The Last Werewolf

The Last Werewolf

by Glen Duncan (Author)

Synopsis

For two centuries Jacob Marlowe has wandered the world, enslaved by his lunatic appetites and tormented by the memory of his first and most monstrous crime. Now, the last of his kind, he knows he can't go on. But as Jake counts down to suicide, a violent murder and an extraordinary meeting plunge him straight back into the desperate pursuit of life.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Publisher: Canongate Books Ltd
Published: 06 Oct 2011

ISBN 10: 1847679463
ISBN 13: 9781847679468
Book Overview: 'Sexy, funny, blisteringly intelligent ... Duncan is the cleverest literary horror merchant since Bram Stoker.' The Times

Media Reviews
Like an updated version of Dracula, only for werewolves, and as rewritten by Bret Easton Ellis. * * Guardian * *
Playfully brainy... wry, world-weary Jake Marlowe would make a fabulous dinner companion. Just not during a full moon -- Justin Cronin, author of The Passage * * New York Times * *
Loaded with beautifully constructed lunatic ravings ... A sublime study in literary elegance. It is bloody (and) brilliant. * * Independent on Sunday * *
A magnificent novel. A brutal, indignant, lunatic howl. A sexy, blood-spattered page-turner, beautifully crafted and full of genuine suspense, that tears the thorax out of the horror genre to create something that stands rapturous and majestic and entirely on its own. -- NICK CAVE
Sexy, funny, blisteringly intelligent ... Duncan is the cleverest literary horror merchant since Bram Stoker. -- Kate Saunders * * The Times * *
Duncan's monstrous narrator makes for memorably rambunctious company * * Times Literary Supplement * *
A brilliantly original thriller, a love story, a witty treatise on male (and female) urges, even an existential musing on what it is to be human. * * Word Magazine * *
The Last Werewolf is written with such scandalous ferocity and such grizzly humour it feels like the literary equivalent of howling at the moon. Not since Lon Chaney and John Landis has lycanthropy been such a blast, and Glen Duncan offers more danger, gristle and lunatic brilliance per sentence than any writer I can think of. -- MATT HAIG
Remarkable for its humour, eloquence and self-aware intelligence. A deeply human narrative about the nature of story itself. -- STELLA DUFFY
Absolutely brilliant. A surreal, dark and unsettling tale that really did put the bite back into the supernatural. In short, I got a real kick out of it. -- Russel McLean
I could say that The Last Werewolf is smart, thrilling, funny, moving, beautifully written, and a joy to read, and this would all be true. But it would also be a woeful understatement of what Glen Duncan has accomplished with his extraordinary novel. The only useful thing I can offer you is a simple admonishment. Stop reading my words, and start reading his. Trust me: you'll be happy you did. * * Scott Smith, author of A SIMPLE PLAN and THE RUINS * *
Okay, no hyperbole, just an admission: I loved this novel. It's a howl, a rager, a scream. May The Last Werewolf put a stake through the heart of humorless, overwrought vampire sagas. Two big thumb-claws up! -- Chris Bohjalian, author of Secrets of Eden, The Double Bind, and Midwives
A sharp, sometimes savage observer of the human condition, whose talents are as many as the legions of Hell. (On I, Lucifer) -- Matthew Baylis
One of the hottest literary properties of the new century. (On I, Lucifer) * * Independent on Sunday * *
Duncan's harrowing story raises the question: Is it time to kick vampires to the curb? * * USA Today * *
Duncan's take on the werewolf tale is rich and black and refreshingly novel. * * Time Magazine * *
Carnal and edgy, with gallons of gore, Duncan's smart horror novel about a werewolf who falls in love while trying to evade capture reworks lycanthropic tropes with a hallucinogenic vividness * * Daily Telegraph * *
Dense with literary allusion as well as thrills and spills, it's the antithesis to Twilight -- Justine Jordan * * Guardian * *
Duncan's gothic satire posits an intruiging suggestion that reality TV has obviated our psychological need for the beast -- Alfred Hickling * * Guardian * *
Carnal and Edgy, with gallons of gore, Duncan's smart horror novel...reworks lycanthropic topes with a hallucinogenic vividness * * Sunday Telegraph * *
An enjoyable horror-thriller with a literary touch * * Sunday Herald * *
Author Bio
Glen Duncan was born in Bolton and studied philosophy and literature at Lancaster University. His first novel, Hope, was published in 1997, and has been followed by five further novels: Love Remains; I, Lucifer, shortlisted for the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize; Weathercock; Death of an Ordinary Man; The Bloodstone Papers; A Day and A Night and A Day; and The Last Werewolf. He lives in London.