Wasteland King, Lilith Saintcrow
Wasteland King, Lilith Saintcrow
List: $24.99 | Sale: $17.50
Club: $12.49

Wasteland King

Author: Lilith Saintcrow

Narrator: Joe Knezevich

Unabridged: 8 hr 32 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Orbit

Published: 07/26/2016


Synopsis

The thrilling conclusion to New York Times bestselling author Lilith Saintcrow's dark fantasy series where the faery world inhabits diners, dive bars and trailer parks.

The plague has broken loose, the Wild Hunt is riding, and the balance of power in the sidhe realms is still shifting. The Unseelie King has a grudge against Jeremiah Gallow, but it will have to wait. For he needs Gallow's services for a very delicate mission -- and the prize for success is survival itself.

In order to save both Robin Ragged and himself, Gallow will have to do the unspeakable. . .

About Lilith Saintcrow

Lilith Saintcrow lives in Vancouver, Washington, with her two children, dogs, cats, and assorted other strays. She fell in love with writing in second grade and has never stopped.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Suz on August 10, 2016

2.5 stars I have to be honest, this series confused me. I wanted to love it, and I do love Saintcrow's prose, but the story itself fell pretty flat until the very end, then it was pretty much just disappointing. The series read like a 3 book chase scene written in descriptive style that felt expositor......more

Goodreads review by Kit (Metaphors and Moonlight) on March 07, 2019

3.5 Stars Review: This was the third and final book of the series, so I was invested in the characters and wanted to know what would happen to them, especially Jeremiah and Alastair, but I was a little disappointed in this book. It was kind of just the same basic plot as the others. People chasing, peo......more

Goodreads review by dane on August 27, 2024

It’s crazy to think I DNF’ed book one in February and then picked it back up and read the entire series back to back. It wasn’t the best ending but overall it was a great series, I wish there was more! Nothing groundbreaking or complex, but nice Summer reads. Eager to check out more of Saintcrow’s w......more

Goodreads review by Kathy on May 31, 2018

Third and last in the Gallow and Ragged dark urban fantasy series and revolving around a rebellious trio of half-human, half-fae. My Take This was sad, fulfilling, sad, and oh, dang, just plain sad. I need to read something upbeat after this. And I find myself hoping that Saintcrow will figure out a w......more

Goodreads review by Nicole on April 16, 2025

Rate: 3.5/5 Content Warning: Graphic- violence, drug use Moderate- child abuse, emotional abuse, murder, cursing, alcohol Minor- vomit, addiction So, I have read all 3 books in the Gallow and Ragged trilogy. I enjoyed the first book, I felt the second book was an improvement, and I did feel like the thir......more


Quotes

"Brings the series to a satisfying close with tightly paced action and compelling characters."—Library Journal on Wasteland King

"Lilith Saintcrow spins an incredibly imaginative and delicious tale with vivid language and a story you will not be able to put down. I loved every minute!"—Darynda Jones on Trailer Park Fae

"A true faery story, creepy and heroic by turns. Love and hope and a touch of Midsummer Night's Dream. I could not put it down."—Patricia Briggs on Trailer Park Fae

"Saintcrow deftly mixes high-minded fantasy magic with rough, real-world rust using prose that veers between the beautiful and the bloodcurdling. Honestly, I wish I'd written it."—Chuck Wendig on Trailer Park Fae

"Unique, twisted, lovely, and raw. Just fabulous."—Faith Hunter on Trailer Park Fae

"Painfully honest, beautifully strange, and absolutely worth your time. Lilith Saintcrow is at the top of her game. Don't miss this."—Seanan McGuire on Trailer Park Fae

"Saintcrow's urban fantasy series launch is expertly crafted with heartbreak and mistrust, far darker and lovelier than the title suggests... Saintcrow's artful, poignant descriptions remain with the reader long after the tale's end, as does the persistent sense of dark, unsettling unease."—Publishers Weekly on Trailer Park Fae