Hell exists. It is a real, geological, historical place beneath our very feet. And it is inhabited savagely.In an intense and imaginative tour de force, New York Times bestselling author Jeff Long takes readers into the depths of the earth where a primordial intelligence waits in the darkness.
A decade has passed since doomed explorers unveiled a nightmare of tunnels and rivers honeycombing the earth's depths. After millennia of suffering terror and predation, humanity's armies descended to destroy the ancient hordes. Deep beneath the Pacific Ocean, a doomed science expedition killed the subterraneans' fabled leader, and suddenly it seemed that evil was dead and all was right with the world again.
Now Deeper arrives to explode that complacency and plunge us back into the sunless abyss. Hell boils up through America's subways and basements to take its revenge and steal our children. Against the backdrop of a looming war with China, a crusade of volunteers races to find the vestiges of a lost race. But a lone explorer, the linguist Ali von Schade, learns that a far greater menace lies in the unexplored heart of the planet. The real Satan can't be killed, and he has been waiting since the beginning of time to gain his freedom. Man and his pitiless enemies are mere pawns in the greatest escape ever devised.
Mesmerizing and concussive, this darkly brilliant work of imagination galvanizes Jeff Long's reputation as a prodigious talent. At once a love story, the ultimate thriller, and an extreme adventure, Deeper will leave you breathless.
Industry Reviews
The old ones were right. Hell is a real place, underground, right where they said it would be. Time to fix that hole in the basement.Long, who flirted with the supernatural in The Reckoning (2004) and scared the bejeebers out of armchair mountain climbers with The Wall (2006), sends armies of characters climbing miles underground into the tunnels, caverns, trenches, streams and rivers comprising Hades, for millennia the home of Hadads, Homo sapiens' older, smarter cousins. Hadads, who didn't hesitate to chow down on their surface-dwelling kinfolk when attacked by the munchies, were civilized ages before anything like writing or arithmetic spread through Europe or China. As a matter of fact, it was Hadads who tipped us off to most of our useful "discoveries." None of that ancient savvy was, however, enough to protect them against greedy humans armed with 21st-century weaponry or good old fatal viruses, which wiped out the Hadads shortly after the family reunion. Or, rather, almost wiped them out. In the near future - as World Powers are busy carving out underground spheres of influence in order to tap the tremendous wealth beneath their feet, engendering competition as fierce and formidable as any in the cold war era - Hadads reappear. They stage a stunning raid on Halloween night, snatching nubile and nearly nubile girls and dragging them below to become mothers to a new generation of Hadads. But Americans don't surrender their daughters. Many sly references to present-day politics and postures keep what is essentially a very gloomy trip from total darkness. (Kirkus Reviews)