WULF: Book 1 of The Fifth Place

What would you do if you woke up on another planet, in someone else’s body, with a gun to your head?

Description

‘Time to die, tabaca.’

 

A man wakes up on an alien planet, in someone else’s body, with a gun to his head.

They call him Jay Wulf – gunslinger, brutal warrior, womaniser and murdering bastard – and he is having a bad day. He must understand and survive the perils of a savage new world, a world of purple skies over canyons and prairie, where everyone and everything – be they outlaws and mountain men, or monstrous creatures of the dark, seem to want him dead.

And if that wasn’t problem enough, a man with green eyes is hunting him, a man from another dimension who will stop at nothing to put the universe right.

 

The Fifth Place is about the universe under mysterious control, and the group of antiheroic misfits determined to survive it and be free no matter what comes. Ideal for fans of Stephen King’s The Dark Tower books, Garth Ennis’s Preacher comics, Joe Abercrombie, and the Farscape TV series, The Fifth Place is for those who want a pull-no-punches adult series merging western, sci-fi, gritty fantasy, dystopian, adventure and horror genres, with a diverse, irreverent and tragically flawed cast of characters to root for against all odds.

 

The world of Earth-706 was so complex and fascinating... [yet] the characters were what really did it for me. They were such a beautiful combination of blunt force trauma... and finely honed blades that slip between ribs when least expected... If you like your westerns mean as hell and steeped in the fantastic with mind-bending trips between realities, then what are you waiting for? This is the book for you.

Eden Hudson, author of the Path of the Thunderbird series

This book draws you in like a python. At first you're just mesmerized and curious. Then you sink into its embrace. Before you know it, you're a little frantic, and find you can't put it down. And it rips along to a conclusion that leaves one breathless.

Tatiana, Amazon review

So, Jay Wulf seems to be a complete bastard.

Pablo, Goodreads review

You may also like…