Glen Duncan is the author of eight previous novels. He was chosen by both Arena and The Times Literary Supplement as one of Britain's best young novelists. He lives in London.
Gorgeous. . . . Irresistible. . . . As with The Last Werewolf, Duncan writes with caustic edge and pop-culturally relevant humor. -Dallas Morning News A lusty, visceral, bloody tale. . . . This is enjoyable stuff. . . . Talulla has the wit and pluck to entertain us. -Cleveland Plain Dealer Horror fiction at its best. -The Oregonian Duncan's antihero is an apex female predator, the antithesis of Stephenie Meyer's gothy milksop. She's smart, confident, and a caring mother. She's also a ferocious man-eater . . . The spectacle alone is worth the price of admission. -NPR The horror genre at its best-wildly imaginative, written with wit and intelligence, wickedly entertaining. -The Times (UK) Flat-out killer. . . . This harmonic hybrid delivers sweet (plot), salty (character), sour (emotional pathos), bitter (psychological probity), and umami (stylistic and linguistic panache). . . . Best described as a gleeful three-way between Raymond Chandler's entire oeuvre, Anne Rice's vampire novels and Umberto Eco's Foucault's Pendulum. . . . A high-calorie blast. . . . Duncan delivers with intelligent humanity a monster we want to track and befriend, even knowing she would happily eat us alive. -New York Times Book Review A howling good read. . . . Horrifying and humorous, imaginative and energetic. -CNN Duncan is an immensely talented literary novelist, and with Talulla Rising, he has again proved you don't have to be driving with a learner's permit to enjoy a good vampire-versus-werewolf book. . . . Its descriptions of sex and violence-by turns hallucinatory and anatomically precise-might render Twilight fans blind and mute. Everyone else should have a blast, though. -Richmond Times-Dispatch In Talulla Rising, Duncan again creates an oddly engaging world defined almost exclusively by the abnormal . . . The story moves from Alaska to London to Italy to Crete, makes good use of the monsters' special powers, offers cliff-hanging moments. . . . Duncan can be awfully entertaining. -Bloomberg News A lusty, visceral, bloody tale [told in] capable, muscular prose . . . This is enjoyable stuff . . . Duncan's werewolves are never cartoons . . . Talulla has the wit and pluck to entertain us. -Cleveland Plain Dealer As well as being thought-provoking, it's all great fun . . . Duncan's writing does more than transcend genre fiction: it creeps up on it in the dead of night, rips out its heart, then eats it. -The Guardian I like now and then to be reminded that I am a companion of the Wild Beast, and Glen Duncan ensures that I never forget it. He writes brilliantly of the presence of evil in its most contemporary disguise, with its heady temptations of heedless abundance, hunger, and satiety. Never again will it be possible to think of werewolves as mere metaphor. This fierce, witty, and erotic novel is full of surprises, both provocative and illuminating. -Susanna Moore