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Monster Island: A Zombie Novel

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As a zombie fan, I was eager to pick this up after reading the synopsis.  Other than a few holes in the story, and the fact that David Wellington has decided to throw in ‘thinking, conscious, zombies’ into the mix is questionable.  Just recently I’ve found that you can read this book online at brokentype.com so at least you can get an idea of the writing.  I would clearly recommend this book to any zombie fan out there, but will have to be cautious about his second book in the series, Monster Nation,  I’m half way through it, and have started to consider throwing it in the garbage, especially after he introduced the lead zombie character as being able to become invisible on demand, which is needless to say NOT artistic merit, but complete idiocy when writing about this genre.

A couple of editorials from Amazon that might be of interest…

From Publishers Weekly

In Wellington’s energetic horror debut, the first of a promised trilogy, Manhattan has become Monster Island after a plague has turned all its denizens into shambling, rotting animated corpses, except for a couple who have kept their intelligence and also acquired psychic powers. When an expedition from Africa arrives, composed of teenage girl-soldiers and a former U.N. weapons inspector, the zombie masters mobilize their forces to kill or eat the living humans. Page by page, the story is inventive and exciting as Wellington exploits his familiarity with New York’s nooks and crannies as settings for flesh-chomping battles and narrow escapes. As a whole, though, the book satisfies less since the author selectively forgets anything about the situation or the characters that would inhibit further gross-out episodes. Still, the novel offers some provocative thoughts about the purpose of life and death underlaid with some ultra-dark humor. (May) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

This is a zombie novel–a fantastic zombie novel. Most of the world has fallen to the undead, with pockets of survivors clinging to a precarious existence. At the behest of the leader of the Free Women’s Republic of Somaliland, a shipload of those makes the ludicrous trip from Africa to New York in a desperate quest for medicine. New York is a wasteland, and everything depends on a small, incredibly dedicated band of teenage girls, armed to the teeth, and native guide Dekalb, formerly a UN arms inspector. Also, in NYC there is Gary, a zombie who, completely unexpectedly, retains live human mental faculties. The questers get ringside seats for some of the apocalypse’s finest moments, and no matter how prepared they thought they were, something worse awaits in the depths of New York. When zombies have already overrun everything, that’s saying something. There are many layers to this zombie apocalypse, and this book just gets things rolling. Stay tuned. Regina Schroeder Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Senior Citizens Help Young Children with Reading – and Relationships

Ageless Friendship: "Grandpa" Paul Bookout welcomes kindergarteners to school at Grace Living Center. Credit: Darren Parker

At the same time every morning, Paul Bookout sits impatiently in his wheelchair, looking out the front door of the Grace Living Center. Hes not waiting for family visitors, and hes not longing to be away from this nursing home. Hes waiting for the children. Just before 9 a.m., a stream of five-year-olds comes through the door, calling out greetings and hugging their “Grandpa Paul.” Though Bookout cant speak as a result of a stroke, he points and smiles with delight as he follows these kindergartners to the door of their classroom, here in the nursing home.

The Grace Living Center is home to two classrooms of about 60 kindergarten and prekindergarten students, as well as to 170 elders, who are “grandmas” and “grandpas” to the students. Kids attend the center in lieu of the first two grades at another school in the district, then switch at the start of first grade.

Far from just a heartwarming partnership, the school housed in the GLC provides students with daily mentors in their academic and social development, yielding proven results in reading and vocabulary. Its success has inspired the opening of a similar school in Kansas and is a model for intergenerational learning, even in more traditional settings.

The partnership came about in 1998, when Don Greiner, president of an Oklahoma nursing home chain, started construction on a facility in Jenks. Noticing a school district-owned daycare center next door, Greiner approached the district about upgrading the playground, thinking that the sight of kids playing could uplift his residents. The idea of a collaboration snowballed as the GLC and Jenks Public Schools found that their goals aligned.

The GLC works to eliminate loneliness, helplessness, and boredom in aging populations; the district’s curricular vision, says Shan Glandon, director of curriculum and instruction, is “to make learning as engaging and purposeful as we can,” focusing on integrating content with real-world ties. Eventually, all parties agreed to create two classrooms inside the nursing home; the GLC paid about $200,000 for construction and leased the space to the district for $1 a year.

School and nursing home are integrated in both physical design and curricular planning. Classrooms wrap around the beauty shop and between the GLC’s atrium and dining hall. Sliding glass doors open onto the hallway, and pane-free windows allow children’s voices to float through the home. Parents drop kids off at the GLC’s front door: They snake through the home to get to class. And elders maneuver their wheelchairs up to huge windows to watch kids play on the playground, or go out to the play area themselves.

