
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









