
Shadows and Crows
The Lost, Book 2
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Narrated by:
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Mark Boyett
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By:
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Peter Nealen
Brotherhood. Honor. Duty.
After surviving the initial horrors of the strange new world he finds himself in, Staff Sergeant Conor McCall and his Marine Recon platoon - or what’s left of it - have come to a safe haven where they and their newfound allies recover from the most brutal op of their lives.
But with MIAs left behind, there is unfinished business back in the Land of Ice and Monsters to the north.
Before the Marines can mount a rescue, the king to whom they are indebted reminds them that alliances go both ways. An ancient evil has raided the Elven kingdom and carried off a priceless treasure. Only Conor and his team have any hope of recovering it.
A brotherhood was forged between the Marines and Elves while in the north. For the sake of that brotherhood, Conor and the other Recon Marines will voyage across the sea, through dark, trackless, and cursed wilderness….
To the lair of evil, in the Land of Shadows and Crows!
©2022 Peter Nealen (P)2022 WarGate BooksListeners also enjoyed...




















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Fantastic story and great performance
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I will say one thing. The feel and grit of the writing is OBVIOUSLY coming from a veteran, which low and behold, it’s written by a former Recon Marine. There was no blundering around with weapon characteristics of someone writing about something they knew nothing about. This author wrote from experience, and it shows.
I was apprehensive about how the author was going to resupply Recon Marines with ammo, but in my opinion, this was done expertly, and taken from actual mythology. I loved the adaptations to this story, and the world the author communicated. I like the characters, both good and evil. This is no glittering flash dance stripper on a pole. This is a hard, gritty story, and I found it to be excellent.
The narrator did an amazing job keeping the feel from the first book. There was no loss of story focus.
HIGHLY RECOMMEND. 5 out of 5 stars in all three categories.
Waiting for book three to go on Pre-order
Zero disappointment, high satisfaction
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Amazing entry, better than the 1st book.
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Nealen blends real military knowledge with a great imagination to make something pretty amazing to me. I am a Marine and I love the references to the Corps, but this is also a fantasy adventure that feels like Dragonlance or the Wheel of Time. I want to dwell with Connor and friends a long time.
Amazing work
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This and Forgotten Ruin could be a fantastic new genre for me.
Just got amazing
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Thats how you keep the fun going!
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Mark Boyett brings this book to life!
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Listener received this title free
Great series!
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Shadows and Crows.
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Shadows and Crows is Peter Nealen’s second book in the WarGate style series The Lost. I feel like Nealen really hits his stride here, the pacing of this book was excellent. I always wanted to listen to just a little bit more, no matter what had just happened. I also enjoy Mark Boyett’s voice work, from the gravelly gunnery sergeant to the Irish-inflected Tuacha.
When we left off in the last volume, Conor McCall’s Recon Marines had narrowly escaped the Fohorimans, men twisted by dark sorcery, monstrous and misshapen. In the process, they found new allies, the Tuacha, who provide them refuge from the many dark things that lurk in the world they have found themselves in. Fortunately for Conor and the rest of the Marines who escaped, the bounty of the Tuacha includes the ability to resupply them will all the instruments of modern mayhem that an infantryman might desire.
In book 2, their services are required when the Isle of Riamog is attacked by something even more foul than the Fohorimans. You might think that their job is going to be straightforward, as they enjoy home field advantage and they have been re-armed. This is where Nealen gives the Marines a worthy enemy, one who can use the dark magics of this world to counter the advantages of man-portable machineguns and 40mm grenade launchers. I won’t spoil the fun here, as I found the whole thing so well done.
In the aftermath of this attack, the Tuacha discover that a sacred artifact has been taken from their lands, along with the holy woman who was its guardian. Neither the Tuacha nor the Marines can abide such a thing, which is the event that sets the rest of the book in motion.
You might think you know what you are going to be in for here. The Marines and their Tuacha allies will use their martial skills to hunt down whatever eldritch trespasser violated their new home, rescue the damsel in distress, and frag/ventilate anything that gets in their way. In a general way, these things can be expected, but there is more to this book than it might first seem.
The reason why is that Shadows and Crows is a Gothic adventure. I am going to take a detour to explore what this means, as the term Gothic can have a variety of meanings ranging from the architectural to the aesthetic. In this case, what makes Shadows and Crows Gothic is that getting killed by a monster in the dark isn’t the worst thing that can happen to a character.
The worst thing that can happen is a character can lose their honor, and their soul. That they can side with Evil against Good and abandon their principles in the pursuit of power. When Conor and his platoon were transported into this world of ice and monsters, the veil was torn, and many things that were hidden in our world were lain bare.
In a Gothic adventure, the conflict is not only between men and monsters, but within each man’s heart. The fault line between good and evil lies there, and the true struggle is within even as the visible servants of darkness must be vanquished without.
Yet, there are compensations for the unclean things that roam the world freely. There are not merely hints of holiness, but shining exemplars of heroic virtue that confound the wicked things with piety, meekness, and humility. With faith like a mustard seed, nothing will be impossible to them. The discipline and sacrifice of the holy ones amazes Conor, as it should. It is easy to write a book where the heroes deliver kinetic violence to the wicked. It is far harder to write one that plausibly leaves those competent in breaking stuff and killing people in awe of a man whose weapons are prayer and fasting.
This is what elevates Shadows and Crows above your average mil-sf. At least to my outsider’s eye, Nealen gives the verisimilitude expected of a book that wants to explore how modern military tactics and weapons could be used against things that go bump in the night. Where things get far more interesting is when Nealen brings in hope, and the possibility of redemption for even the most wretched.
I am enjoying this series immensely, and I wish Nealen continued success.
I received a review copy from the publisher.
The real conflict is within each man's heart
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