To ensure curricular ties, the GLC employs a full-time liaison — the energetic Elaine Arnold — who identifies mentoring opportunities for every interested resident and is present any time kids are with elders. The district allocates time for Glandon to meet regularly with Arnold and the teachers, and every four to six weeks, the group reviews the curriculum taught in all 30 of the district’s kindergarten classes, identifies unit objectives, discusses skills they should reinforce, and brainstorms activities in which grandmas and grandpas can help students learn.

The curricular hallmark of the partnership is “book buddies,” which pairs rotating groups of elders and kindergarten students who read to one another for about 30 minutes several times a week. Grandpa Charles “Charlie” Lamson, who moved to the GLC after suffering a stroke, has participated for about a year. “I always start out saying, ‘Are you going to read to me?’ ” says Grandpa Charlie, a tall man wearing a Tulsa Drillers baseball cap. “It’s such a good feeling to just listen, read along, and help with words,” he explains. “I know how important it is to learn to read, and if I can read to them now, that’s a big help down the line.”

Grandpa Charlie is right. Since 2004, the Jenks Public Schools has tracked the number of students entering first grade whose reading skills are below grade level. Consistently, a smaller percentage of students from the GLC have required reading intervention once they entered first grade than those who attended prekindergarten or kindergarten at the nearby West Elementary School, which has a similar population but no intergenerational partners; for the last three years, the difference has been about 10 percent.

Another key program is “shared study,” in which elders join small groups of kindergartners in hands-on activities. On the day of my visit, Grandma Irene rolled her wheelchair up to a round table where a handful of kids were creating books of fall leaves. She talked about making Christmas ornaments from leaves as a child, and throughout the activity helped students measure, color, describe textures, and make rubbings. Earlier in the month, students had made scarecrows while elders talked about growing up on farms; they worked together guesstimating the circumference of pumpkins. During a unit on senses, residents helped with taste tests.

According to kindergartner Liam, “We do activities, like trying new food. I tried a mint leaf and dark chocolate. I like school better with grandmas and grandpas.”

Site principal Suzanne Lair says shared study is developmentally appropriate for both groups. “Things like cutting and pasting with the kids helps the residents not lose those motor skills,” she adds.

Dramatic play is also important, as residents join prekindergarten students in enacting a scenario connected to the unit of study. Using props and costumes to set the scene — like Thanksgiving dinner, a vacation, a trip to the doctor’s office — the teacher gets the ball rolling, then kids, grandmas, and grandpas begin improvising. “This is all in the service of language development, interacting with vocabulary,” says Lair.

To promote connections between the generations, teachers look at class themes through the lens of “then and now.” In the My Classroom unit, for instance, students and elders compared how they traveled to school; in Healthy Habits, they discussed lunch choices and options from the past and today. Sometimes those discussions become big books created by the students and elders.

Although all Jenks schools weave instruction of core values — compassion, responsibility, perseverance, for instance — into the curriculum, GLC students learn in an environment where those lessons are naturally reinforced. Lair says, “Students’ understanding of respect takes on a whole different meaning as they learn about respecting the individual homes of the grandmas and grandpas within the nursing home. They learn about responsibility and self-discipline when they see the grandmas and grandpas coming to read with them every day. They experience tolerance and acceptance of physical differences when there is a resident who carries an oxygen tank or has difficulty speaking.”

Instructors teach these core values explicitly, too. Following the Tribes program philosophy, in which a sense of safety and tribe-like community is incorporated into the classroom, teachers define and model ideas like “good listening.”

At the beginning of the school year, and before any new activity with elders, Arnold prepares kids with discussions, posters, and a review of the rules. “I say, ‘Grandpa Buddy was in the war and lost a leg. Should we talk about people without feet or legs?’ I let children share about that.” Mundane school rules have urgency at the GLC; students who don’t maintain ordered lines might be in the way of an ambulance worker with a gurney or a frail elder with a walker. Arnold says, “I tell them point blank, ‘If we knock Grandma down, she might break her hip.’”

Rich social and emotional learning comes as a response to the environment. Kids observe teachers greeting and touching the grandmas and grandpas, asking them questions. Prekindergarten students visit residents in their rooms, learning to knock and asking permission to enter. Arnold talks to children individually if they show any disrespect or lack of compassion. And death is dealt with head on. A few years ago, when a grandparent died, the class brainstormed how to support the family. “They ended up creating a book, with each child contributing a page about his or her best memory of the person,” says Lair. “They took a real-life event and applied skills they’d learned — in writing, storytelling, and compassion.”

