Mike Carey has been making up stories for most of his life. His novel The Girl With All the Gifts, written as M. R. Carey, was a USA Today bestseller and a major motion picture based on his BAFTA-nominated screenplay. Mike Carey has written for both DC and Marvel, including critically acclaimed runs on X-Men and Fantastic Four, Marvel's flagship superhero titles. His creator-owned books regularly appear in the New York Times bestseller list. He also has several previous novels, two radio plays, and a number of TV and movie screenplays to his credit.
""The Devil You Know is a spectacular novel, one of the best supernatural thrillers I've read in years.""--Douglas Preston, New York Times bestselling author ""A treat . . . Genre-bending at its best.""--Booklist (starred review) on Vicious Circle ""An imaginative spin on the hard-boiled detective . . . mixes horror and humor in a way that spells good omens for future Castor novels.""--Entertainment Weekly on The Devil You Know ""Every bit as good as Jim Butcher.""--Publishers Weekly (starred review) on Dead Men's Boots ""Felix offers a darkly droll take on the circumstances of his world, which is just as familiar, intricate, and morally tangled as our own.""--Entertainment Weekly on Vicious Circle ""Like Humphrey Bogart meets John Constantine, Felix Castor makes for an enjoyably, untrustworthy guide through the undead-filled streets of London. . . engaging and vivacious.""--SFX on The Naming of the Beasts ""The author has mastered the challenge of incorporating the paranormal into a normal urban setting, and his refusal to pull punches makes this a harder hitting genre entry than many others.""--Publishers Weekly ""The Felix Castor novels are splashed with color and texture, their characters are larger than life (or death), and the stories are, well . . . out of this world. Castor is a remarkably believable character... A wholly engaging blend of the detective and fantasy genres.""--Booklist on Dead Men's Boots ""Witty, sardonic . . . irresistible.""--Kirkus (starred review) on Dead Men's Boots