The Ballad of Big Charlie”; and a motorcycle gang, formerly trying to prevent Mexican border crossings, now are on the lookout for vampires in “Roadkill”. “Heartsick” was a very chilling story and “Epiphany” in which a young Native American girl is slowly changing into what appears to be a rattlesnake is quite moving. My favourite stories were those by Jonathan Maberry himself. “Junk” provides the background story for all the others. The title “Junk” refers to the junk DNA that everyone has and which is implicated in the changes being wrought on those infected. Often when reading an anthology, some stories stand out more than others. But in this collection each of the authors maintained a similar level of suspense, intensity and surprise, along with an unexpected touch of humour, which made reading this book a pleasure with none of the feeling of disjointedness inherent in other anthologies of this kind.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5V-Wars, edited by Jonathan Maberry, is a collection of stories set in the same world but written by a bevy of talented authors.
In the world Maberry creates in V-Wars, a prehistoric virus has been released from polar ice, awakening recessive genes in the human genome. The virus triggers changes in some humans, awakening physical changes that are varied and dramatic. Before long, vampires walk among us. Some are benign; many are not.
Maberry's collection of tales does well and more credibly what X-Men (at least the movies--I'm not familiar with the comics) tries to do: it portrays a genetic mutation that changes a portion of humanity, causing ostracization, fear, violence, and, of course, government action. I've always been dubious about what the reaction to the X-Men. After all, the powers they have seem to be magical and useful. On the other hand, the mutations in V Wars result in a change that seems to drive its mutants to, well, suck blood.
That seems a bit more against the public interest than the power to start fires, freeze objects, levitate, or any of the other number of changes that Stan Lee's X-Men undergo.
Maberry does an excellent job tying the stories together with a common story that intersperses the tales. While the majority of the stories seem to take place in and around the American northeast, especially New York City, V-Wars treats readers to a semi-global perspective, with stories from the American southern border with Mexico, in the shadows of the Appalachian Mountains, and one that crisscrosses the globe, starting in Antarctica, jetting off to Romania, and stopping through France, too. Some times we read from the vampire's perspective; other times, from the humans. Maberry breaks up the stories, too, giving the collection something of novel-like feeling.
As interesting as the collection is, the stories are not all created equal, and it's part of the reason I had a hard time settling on just three stars. I wanted badly to give the book four stars--but several of the stories disappointed, even bored me.
They were few, however, and generally the stories were creative and enjoyable, if occasionally not for the faint of heart. Here are a few of my favorites:
"Stalking Anna Lei" by James A. Moore brings together legends of vampires from East Asia, as John Lei searches for his sister while navigating the dangerous world of Asian gangs amid reports of a monstrous creature that seems to be haunting his every step. Told from John's perspective, Moore has a great voice that makes his story one of the most enjoyable, and his plotting makes the final twist satisfying and unexpected.
"Vulpes" by Gregory Frost begins in Antarctica and trails Ruksana back to her home in Romania. Beware, though: when the change comes to her, the results are anything but vampiric.
Yvonne Navarro's "Epiphany" asks what happens when society's most weak go through the vampiric change, trading vulnerabilities for superhuman power. Red Moon is the orphaned daughter of Native Americans, raped, pregnant, and infected by the virus. Beset by changes she cannot explain, she finds herself on the edge of motherhood in a world that threatens to destroy her for the changes that have come over her.
V-Wars deserves a second installment. It is, in many ways, only the opening chapter in the new world that emerges as vampire and human eye each other and wonder if they will live together or in conflict. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5V Wars: A Chronicle of the Vampire Wars was released in 2010. I did not come across it until 2012. I am so glad I did not miss it. V Wars in an unique anthology. It is a collection of several stories that all have some connection. The first story “Junk” is by Jonathan Maberry. It is the jumping off point for all the stories that follow. “Junk” has six parts but they are dispersed throughout the book. All of the multi part stories are dispersed. All the different stories are threads that weave a very compelling tapestry. V Wars creates a fertile universe as illustrated by the sequels. My favorite thread was “Epiphany” by Yvonne Navarro.
The narration was fantastic. The team of narrators was first rate. It included Cassandra Campbell, Gabrielle de Cuir, Roxanne Hernadez, Arte Johnson, Stefan Rudnicki, Wil Wheaton. Each narrator handled a different thread of the overall collection. Each did a fantastic job with any accents, male vs female characteristics and conveying emotion.