“Here, we have elders, who our society has parked somewhere, having that impact. This is an opportunity for them to mean something and be something.”

Not only do kids learn about difference, illness, and aging in a supportive environment, but elders gain a real sense of purpose. “These kids are better readers because the grandmas and grandpas are there reading to them five days a week,” says GLC president Don Greiner. “Here, we have elders, who our society has parked somewhere, having that impact. This is an opportunity for them to mean something and be something.”

The relationships built in the academic work spill over into the home’s social events, too. Grandpa Charlie appreciates even the smallest acknowledgments from kids at weekly ice cream socials. “You’re sitting there eating and a kid you worked with in the morning will come up and ask, ‘What kind are you having, Grandpa Charlie?’ and it almost tears your heart out,” he says, choking up, “that they would remember me.”

Teachers, too, reap the benefits. “I’ve learned more about the stages in our lives,” says prekindergarten teacher Glenda Fitzgerald. “When you become a teacher, you want your kids to succeed, you want to see children learning and growing. The bonus here is that you also get to see the elders grow and learn. I get goose bumps about both.”

This article was also published in the February 2009 issue of Edutopia magazine as “No Generation Gap Here”.

A reference to this story was also included in the book ‘The Element – How finding your passion changes everything’ by Ken Robinson and Lou Aronica

via Senior Citizens Help Young Children with Reading — and Relationships | Edutopia.

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Apple’s Tablet Could Be Print Industry’s Lifeboat

The more you think about it, the more obvious it is that an Apple tablet would specialize in reviving dead-tree media (i.e., newspapers, magazines and books). All the rumors suggest the device would be a larger iPod Touch/iPhone with a 10-inch screen. Previously Wired.com argued that redefining print would would be a logical purpose for a gadget this size, and Gizmodo today has even more details to prove that this is Apple’s goal with the tablet.

Gizmodo’s Brian Lam cites two people related to The New York Times, who claim Apple approached them to talk about repurposing the newspaper onto a “new device.” Lam notes that Jobs has called the Times the “best newspaper in the world” in past keynotes. (I recall him saying that when introducing the iPhone’s web browser at Macworld Expo 2007.)

Lam proceeds to cite a vice president in textbook publishing who claims publishers McGraw-Hill and Oberlin Press are collaborating with Apple to move textbooks to the iTunes Store. The possible distribution model would involve a DRM’ed “one-time-use” book, which could spell out to lots of money for publishers while reducing pricing of e-books for consumers.

Lastly, Lam claims several executives from magazines met at Apple’s Cupertino campus to demonstrate their ideas on the future of publishing, where they presented mockups of magazines in interactive form.

Those are all strong data points, and we agree with the overall argument. Wired.com in July speculated that an Apple tablet, in addition to an e-book section in iTunes, would be a killer combination to compete against Amazon’s Kindle and e-book store. We suggested an à-la-carte purchase model for textbooks so students could download single chapters as opposed to purchasing entire books. The suggestion from Lam’s sources about a DRM’ed “one-time-use” book would probably be a more attractive model for publishers.

Meanwhile, Amazon recently launched a pilot program with some universities to determine how to sell Kindle-compatible textbooks in the Amazon.com e-book store. It doesn’t appear to be going well: Princeton students are complaining the Kindle DX is disappointing and difficult to use, according to a Fox News report. We’re not surprised: In May, Wired.com polled students on their impression of the Kindle DX as a replacement for textbooks, and most of them dismissed the idea. Apple has a clear opportunity to seize the e-publishing market, and it appears the company has that precisely in mind.

via Apple’s Tablet Could Be Print Industry’s Lifeboat | Gadget Lab | Wired.com.

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The Elements | Theodore Gray

Source: Wired.com

Source: Wired.com

The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe

By: Theodore Gray

This magical book is a totally original collection that features gorgeous, never-before-seen photographic representations of the 118 elements in the periodic table – plus facts, figures and fascinating stories about each one!

The elements are what we, and everything around us, are made of. But how many elements have you seen in their pure, raw, uncombined form? This book provides that rare opportunity…

Based on five years of research and photography, the pictures presented in this book make up the most complete and visually arresting representation available to the naked eye of every atom in the universe.

For a document that organizes the building blocks of everything in the universe, the periodic table is awfully dull. Enter science writer Theodore Gray. He spent years collecting and photographing samples of elements from aluminum to zinc, and his book The Elements is a loving reimagination of the classic table, detailing not only atomic weight and structure but also how each substance is used. Where would we be without brittle, iridescent bismuth, the active ingredient in Pepto-Bismol?

