The Vampires of Finistere
A beautiful virgin is abducted in a ceremony which begins as a Breton village carnival and ends as a diabolic fertility rite. For Nick Brooke, Margot's disappearance means not only the loss of the girl he loves – but the revenge of her superhumanly strong father. It is a job for The Guardians – whose investigations will uncover an evil network of witchcraft, sorcery and devil-worship, protecting a sinister town that Time Forgot, guarded by insatiable werewolves and the incarnation of the legendary sea-vampires of Finistere.
Readers also enjoyed
Peter Saxon
Peter Saxon was a house pseudonym used by various authors of British pulp fiction, among them
- W Howard Baker (Danger Ahead 1958, The Killing Bone 1968 and Vampire's Moon 1972)
- Rex Dolphin (The Vampires of Finistère 1968)
- Stephen D Frances (The Disorientated Man aka Scream and Scream Again 1966, Black Honey 1968, and
- Corruption 1968)
- Wilfred McNeilly (The Darkest Night 1966, Dark Ways to Death 1966, Satan's Child 1967, The Torturer 1967, and The Haunting of Alan Mais 1969)
- Ross Richards (Through the Dark Curtain 1968)
- Martin Thomas (The Curse of Rathlaw 1968).
The Guardians
The Guardians consists of four primary books, and includes two additional books that complement the series but are not considered mandatory reads. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.