I enjoyed V Wars: A Chronicle of the Vampire Wars so much that I am currently listening to V Wars: Night Terrors (2015). I will eventually get to V Wars: Blood and Fire: New Stories of the Vampire Wars (2014). I really enjoy the ensemble aspect of this audiobook, not only in the author's’ writing but in the narrator's’ also. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
This isn’t the apocalypse, it’s genetic de-evolution?
V Wars reminded me somewhat of World War Z by Max Brooks except this was with vampires instead of zombies and V Wars was written by a handful of authors instead of one. Each chapter it switches to a different character thread.
Reading V Wars made me so curious as to how this book was plotted out. Did Maberry plot the whole thing and pitch the story or did all of the authors brainstorm together? I seriously want to know!
There were a few of the character threads that I extremely enjoyed, first of which being the one written by Jonathan Maberry called Junk . This is the first chapter written by him (and it continues in several more chapters throughout the book.) Several story threads work that way. It successfully captured my attention from page one. It was intense, comical at times and naughty in others – of course with the expected blood and gore! Above all it sets a great scene and tone for all of the stories to follow.
Roadkill by Nancy Holder was a great one with an unexpected twist ending. It is a look at how a small town might be held captive by mosters, the human kind. Another favorite is Vulpes by Gregory Frost. I love the character he created and the awesome folklore that is melded into this one.
Overall, I enjoyed V Wars but I did feel some of the stories were not as well written as others. I’d recommend it too any vampire and apocalyptic fans. Though if you aren’t the type to like a disjointed storytelling style this may not be for you. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Having had the honour of reading a pre release review copy, I picked up this book to find myself pleasantly surprised. V Wars is a gripping tale of mankind's ancient genetic past coming to life, bringing death. A tale told in a manner that makes you almost believe it is really happening, through first person viewpoints and the clever use of news and media reporting inserted in to the story.If you enjoy tales of vampires, werewolves, ancient creatures which once haunted mankind, then this is a definite book for you. The author manages to capture the characters and their struggles in ways that make you identify with them. The conflict between sisters, as one has infected the other but each adapts to a new situation in a different sort of struggle. The very human reflex of a politician finding himself to be a man who uses his talents to protect his mother, who has turned into something different, something else, the only way he can. The story of the good doctor who once was merely a scholar on the sides of science, finding himself suddenly in a position of the dog barking in the night - even though it is his knowledge that stands between his government making the right, and the wrong choices. V Wars is a book worth reading, it is fresh and enticing. Pick it up, you won't let go until you finish.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The best way to describe this collaboration is as an anthology, but it's different to most. The stories are broken up and interwoven, painting a gradual picture of unfolding events. I felt like there was a lack of resolution at the end, but then again the nature of the narrative didn't really allow for it. Overall, it's a great read. And there are echoes of current events that give it a bit of an extra kick.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5--Full, non-spoiler review courtesy at Book & Movie Dimension a Blog--Vampire stories are widespread but really the question is whether or not to read them. There has to be no question on their originality take and involving characters. V Wars is a vampire novel. Albeit honestly a humongously original one at that.Michael Fayne labeled patient zero in our modern world in V Wars happens to be the first individual to contract what many politicians and doctors as well as phychiatrists call the I1VI virus-Vampire virus- and now he's known as the first vampire. We are thrown into Michael's world of while at first apparent normalcy becomes quickly discord. In blackouts, he happens to slaughter women in moments of close encounters. Letting it go on longer without knowing what is going on he also infects others from a far. That is how V Wars is built up. The changing of stories and narration of other people that have contracted the as well are feautured too. Get this though there are many types of vampires. Some of which we are repugnant fur balls and other cadaver-looking people. Vampires are based on how a peson may perceive vampires and also by the genetic origins (culture) that people come from. So we have a difference in vampire species with many much like ethnicity. V Wars premise overall is that they the vampires are hunting us. The vampires aren't the only ones waging war in hunting.Werewolves emerge too and thankfully they are not hunting us. In the end, the extermination of the human race relies perhaps on whether we can actually consent to some truce between humans and vampires considering they are much stronger than us. V Wars had quite an intense angle because it actually had the entirety of the novel built on input from various authors who will, of course, bring a fresh take on things on vampire and werewolf characteristics. Its a mix of distinctive styles of writing which comes together seamlessly. Many readers will surely find stories or a story that they at least favor. Not only that but in general V Wars had quite an amusing tenor in its conclusion that a reader will no doubt find to their liking. V Wars has some nods to 30 Days of Night and the prestige of being all of its own a colloboration of authors who managed to create something utterly fantastic.Overall: Amazing read!Genre: Vampires, Werewolves, Horror