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And if the book doesn’t tickle your boat, his award winning website Theodoregray.com which isn’t musc to look at, but has content that would blow your mind, you can also see his periodic table in all it’s glory at theodoregray.com or periodictable.com for the interactive version.

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World War Z by Max Brooks

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“The end was near.” —Voices from the Zombie War

The Zombie War came unthinkably close to eradicating humanity. Max Brooks, driven by the urgency of preserving the acid-etched first-hand experiences of the survivors from those apocalyptic years, traveled across the United States of America and throughout the world, from decimated cities that once teemed with upwards of thirty million souls to the most remote and inhospitable areas of the planet. He recorded the testimony of men, women, and sometimes children who came face-to-face with the living, or at least the undead, hell of that dreadful time. World War Z is the result. Never before have we had access to a document that so powerfully conveys the depth of fear and horror, and also the ineradicable spirit of resistance, that gripped human society through the plague years.

Ranging from the now infamous village of New Dachang in the United Federation of China, where the epidemiological trail began with the twelve-year-old Patient Zero, to the unnamed northern forests where untold numbers sought a terrible and temporary refuge in the cold, to the United States of Southern Africa, where the Redeker Plan provided hope for humanity at an unspeakable price, to the west-of-the-Rockies redoubt where the North American tide finally started to turn, this invaluable chronicle reflects the full scope and duration of the Zombie War.

Most of all, the book captures with haunting immediacy the human dimension of this epochal event. Facing the often raw and vivid nature of these personal accounts requires a degree of courage on the part of the reader, but the effort is invaluable because, as Mr. Brooks says in his introduction, “By excluding the human factor, aren’t we risking the kind of personal detachment from history that may, heaven forbid, lead us one day to repeat it? And in the end, isn’t the human factor the only true difference between us and the enemy we now refer to as ‘the living dead’?”

Note: Some of the numerical and factual material contained in this edition was previously published under the auspices of the United Nations Postwar Commission.

Eyewitness reports from the first truly global war

“I found ‘Patient Zero’ behind the locked door of an abandoned apartment across town. . . . His wrists and feet were bound with plastic packing twine. Although he’d rubbed off the skin around his bonds, there was no blood. There was also no blood on his other wounds. . . . He was writhing like an animal; a gag muffled his growls. At first the villagers tried to hold me back. They warned me not to touch him, that he was ‘cursed.’ I shrugged them off and reached for my mask and gloves. The boy’s skin was . . . cold and gray . . . I could find neither his heartbeat nor his pulse.” —Dr. Kwang Jingshu, Greater Chongqing, United Federation of China

“‘Shock and Awe’? Perfect name. . . . But what if the enemy can’t be shocked and awed? Not just won’t, but biologically can’t! That’s what happened that day outside New York City, that’s the failure that almost lost us the whole damn war. The fact that we couldn’t shock and awe Zack boomeranged right back in our faces and actually allowed Zack to shock and awe us! They’re not afraid! No matter what we do, no matter how many we kill, they will never, ever be afraid!” —Todd Wainio, former U.S. Army infantryman and veteran of the Battle of Yonkers

“Two hundred million zombies. Who can even visualize that type of number, let alone combat it? . . . For the first time in history, we faced an enemy that was actively waging total war. They had no limits of endurance. They would never negotiate, never surrender. They would fight until the very end because, unlike us, every single one of them, every second of every day, was devoted to consuming all life on Earth.” —General Travis D’Ambrosia, Supreme Allied Commander, Europe

THE AUTHOR: Max Brooks’s previous book, THE ZOMBIE SURVIVAL GUIDE, formed the core of the world’s civilian survival manuals during the Zombie War. Mr. Brooks subsequently spent years traveling to every part of the globe in order to conduct the face-to-face interviews that have been incorporated into this present publication.

REVIEW: This is my all time favourite Zombie book, and from what I can tell, there’s no shortage of fans either.  Rumour has it that the film is coming out in 2010.

via World War Z by Max Brooks, author of The Zombie Survival Guide – Hardcover – Random House.

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Contagious by Scott Sigler

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Across America, a mysterious pathogen transforms ordinary people into raging killers, psychopaths driven by a terrifying, alien agenda. The human race fights back, yet after every battle the disease responds, adapts, using sophisticated strategies and brilliant ruses to fool its pursuers. The only possible explanation: the epidemic is driven not by evolution but by some malevolent intelligence.

