Jeff Conner
Author of V Wars
10 Works 343 Members 14 Reviews
About the Author
Also includes: Jeff Connor (2)
Works by Jeff Conner
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Common Knowledge
- Gender
- male
Members
Reviews
Stephen King Goes to Hollywood: A Lavishly… by Jeff Conner
Not bad, with some decent insider stories on the various movies made up to the end of 1986, but each movie is only given a few pages. Would have liked a little more in-depth analysis and info on each.
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TobinElliott | Sep 3, 2021 | This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress, Blogspot, & Librarything by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission
Title: V-Wars
Series: V-Wars #1
Editor: Jonathan Maberry
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 405
Words: 154.5K
Synopsis:
From Vwars.fandom.com
Conceived of and edited by Bram Stoker Award-winner Jonathan Maberry, V-Wars: is an anthology series of ‘eyewitness accounts’ and ‘frontline reports’ from the vampire apocalypse. After an ancient virus that causes vampire-like symptoms is accidentally released during an Antarctic expedition, humanity must scramble to survive. In this collection of interconnected but unique tales, contributing authors Nancy Holder, Yvonne Navarro, James A. Moore, Gregory Frost, John Everson, Keith R. A. DeCandido, and Scott Nicholson offer gripping accounts of a world spinning towards war and destruction.
My Thoughts:
The “synopsis” was the best I could find without writing my own. A set of authors all write multiple short stories about a character and Maberry, the editor and one of the contributors, weaves the stories all together into one tapestry. So you'll get a chapter from Maberry about Character X, then a chapter by Navarro about Character A, etc. Most of the characters have no overlap and are written so as to give a broader view of the events happening.
Which basically is that vampires make a huge comeback and how humanity deals with it. This was what I want in a vampire story. Vamps kill humans in one way or another, bloody and violent and it's all kill or be killed. The thing is, one or two characters are perfectly slotted into the “Woke” side of things and bleat about vamps and it not being their fault and we just have to understand and try to get along with them. They were perfectly done and it took all of my mighty might to appreciate that instead of raging at a fictitional character.
The main reason this is getting only 3.5 instead of 4 is because along with the blood and violence associated with vamps, we also get the sexual side of things. There were too many near explicit scenes for me to be comfortable with. If this trend continues in the next book I'm afraid that it will be the last book in the series I read.
Right at the end there is a character who is revealed as an anti-vamp. She's a werewolf and transforms in the presence of vampires and kills them. It was awesome!
In many ways this reminded me of the Necroscope series in both good and bad ways. That was another vampire series I had to stop, so we'll see what happens with this one.
★★★✬☆… (more)
½Title: V-Wars
Series: V-Wars #1
Editor: Jonathan Maberry
Rating: 3.5 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 405
Words: 154.5K
Synopsis:
From Vwars.fandom.com
Conceived of and edited by Bram Stoker Award-winner Jonathan Maberry, V-Wars: is an anthology series of ‘eyewitness accounts’ and ‘frontline reports’ from the vampire apocalypse. After an ancient virus that causes vampire-like symptoms is accidentally released during an Antarctic expedition, humanity must scramble to survive. In this collection of interconnected but unique tales, contributing authors Nancy Holder, Yvonne Navarro, James A. Moore, Gregory Frost, John Everson, Keith R. A. DeCandido, and Scott Nicholson offer gripping accounts of a world spinning towards war and destruction.
My Thoughts:
The “synopsis” was the best I could find without writing my own. A set of authors all write multiple short stories about a character and Maberry, the editor and one of the contributors, weaves the stories all together into one tapestry. So you'll get a chapter from Maberry about Character X, then a chapter by Navarro about Character A, etc. Most of the characters have no overlap and are written so as to give a broader view of the events happening.
Which basically is that vampires make a huge comeback and how humanity deals with it. This was what I want in a vampire story. Vamps kill humans in one way or another, bloody and violent and it's all kill or be killed. The thing is, one or two characters are perfectly slotted into the “Woke” side of things and bleat about vamps and it not being their fault and we just have to understand and try to get along with them. They were perfectly done and it took all of my mighty might to appreciate that instead of raging at a fictitional character.
The main reason this is getting only 3.5 instead of 4 is because along with the blood and violence associated with vamps, we also get the sexual side of things. There were too many near explicit scenes for me to be comfortable with. If this trend continues in the next book I'm afraid that it will be the last book in the series I read.
