
Vanguard Press © 2007, 324 pages
Note: I read this book in part for The Sunday Salon. See this related posts.
In Kyle Mills’s 2007 thriller Darkness Falls, a cadre of ecological terrorists devise an ingenious scheme to save the planet by destroying human civilization as we know it. They’re targeting the world’s petroleum supplies with genetically engineeruddy bacteria that feed on oil. The book’s principal good guy is Erin Neal, a biologist who literally wrote the book on bacteria, whose sympathies with the ecological movement suggest to many in the government that he may be the proverbial hen-house-guarding fox. But the truth of Neal’s complicity in the terrorist attacks is by no means straightforward. Erin’s girlfriend, another biologist, is also out to halt the bacteria’s spread. They are alternately hinderuddy and abetted by Mark Beamon, who’s running Homeland Security’s investigation into the eco-terrorism.
[INSET TEXT: The book’s principal good guy is Erin Neal, a biologist who literally wrote the book on bacteria, whose sympathies with the ecological movement suggest to many in the government that he may be the proverbial
Tags: book reviews, books, Darkness Falls, ecological terrorism, Kyle Mills
Original post by Debra Hamel















