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The Dark Tide
The Dark Tide
The Dark Tide
Audiobook9 hours

The Dark Tide

Written by Dennis L. McKiernan

Narrated by Cameron Beierle

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

Tuck Underbank is a Warrow think a hobbit with shoes and "large jewellike eyes" living in the peaceful Boskydells. When an unnaturally cold winter strikes and the evil Modru threatens the world, he and a number of his fellow Thornwalkers go to the High King's aid. But a vast expanse of lightless blizzard called the Dimmendark (sounds bad, doesn't it?) is spreading over the land, and Tuck soon finds that the "dark tide" is going to swamp them all. Despite the fact that they're tiny and temperamental, the Warrows get included in the military forces. But the High King doesn't have enough warriors to hold off the horde of slobbering monsters who are coming to attack. And the battle goes horribly wrong, separating the friends from one another and possibly dooming them all.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 15, 2009
ISBN9781605483986
The Dark Tide
Author

Dennis L. McKiernan

Dennis L. McKiernan The Gory Details My writing career began in 1977 when I got run over by a car—it shattered my left femur into about fifty pieces. The day they put me into a cast that went from my armpits to over my toes was the day I began a novel. You see, I needed something to keep me sane while I spent the next few months in a cement block. My lovely wife got me a large batch of yellow legal-sized tablets and lots of sharpened pencils. Since I was flat on my back as stiff as a board, I held the tablets up and wrote more or less overhead. Straight up. Vertically. My arms would get tired and I would rest and think about what came next in the tale and then repeat the vertical exercise—write, rest and think, and then write again (rather like rinse and repeat over and over again). And so, for some ten to fifteen hours a day seven days a week, I ran, swam, rode horses, fought battles, cried over deaths of loved ones, and helped the Dwarves regain their lost homeland, all while confined in a cement block. (Okay, okay, it was orthopedic plaster, but to my way of thinking it was more like the mob had a vendetta against me and had prepared me to sleep with the fishes, but for some reason hadn’t thrown me in but simply abandoned me on the roadside instead.) Anyway, the day they put me in the cast was the day I started the novel, and, coincidentally, about a hundred days later, the day they took me out of that imprisonment was the day I wrote “The End” on that tale. That was how I wrote my first novel. Oh, it wasn’t fine-tuned or finished by any means. There were revisions to make and I had to transcribe it from a handwritten story to a typed one, and, when all that was done, although I had written it just to keep sane, I thought it was quite good (no ego here, ha!). And so I sought out an editor who wanted to acquire it and so on and so forth, and finally succeeded in having it published (Thank you Al Sarrantonio and Pat LoBrutto and the folks at Doubleday). But that story I wrote just to keep sane was where I began. (Unless, of course, you count the round-robin “side-splitting” tales my father and I wrote about a detective, yet that is another story altogether.) Including that first Mithgar story, I have written and have had published a good number of tales set in that same world—a trilogy, two duologies, six stand-alone novels, two collections of Mithgarian stories, and I have just finished another Mithgarian saga. In addition, I have had published a five-book series of retold fairy tales, a science/fantasy novel, and about twenty or so short stories published in that many anthologies. What else is there? Ah, yes, there is this: Right out of high school I joined the Air Force (the Korean War had just begun). At the end of that war (actually, it never ended, but it stopped with a truce called) using the GI Bill, I earned a BS degree in electrical engineering from the University of Missouri. I earned a masters degree from Duke University also in electrical engineering. I spent some thirty-one years at Bell Labs in anti-ballistic missile defense systems, in hardware and software, and in a think tank. I married Martha Lee Northcutt in 1957 while in college, and we have two sons. I am a fantasy role player, and, as well, I exercise my thumbs and trigger fingers on my Xbox 360. I like chocolate-covered graham crackers. But my writing career . . . well it all began when I got run over by a car. I do not recommend that as a way to begin any profession.

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Reviews for The Dark Tide

Rating: 3.4346154492307694 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

130 ratings4 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Dennis L McKiernan does a thorough job of plotting this quick-read novel classified as Fantasy fiction. He himself had been on duty in the Korean war and then went to get a B.S. in Engineering to go on to work at an R&D Lab in Ohio. He is very orderly about the introductions he prepares as the first two chapters are written to acquaint the reader with the clan of Warrows who are Thornwalkers, whose sworn duty is to protect the Thornwall territory which belongs to the warrows, who are extremely accurate archers. As they take up their positions on the border of Thornwall, they are unexpectedly met by a dangerous bunch of Vulgs and the dangers become more seriously as the story continues. This book is now hard to find, but is available as an audio book offering. It's entertaining.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I was told this trilogy was a classic, but I was incredibly disappointed with the first book, so much that I refuse to continue. I appreciate that Mr. McKiernan has tried to stay true to Tolkien fantasy, but it's as if he is attempting to reproduce it, and he does it quite poorly. The action scenes are quite good, but I dislike the universe he has built.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is the start of what the author describes as an attempt to recreate some of the tone and spirit of classic fantasy novels, especially Tolkien's. The setting and style seem to be similar, though not quite as much High Fantasy as Tolkien. Like LOTR, the heroes of this story are mainly Warrows, McKiernan's version of Hobbits. The plot and characters are his own though, and there's no Gandalf to save the day.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A generic, run-of-the-mill fantasy novel. I felt that it focused way too much on the fighting.