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J.
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Aug 01, 2013 11:55AM

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I am just a reader.

Nice to meet you guys. Really grateful David sent me your way!

I am a huge fan of zombie movies and it's mine and my sisters' hobby to find all different kinds of zombie movies from the classics to the b-flick, c-flick, and utterly terrible. So I figured I would do the same with books. It's the reason I joined this group.
So, that's a little about me. So far I've seen a lot of awesome threads on this group and hope I can participate a lot more in the future. :)

I am pleased to see just how jumped up to say hello.
While David has met his quota, Please do not let that stop you from posting.
Our group desperately needs more active members.
Its been about a month since the new moderators stepped up to help bring some shape to our groups. They are doing an awesome job, Thanks Jim and Elizabeth :D
I hope to see each of you through the threads. I've read most of the recently active threads. (There are a lot of dead threads that I haven't gotten too).
Once again David, my hat goes off to you. You caught me by surprise.
Respectfully,
Tammy K.



Glad I could motivate you! This is a cool group. Dive in.

I am impressed.
Ok. a deal, is a deal. You won yourself a buddy read.
I will start up a buddy read for your book. Let me go look to see the dates that the book of the mont..."
Thanks Tammy! And talk about timing... Today happens to be the expiration date of coupon code "ZE75J" for a FREE eBook (mobi, epub, PDF, etc.) copy of Voyage of the Dead at https://www.smashwords.com/books/view... (I think that means it is still valid today... LOL).
For those who prefer to buy a copy, Voyage of the Dead is now available in paperback, Kindle, Nook, iTunes, Sony, Kobo, and a few black market torrent and foreign pirate sites that I am not too happy with! ;)
I was already sending people here for the Free Kindle Zombie Book thread, but thanks for giving me a reason to pull out the stops and BEG people to drop in and say hi!
I hope this helps raise the dead and reanimate the group.
DPF

Neither did I, Pleasure. At least not when I was writing my first book. I wrote Voyage as the type of story that I would want to live through in the event of Z-Day. For some reason I thought it would be read by adolescent teens and young men (probably because that is what my inner-self thinks of itself). Boy was I wrong!
Once the reviews started rolling in I realized that my "audience" included grandmothers too! And some of them were pissed. Too much testosterone! A male zombie lover's wet dream. Let the women off the boat to fight zombies too! The lead character is too arrogant! Those were just a few of the critical comments coming from women who, for the most part, liked the book! LOL
I quickly realized that this was constructive criticism. So the next two books in the series incorporated some stronger female characters and strengthened some of the women from the first book. Keep that in mind if choose to venture aboard the Voyage of the Dead. ;)
One of the reasons I like Goodreads is the interaction and feedback that I get from readers. I think authors who ignore reader reactions are missing out on a great source of inspiration.


(Crowd all joins to say, "Hi Bill." It seems to terrify the reclusive wordsmith and yet somehow he managed to continue)
So far I've managed to savagely beat and abuse keyboards until six works of fine literature have been cobbled together. Four of them have dealt primarily with the undead and the myriad of problems they tend to pose for the living.
Here's my unsolicited view on writing any kind of story. The author may have a good idea what he/she wants to write about, perhaps even a plan regarding how to do it and what will happen. BUT, at least for myself, it's much like putting together a mammoth 100,000 piece jigsaw puzzle with no picture of what it's supposed to look like when completed. I sort of like not knowing what the picture (or story) is supposed to look like because it allows freedom to explore things and ideas that weren't in the picture at all. (Especially since there actually is no picture) So what, if it ends up 'looking' a bit like abstract art?
What matters to me more than what reviewers write about a story of mine, is what do I think about it.
I think that's the key to writing anything, above everything else, enjoy it or don't do it. If someone waved a gigantic wad of cash at me and asked me to write a novel about Swedish butter churns and their contribution to world culture I might try and do it. But I'm certain I would not enjoy the experience and subsequently the novel would be a hideous thing to try and read. (As some reviewers have described my real novels)
It comes down to liking what you create. I don't care about Swedish butter churns in the slightest, thus even if I did manage to write a story about them I kind of doubt I'd like it. Even if I included a nymphomaniac milk maid with a heart of gold.
Well, I wasted a good five or ten minutes procrastinating. Now I must go continue wrapping up my latest masterpiece.
-Bill

Thank you for sharing. :-)
Is it just me who feels a need to recite the serenity prayer? Oops wrong group, my bad.
Welcome to the group if you're new and welcome back if you've just been lurking around.

