MERKABH RIDER
Have Glyphs Will Travel
By Edward M. Erdelac
Damnation Books, LLC.
338 pages
In his two previous books in this series, writer Edward
Erdelac established a sweeping tableau that encompasses the American southwest
in the years following the American Civil War.
His hero is a Jewish Mystic known only as the Rider. He is a veteran of
the war between the states whose one-time religious teacher, Adon, betrayed him
and his fellow students to become the agent of ancient alien gods. The Rider
chases him across the frontier, his goal to kill him and end the threat he
poses.
“The Long Sabbath,” picks up where volume two ended with the
Rider and his African ally, Kabede, being chased across the desert by an army
of zombies led by three of Adon’s renegade riders. They come across a small
U.S. Cavalry outpost and hope to find refuge and support. Instead they are
taken prisoner and thrown into the stockade as wanted felons. When several
soldiers suddenly commit suicide, the others turn to the Rider and Kabede for
succor. Then some of the troopers begin painfully morphing into strange
monstrous creatures at the same time the fort is set upon by the legion of
undead. “The Long Sabbath” is a
relentless horror-fest that once begun, never lets up and easily one of the
scariest tales I’ve ever read.
This is followed by “The War Shaman,” where the Rider and
his companions are enlisted by a traveling salesman to help prevent an alien
entity from persuading various Indian tribes to ban together and use black
magic to annihilate all whites and Mexicans. To stop them, the Rider, working
through body of friendly Apache brave, must convince Geronimo of the shaman’s
true identity and goals. Another rousing battle between good and evil with the
Rider being aided by the Indian spirits of the mountain; a truly imaginative
yarn.
The third tale is called, “The Mules of the Mazzikim,” and
revolves around the Rider’s obsession with a demon succubus he encountered in a
previous battle against the forces of evil. According to Satan, Nehema is being
punished by her mother, Lilith, for having aided the Rider. Now our hero feels
compels to seek her out and rescue her. Unfortunately the celibate warrior is
tricked by his own naïveté and by the time he realizes his folly, he has been
manipulated into a trap and finds himself sentence to the newly constructed
Yuma State Prison. This is a tale of twisted love in its most perverse disguise
and easily the best crafted story in this collection.
Next up is the most pivotal chapter in the saga thus far.
“The Man Called Other” finally has the Rider coming face to face with his
renegade teacher, Adon. Only now Adon
has inhabited and is controlling the body of the Yuma Prison warden where the
Rider is being held for having slain the woman succubus Nehema. Alone and at
the mercy of his arch enemy, Rider must fall upon his faith as never before to
shield him against Adon’s manipulative abilities and their confrontation in the
dream world.
By the fifth and final story, “The Fire King Triumphant,”
the Rider and his handful of allies have discovered they possess the an arcane
document that will allow the Old Ones to breach the wall between dimensions and
achieve their ultimate goal, the invasion of the Earth and its utter
subjugation. But no sooner do they
uncover this final piece of the puzzle then the Rider is shot down in the
streets of Tombstone
by a “blue” gunslinger who then steals the sacred scroll and rides away leaving
our hero bleeding to death. Now that’s
what I call a cliffhanger.
“Merkabah Rider – Have Glyphs Will Travel,” is a fine
addition to the previous volumes but more than ever begins to weave a tight
pattern giving the readers a closer glimpse of the overall series. In the process the stories become episodic in
nature and though I’m still going to recommend the book, I do so with the
caveat that you pick up volumes one and two first. Otherwise you are going to find yourself both
enjoying this feast but still feeling like a whole lot has been left out.
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