SLAY (The Man in Gray Book 1)
The Slay Series, Book 1
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Narrated by:
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Scott Sigler
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By:
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Scott Sigler
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Rob Otto
About this listen
SLAY is the electrifying debut of a five-book series starring enigmatic anti-hero Lincoln Franks.
For millennia, a secret society known as the Bastion has protected mankind from the horrors of the Underskin—malevolent forces lurking unseen in civilization's shadows. Monsters, demons, spirits, lawyers, and Fortune-500 CEOs, the Underskin's fiends pray upon the weak.
When these creatures spill blood, it falls upon the rixators—the Bastion's elite warriors—to cut them down. Armed with ancient relics and modern weaponry, altruistic rixators hold the line against chaos. But a rixator's sworn oath of poverty grinds against Lincoln's life.
Faced with providing for his agoraphobic former partner, who was crippled by a monster, his father, whose life as a rixator left him broke and broken in an old folk's home, and his son who is imprisoned in a land of nightmares, Lincoln's got bills to pay.
Vow of poverty be damned—it's time to cut off some heads, collect bounties, and bring home the bacon.
©2024 Empty Set Entertainment (P)2024 Empty Set EntertainmentCritic reviews
"The Witcher meets THE BOYS. Filled with irreverent humor and gleeful bloodshed. Highly recommended!" (Jennifer Brody, author of STAR WARS Stories of Jedi and Sith and A Sacrifice of Blood and Stars)
"Monsters, bastards, and things that go bump in the night don't stand a chance when the ruthless Man in Gray comes gunning for them. SLAY blasts along with Sigler's prose coming at you as hard and precise as the Man himself. Packed with action, clever ideas, and memorable characters this is Sigler at his very best." (Richard Kadrey, author of Sandman Slim and The Everything Box)
What listeners say about SLAY (The Man in Gray Book 1)
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- 16-11-24
The Anti-Stephen King
There isn't a single Scott Sigler book I haven't enjoyed - to the extent that when he puts out something new, I'll go grab it.
There isn't a single Stephen King book I haven't enjoyed, but left disappointed.
Why is this? Stephen King is absolutely a master storyteller, but his endings rarely (if ever) pay off to the same level as the build-up. Almost always a whimper rather than a bang. I read IT in the summer of 1990, and it was the thickest tome I'd ever tackled. The final battle and wrap up after 700 pages? About a dozen pages. Like pulling an ejector seat handle.
Why reference Mr King? Because Scott is the opposite. His endings are girthy, and deliver on the promise of the story to that point, even when setting up for a sequel. Scott has a different problem - beginnings., This is possibly enhanced by the fact that Scott's vocal tone and speech pattern is very distinctive (and an acquired taste) requiring some settling in time while you get used to it, but there's also the sense of having to power through the initial stages to get to the point where your interest is piqued.
Two hours. That's the period during which I found myself thinking "I'm not getting into this" for this story. There's nothing wrong with the action opener, the characters, or anything else, but it doesn't pull you in. This phenomenon isn't peculiar to $LAY either, I've found it with many of Scott's books before then getting hooked.
Should anything in this extremely subjective review cause a change in writing style? Hell no. It's a me problem. I'm just saying. Maybe you're in the same boat and bounce off early, don't get past the slightly odd narration, and the emotional distance you have from the story at the outset and you'll find your way in. That's the message. Yeah, that'll do it.
(I do think the title is wrong though - I thought, based on skimming the back-of-book copy and title I was getting some underground, mythological fight club. It's not that. Nothing wrong with what it is, it's just not what I thought it was going to be.)
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