Standing against this unimaginable threat is a small group, assembled under the strictest secrecy. Their best weapon is hulking former football star Perry Dawsey, left psychologically shattered by his own struggles with this terrible enemy, who possesses an unexplainable ability to locate the disease’s hosts. Violent and unpredictable, Perry is both the nation’s best hope and a terrifying liability. Hardened CIA veteran Dew Phillips must somehow forge a connection with him if they’re going to stand a chance against this maddeningly adaptable opponent. Alongside them is Margaret Montoya, a brilliant epidemiologist who fights for a cure even as she reels under the weight of endless horrors.

These three and their team have kept humanity in the game, but that’s not good enough anymore, not when the disease turns contagious, triggering a fast countdown to Armageddon. Meanwhile, other enemies join the battle, and a new threat — one that comes from a most unexpected source — may ultimately prove the most dangerous of all.

The Author: SCOTT SIGLER’s fiction podcasts have drawn a huge and devoted following. His serialized stories have held the number one position in all the podcast indexes, including iTunes. Scott’s first hardcover release, Infected, was translated into a dozen languages and is being adapted for film by Random House Films/Rogue Pictures. Scott lives in San Francisco with his wife and their dog.

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The Living Dead – Edited by John Joseph Adams

Publishers Note: From White Zombie to Dawn of the Dead; from Resident Evil to World War Z, zombies have invaded popular culture, becoming the monsters that best express the fears and anxieties of the modern west. The ultimate consumers, zombies rise from the dead and feed upon the living, their teeming masses ever hungry, ever seeking to devour or convert, like mindless, faceless eating machines. Zombies have been depicted as mind-controlled minions, the shambling infected, the disintegrating dead, the ultimate lumpenproletariat, but in all cases, they reflect us, mere mortals afraid of death in a society on the verge of collapse.

Gathering together the best zombie literature of the last three decades from many of today’s most renowned authors of fantasy, speculative fiction, and horror, including Stephen King, Harlan Ellison, Robert Silverberg, George R. R. Martin, Clive Barker, Poppy Z. Brite, Neil Gaiman, Joe Hill, Laurell K. Hamilton, and Joe R. Lansdale, The Living Dead, covers the broad spectrum of zombie fiction. The zombies of The Living Dead range from Romero-style zombies to reanimated corpses to voodoo zombies and beyond.

Edited by John Joseph Adams (Wastelands), The Living Dead is 230,000 words of zombie fiction (34 stories!), collecting the best tales from Book of the Dead, Still Dead, and Mondo Zombie, along with the best zombie fiction from other sources.

Table of Contents:

  • Introduction – John Joseph Adams
  • This Year’s Class Picture – Dan Simmons
  • Some Zombie Contingency Plans – Kelly Link
  • Death and Suffrage – Dale Bailey
  • Ghost Dance – Sherman Alexie
  • Blossom – David J. Schow
  • The Third Dead Body – Nina Kiriki Hoffman
  • The Dead – Michael Swanwick
  • The Dead Kid – Darrell Schweitzer
  • Malthusian’s Zombie – Jeffrey Ford
  • Beautiful Stuff – Susan Palwick
  • Sex, Death and Starshine – Clive Barker
  • Stockholm Syndrome – David Tallerman
  • Bobby Conroy Comes Back From the Dead – Joe Hill
  • Those Who Seek Forgiveness – Laurell K. Hamilton
  • In Beauty, Like the Night – Norman Partridge
  • Prairie – Brian Evenson
  • Everything is Better With Zombies – Hannah Wolf Bowen
  • Home Delivery – Stephen King
  • Less Than Zombie – Douglas E. Winter
  • Sparks Fly Upward – Lisa Morton
  • Meathouse Man – George R. R. Martin
  • Deadman’s Road – Joe Lansdale
  • The Skull-Faced Boy – David Barr Kirtley
  • The Age of Sorrow – Nancy Kilpatrick
  • Bitter Grounds – Neil Gaiman
  • She’s Taking Her Tits to the Grave – Catherine Cheek
  • Dead Like Me – Adam-Troy Castro
  • Zora and the Zombie – Andy Duncan
  • Calcutta, Lord of Nerves – Poppy Z. Brite
  • Followed – Will McIntosh
  • The Song the Zombie Sang – Harlan Ellison and Robert Silverberg
  • Passion Play – Nancy Holder
  • Almost the Last Story by Almost the Last Man – Scott Edelman
  • How the Day Runs Down – John Langan

Review: This was a fantastic read from beginning to end, and at 500 pages, and such a collection of stories, it was a long read.  I must admit that I skipped 2 stories that were completely off the plot; and to me this is an issue.  If you’re going to collect stories about the living dead, I don’t want to end up reading a short story with vague references to Zombies; I must admit that some of them were entertaining, but really far off the point.

Regardless of what I think, this was well received as a gift, and I’m ready to order his first collection “Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse”

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