Quote:
The basic premise is that monsters from B-movies (werewolves, zombies, vampires, chupacabras, that kind of thing) are real, and there are monster-killing companies that eliminate them. The government wants to keep the monsters' existence under wraps, so the companies operate covertly. Monster Hunter International is pretty much the best of the best at this, and Owen Pitt, after being attacked by his werewolf boss, is recruited to them. Pretty interesting.
If you think it sounds stupid, you ought to take note of this: it's a New York Times best-seller.
Stunningly well-written, too.
Wow, I don't think that's stupid at all!
Anything involving governments hiding things, operating under radar and other stuff like that is cool. I reckon it adds excitement to the whole thing - I can't stand remantic stories where nothing happen.
Many reviews put it this way: It's got guns, action, violence, humor, monsters, more guns, more monsters, and violent action with guns against monsters, which is often humorous. My kind of story.