Blood World
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Everything changed when scientists discovered the drug. It looked like the cure for aging, but all progress comes with a price tag. Now, eternal youthfulness will be paid for by the blood of the innocent.
The blood of “carriers” is the most valuable commodity on earth. When treated with a new wonder drug, it cures disease, increases power, and makes the recipient a virtual superman.
It also makes the carriers targets. Young people with the right genes are ripped from their families and stashed in “blood farms.”
Ellie Batista became an LAPD officer specifically to fight this evil as a member of the Blood Squad, but her ambitions are thwarted—until the day she and her partner are ambushed during a routine stop. The resulting events plunge her into an undercover world more dangerous than she could have ever imagined.
Because a madman has found a way to increase the potency of the blood to levels previously unimagined. As he cuts a bloody swath through the already deadly world of blood cartels, Ellie is the only hope to stop him before the body count explodes.
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In this imaginative near-future crime novel from Mooney (the Darby McCormick series), some people have become carriers of an enzyme that produces "unbelievable amounts of energy." Abductions of carriers by criminals who want to monetize their blood by selling transfusions to the affluent have become so widespread that the LAPD has formed a Blood Crimes Unit. Officer Ellie Batista wants to join the unit because her twin brother, a carrier, was kidnapped when they were six, and she hopes that access to the unit's intel will enable her to find him. Batista gets a break when her patrol car strikes a dog wandering in the street whose tag bears bloodstains and the words "Help Us." She and her partner trace the dog to a nearby house, where two carriers are being held captive. After the subsequent deadly encounter with the crooks holding the carriers, Batista is tapped by her commissioner to go undercover into the blood world. While Mooney's worldbuilding is underdone, he maintains suspense throughout, and even engenders empathy for a bad guy. Those looking for an SF variant on a familiar thriller trope the dedicated undercover cop taking on a vicious drug network will be rewarded.