(Crowd all joins to say, "Hi Bill." It seems to terrify..."
Some similar thoughts here, Bill. My outlines are usually in my mind and subject to change when my characters, or external influences, dictate it. I like to be surprised by things in my books and hope that the reader gets the same kick out of it. If I don't like what I write, I won't share it. Luckily for me, I usually like what I write. Of course I am not the right person to judge my own books. The readers are. The following quotes have been my guiding lights:
“I have never tried, in even one single little instance, to help cultivate the cultivated classes. I was not equipped for it either by native gifts or training. And I never had any ambition in that direction, but always hunted for bigger game--the masses." - Mark Twain, a Biography
“Modern [writers] talk against business, poor things, but all of us write for money. Beginners are subjected to trial by market.” ― Robert Frost

Thank you! Love U2 (the band of course) ;)

I'm really excited about all the new activity and the group reads happening this month!

I'll never forget opening night of the original Dawn of the Dead at the local drive-in! Went back the next night and the next weekend too... Lost count of the times I've seen it. Certainly the most influential zombie movie for me.



The original Romero Night of the Living Dead was, is, always will be my favorite. With a low budget and a cast of unknown actors he ushered in the first 'true' zombie film. I also has one of my favorite lines from any movie ever made; "They're coming to get you, Barbara."
My next favorite was 1978's Dawn of the Dead, also by George Romero. I saw the remake back around 2002 and while it was very good and the producers made an excellent choice of using Johnny Cash's When the man comes around, in many ways that are hard to explain I just thought the original was much better.
The third will probably have some people roll their eyes in disgust, but Return of the Living Dead by Dan O'Bannom is quite simply a great film. The brain eating would probably be my biggest gripe, other than the undead being capable of speaking. I watched this film close to a dozen times in the theater and still occasionally take a gander at it. Some people don't appreciate the humor aspect but it worked well, at least for me. Too serious a film involving the undead tends to make me bored. Whereas some comedic undead films make me nauseated. Shaun of the Dead did a very good job by including humor. But Zombieland sort of went way overboard with it. A dash of humor here and there appeals to me but too much of it just doesn't appeal to me.
A few days ago I finally watched Warm Bodies and for what it was, it wasn't as bad as I feared. The zombie romantic comedy worked very good for its intended audience. But ... It won't be on my top five or maybe even ten undead films.
-Bill

One of my favorites as well. It had such biting (if you'll pardon the pun) wit and sarcasm. I love the line, "You mean the movie LIED!?". Plus Tar Man? And I had a crush on Ms. Quigley at the time. :)
But I prefer the remake of Dawn of the Dead over the original, even though they have quite different aspects. What I find interesting is that most people think Romero's zombies are "brain dead", but in every movie they do show signs of intelligence and/or memory of their past life.
One of the things I hated about the remake was the line, "I don't want to die here.". My retort would have been, "You'd rather die out in the parking lot?" There were a lot of stupid mistakes made by the characters in the latter half the film.

We've got a lot of content to comment on.
A lot of authors to grill.
A lot of readers to entice.
A lot of books to discuss.
Any takers?

To me, the remake lacked the huge social-satire aspect of the original. They were in a mall because that's where the first movie took place, not to say anything about consumerism and American society. Not that I didn't love the 2002 version, but I also prefer the original.

Every night right around midnight (Pacific time zone) goodreads website has a mini-freak out session. It refuses to post comments, or double post them, or gives you the over capacity message page. I believe that those are caused when the site does it's daily server dump and resets itself.
When you're online around that time, your going to get your posts screwed up.
That's just the way to goodreads site rolls.


Welcome aboard, Barb, and thanks for the kind comment! Feel free to discuss all things zombie here.

It will be a weekend read with about 90 pages "assigned" per day. It think that is fitting, because most of the people who really liked the book say they flew through it in a day or two. If it doesn't draw you in and make you burn the midnight oil, it is probably not right for you anyway. But I do hope you like it. So, if you choose to participate in the fulfillment of this challenge, Bon Voyage'!
PS: One of the "rules" is that I shut the F up and let you all tear it apart like raw meat on Z-Day.
PPS: Let's keep this thread going and talk about something completely different. Any feedback on the WWZ movie?


Shawn

I just watched Steve Niles' Remains on Netflix this afternoon. With my lowered expectations after reading a few reviews, I emerged pleasantly surprised for a decent zombie flick. My only quirk was that a few of the zombies were growling at each other like dogs warning off a competitor from their meal. Never could figure that one out.

Someone send Neil a Starbucks gift card! :)

Like let us say that our current book of the month Jordan's brain needed its kindle edition updated, and a photo added.... then our groups very own goodreads librarian (Netanella) could fix it right off.
If only we had our very own goodreads librarian (Netanella).
Huh?

David, the way that you started this thread, and keep the chat going by commenting back and feeding the next topic is very cool.
It is open and friendly dialog that sparks a lively chat.
Kudo's to you for the time and effort that you are putting in to help our group grow and stay healthy.

Books mentioned in this topic
Zombie Fallout (other topics)World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War (other topics)
Dawn of the Dead (other topics)
Voyage of the Dead (other topics)
Relic (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Christopher Rice (other topics)Nancy Holder (other topics)
Jonathan Maberry (other topics)
Tamara Thorne (other topics)
Douglas Preston (other topics)
More...