Right at the end there is a character who is revealed as an anti-vamp. She's a werewolf and transforms in the presence of vampires and kills them. It was awesome!
In many ways this reminded me of the Necroscope series in both good and bad ways. That was another vampire series I had to stop, so we'll see what happens with this one.
★★★✬☆… (more)
Flagged
BookstoogeLT | 10 other reviews | Apr 27, 2021 | The 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.
Flagged
AngelaJMaher | 10 other reviews | Jul 12, 2020 | REVIEWED: This Means War - Zombies Vs. Robots anthology
EDITED BY: Jeff Conner
PUBLISHED: March, 2012
Love this anthology! Cool concept - just as the name implies - a collection of stories pitting zombies against robots. Violent and thoughtful, gruesome and funny, this collection of stories provides a wide-range of possibilities in the near-future in which technology aids our ceaseless struggle against the undead. The book itself is beautifully formatted with color illustrations to accompany each story. And what stories! The authors bring in some of the best short fiction I've read in a while. Including Steve Rasnic Tem, Joe McKinney, Lincoln Crisler, Norman Prentiss and others. Editor Jeff Conner is applauded for this highly-recommended collection.
Five out of Five stars… (more)
EDITED BY: Jeff Conner
PUBLISHED: March, 2012
Love this anthology! Cool concept - just as the name implies - a collection of stories pitting zombies against robots. Violent and thoughtful, gruesome and funny, this collection of stories provides a wide-range of possibilities in the near-future in which technology aids our ceaseless struggle against the undead. The book itself is beautifully formatted with color illustrations to accompany each story. And what stories! The authors bring in some of the best short fiction I've read in a while. Including Steve Rasnic Tem, Joe McKinney, Lincoln Crisler, Norman Prentiss and others. Editor Jeff Conner is applauded for this highly-recommended collection.
Five out of Five stars… (more)
Flagged
Eric_J._Guignard | Jul 26, 2018 | You May Also Like
Associated Authors
James A. Moore Contributor
Nancy Holder Contributor, Introduction
John Everson Contributor
Dacre Stoker Contributor
Scott Nicholson Contributor
Gregory Frost Contributor
Keith R. A. DeCandido Contributor
Jonathon Maberry Contributor
Brea Grant Contributor
Fabio Listrani Illustrator
Rachel Swirsky Contributor
Sean Taylor Contributor
Steve Rasnic Tem Contributor
Chris Ryall Introduction
Joe McKinney Contributor
Nicholas Kaufmann Contributor
Lincoln Crisler Contributor
Norman Prentiss Contributor
Nancy Collins Contributor
Hume Nisbet Contributor
Aleksei Tolstoy Contributor
Ludwig Tieck Contributor
Lord George Gordon Byron Contributor
Mary E. Wilkins-Freeman Contributor
H. B. Marriott Watson Contributor
F. G. Loring Contributor
Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu Contributor
Claude Askew Contributor
Dick Donovan Contributor
Bram Stoker Contributor
Alice Askew Contributor
John Polidori Contributor
F. Marion Crawford Contributor
Mary Elizabeth Braddon Contributor
Algernon Blackwood Contributor
Théophile Gautier Contributor
Anne Crawford Contributor
E. F. Benson Contributor
M. R. James Contributor
James Malcolm Rymer Contributor
Mary Cholmondeley Contributor
Ekaterina Sedia Contributor
Yvonne Navarro Contributor
John Skipp Contributor
Hank Schwaeble Contributor
Jon McGoran Contributor
Rhodi Hawk Contributor
Nancy A. Collins Contributor
Amelia Beamer Contributor
Mark Morris Contributor
Bobby Nash Contributor
Amber Benson Contributor
Kaaron Warren Contributor
Cody Goodfellow Contributor
Jonathan Maberry Introduction
Stephen Dedman Contributor
Ericka Lugo Illustrator
Stephen Graham Jones Contributor
Rio Youers Contributor
Simon Clark Contributor
Simon Kurt Unsworth Contributor
Mike Dubisch Illustrator
Robert Hood Contributor
Dale Bailey Contributor
Gary McMahon Contributor
Trevor Hutchison Cover designer
Michael Manomivibul Illustrator
Statistics
- Works
- 10
- Members
- 343
- Popularity
- #69,543
- Rating
- 3.8
- Reviews
- 14
- ISBNs
- 35
- Languages
- 1