From Dusk Till Dawn and American Vampire meet The League of
Extraordinary Gentlemen in this terrifying tale of the Old West,
survival, blood, and monsters.
La Sangre es la Vida
A beautiful vampire must flee monster slayers in New York City and
reclaim the ancestral soil that restores her undead flesh. But the world
has changed since she was reborn in the New Mexico desert, and now,
Constance Der Abend and her loyal assistant Dooley, must adapt to life
in the rough frontier town of Sangre De Moro, where all sorts of
monsters have settled.
West of Sundown - where Hammer Horror and literary monsters stake
their claim in old New Mexico.
A Western tale of survival starring a cast of literary horrors from the
diabolical minds of Tim Seeley (Hack/Slash, Vampire: The Masquerade,
Money Shot), Aaron Campbell (Hellblazer, Infidel), and Jim Terry
(Vampirella, Come Home, Indio)!
For fans of Westworld, Red Dead Redemption, American
Vampire, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Hammer Horror
films, Universal monsters, and Preacher!
Collects the entire 5-issue first arc of the smash-hit series!
"If you like your horse operas bloody, if you thought The Searchers
was fine, except for all the missing vampires and werewolves and
monsters, then ... Tim Seeley, Aaron Campbell, and Jim Terry have a book
here for you. Come walk with them through the Old West, and don't trust
them when they tell you it's all going to be fine. It's not. And we
wouldn't have it any other way." --Stephen Graham Jones (New York
Times bestselling author of The Only Good Indians, My Heart is a
Chainsaw, and Don't Fear the Reaper)
"...a tawdry monster mash that's bloody entertaining*" - Publishers
Weekly* (Starred Review)
"Vigorous, bloody pulp fiction boned with fierce intelligence and
blooded with delicate observation. This just might be the start of the
best monster universe since Universal's." -- Daniel Kraus (New York
Times bestselling author of The Shape of Water, Trollhunters, and
The Autumnal)
"Western gets weird in this gore-strewn, rollicking adventure set in the
1870s ...with a wink toward gothic Victorian horror." - Publishers
Weekly (Starred Review)