[By Blood We Live] [By: Duncan, Glen] [November, 2014]
The Last Werewolf / Bloodlines Trilogy • Book 3
by Glen Duncan
Why You'll Love This
A 20,000-year-old vampire and a werewolf mother are drawn together by something older than memory — and the series ends where genre fiction rarely dares to go.
- Great if you want: dark, literary horror with genuine emotional and philosophical weight
- The experience: intense and brooding — erotic, violent, and unexpectedly moving
- The writing: Duncan's prose is dense, self-aware, and razor-sharp about human contradiction
- Skip if: you haven't read the first two — this won't work as a standalone
About This Book
In the concluding chapter of Glen Duncan's Bloodlines Trilogy, Talulla Demetriou has carved out something resembling a life—twin children, a devoted lover, a fragile domesticity—despite the small inconvenience of transforming into a flesh-hungry werewolf each month. But equilibrium never lasts. An ancient vampire named Remshi, twenty thousand years old and still haunted by a love he cannot name, keeps pulling at the edges of her world. What unfolds is a collision of desire, survival, and identity that forces every character to reckon with what they owe the living, the dead, and themselves.
Duncan writes literary horror the way very few authors dare to: with genuine philosophical weight, bleak humor, and prose that is simultaneously visceral and achingly precise. He doesn't use the supernatural as mere backdrop—he uses it to tear open questions about mortality, longing, and what it costs to keep going when your very nature is a source of destruction. The trilogy's finale rewards patient readers with a voice that has grown richer and more conflicted across three books, arriving at an ending that earns its emotional violence.