The Dungeonmaster's Apprentice
Mark Ramsden(Author)
Serpent's Tail (Publisher)
Published on 28. October 1999
Book
Paperback/Softback
224 pages
978-1-85242-623-1 (ISBN)
Description
Matt and his partner the Supreme Ogress Sasha, a 5' 2" dominatrix have fled New York leaving a trail of bodies behind them. Back in London ripping off the fetish scene, their daily routine is abruptly shattered by a sinister death threat from the Dungeonmaster's Apprentice. To make matters worse, the threat comes delivered in a highly undesirable package containing the skull of a dead cat, Matt and Sasha's names written backwards in what can only be blood, and a picture of them torn to shreds. An unfortunate fatality at a fetish event and Sasha's desire to infiltrate a neo-Nazi sect do not set them back on the road to safety and they are sucked into the unpredictable realm of the occult...
Reviews / Votes
?You ll laugh along until your piercings ache * Time Out ?The Dungeonmaster?s Apprentice has disturbing undercurrents that will make it linger in your memory like a prolonged whipping. A worthy follow-up to a truly skewed original? Forum ?Fine black-hearted fun? Time Out *More details
Edition
Main
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Profile Books Ltd
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
Thickness: 16 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-85242-623-1 (9781852426231)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Mark Ramsden was born on a Friday 13th and is a founder member of the Black Church of Eternal Hellfire. He is the author of The Dungeonmaster's Apprentice and The Dark Magus and the Sacred Whore, and has contributed to numerous magazines including Fetish Times. He also collaborated with the photographer Housk Randall, providing the text for Radical Desire.
Much of Mark's adult life has been spent playing saxophone, enjoying countless worthy, if obscure, jazz projects.
Much of Mark's adult life has been spent playing saxophone, enjoying countless worthy, if obscure, jazz projects.