
If you’re looking for a new series that’ll be simultaneously fairly religious while also reminiscent of the Blade movies, then look no further! Talon of God is the book for you. I would be curious to know who wrote what in this case (as you can see, in a much smaller font under Wesley Snipes name, is a second name, Ray Norman), but again that’s mostly for curiosity’s sake. The dialogue turns a bit Sunday school (“Fear is the devil’s rope, and he will tie you down if you let him”), but the embrace of mercy and forgiveness towards one’s enemies is a welcome act of faith in what otherwise could have been Blade with a Bible.I wasn’t really sure what to expect out of a novel written by an actor (though it seems to be becoming a more common trend), but I still found myself both surprised and unsurprised by what I received. The overall tone of the book is fundamentalist, but the authors broaden their audience by discreetly avoiding both explicit violence and thorny cultural issues they do explicitly disparage the subjugation of women as being based on a misinterpretation of the Bible, but no one remarks on African-American Lauryn’s relationship with a white police officer. Debut novelists Snipes (star of the Blade vampire hunter film trilogy) and Norman bring a cinematic flair to the proceedings (including a “giant flying hell fortress”). As her ex, a Chicago cop, battles the cartel responsible for the demon drug, Lauryn has to redeem first her younger brother and then the rest of Chicago from their personal devils. When a new drug laced with sulfur turns her patients into demonic monsters, her savior is Talon, a sword-wielding soldier of God astride a motorcycle. Lauryn Jefferson, daughter of a Baptist minister, chooses to practice medicine rather than preach.


In this theological urban fantasy, a young ER physician in Chicago must add faith to reason to prevent all hell from breaking loose.
