KILL KILL KILL (KILL KILL KILL #1)

Mike Leon


4.50 · 2 ratings · Published: 22 Nov 2013

KILL KILL KILL by Mike Leon
WARNING: THIS BOOK IS TOTALLY METAL.

No, it's not made of metal. It's totally metal the same way that electric guitars, ninjas, and hot naked girls riding on dinosaurs are totally metal. If you don't understand, then just put this book down and walk away. Just walk away.

But if you do understand…

Welcome to Graveyard – an elite private military company employed by the secret society that really controls the world – this world. YOUR WORLD.

Graveyard’s commander is the grizzled Walter Stedman, a former Delta Force operator battered by twenty years of secret wars, forbidden knowledge, and abominations of science.

Someone has murdered one of Walter’s employers, and that means Graveyard is about to go to war. The enemy is like none Walter has ever encountered – creatures from beyond nightmares.

His mission will lead him into direct confrontation with an old friend, the legendary Graveyard operator known as Kill Team One - because his exploits in combat match those of an entire squad of regular men.

Now retired, Kill Team One has used a strict regimen of training, beatings, and propaganda to condition his two teenage sons into the ultimate super soldiers – ice cold killers that have known nothing but violence and destruction since birth. One of them may be almost human. Almost.

Tracking their every move is the ninja, Yoshida Tanaka – a man consumed by hatred in the decade since Kill Team One needlessly tortured his young family to death. Now he lurks in the shadows, honing his skills and waiting for the perfect moment to strike.

All of this has come together as a perfect storm, and by the time the rains subside, all life on Earth may have been washed away.

Note: This volume collects all 101 chapters of KILL KILL KILL.

romance tags

crime tags

literary-fiction tags

historical-fiction tags

fantasy tags

sci-fi tags

action-adventure tags

thriller tags

horror tags


Reviews

My review

Community reviews