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So... what makes a "good" zombie book?
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His "mission" in the book? To cross a large part of the country, most of which contains zombies or is under martial law, to get home. Mostly on foot, with very little ammunition. He knows his wife and son are dead. They were featured in early news footage. But he wants to get home so that he can avenge them, and kill the zombie that killed them. He considers it his "duty" to them to kill that zombie.
Sigh.

I don't mind running when the zombies are fresh but once they are a week or two old they should start slowing down.


They might not be real but decaying bodies still look a certain way.


It depends whether you want to focus on the action story of the outbreak, the survivor story in the near-term, the rebuilding story, or the "steady state" society that exists afterwards. Each has a different dynamic of the conflicts between human vs zombie and human vs human.
Some authors do the initial breakout in either short flashback or dream sequences. Hints here and there of what traumas the survivors went through.

It depends whether you want to focus on the action story of the ..."
I couldn't of said it better myself.

My question is, what book should I buy?

Depends on what you're looking for in a zombies book.
Since you have been reading classic literature, you will need to switch mind states/expectations for your typical zombies read.
Choosing to read indie work will offer you wider range plotlines but you'll need to accept the "raw" form ( things like little editing, sometimes underdeveloped characters, or incomplete plot resolutions ).
If you are going to select a book from a large publisher than you'll find a fair amount with teenagers as your lead characters with an angst filled romance, or cheesy stereotype where the men are strong but cold hearted and the women are only capable if there is no man around, they grow weak in the knees the sight of a male.
Ok that is all a bit of exaggerating on my part, but the core principles are true.
The majority of titles are not 5 star or for that matter even 4 star works.
To read and appreciate zombie apocalypse books, you have to kiss a lot of toads.
So ask yourself, what am I looking for in characters, in plot, in editing, and then come back and let us know.
We have all kinds of zombie lovers here and surely one will lead you in the right direction.
As for me, I'm always on the hunt.

Book was good, bro.

Book was good, bro."
I'll second that sentiment, Yammy: Zombie Trailer Park was damn good. Here's my tacky plug for any writer that can come up with the crazy scenario that is Charlie.

Thanks again for the kudos.
-Bill

Plugging and spamming are two different things.


I don't like first person or diary stuff. That is like someone telling you about a movie instead of seeing it.
I really don't like the zombie point of view. I can't buy into it. If they have a conscious point of view then they aren't zombies they are people with serious problems.
And finally, as a writer, it is hard to come up with a new twist while delivering more of the same old. People want to have the same great experience but not redo the same journey.





Just joined this group and reviving an old thread by way of introduction.
Ditto on the overwhelming crowd support for Character.
Plot needs to be there, and it needs to be a little new so I don't know exactly how to beat the puzzle, but the cleverest, tightest plot is wasted if there isn't anybody around for me to root for. (And I will root for the bad guy, too.)
And the Zombies? I am an equal opportunity devourer. Fast zombies/slow zombies, undead/alive, straight-forward/cunning, villain/hero/background noise; I like and have read them all.
What I am done with in a big way:
*books that read like a friend is telling you about their new first person shooter game
*tough as nails sergeants and/or anyone with both a cigar and a machine gun smoking at the same time
*long winded pseudo-science about how the zombies got to be zombies, we get it already, it's because there's a yellow sun.
Favorites in the genre (listed in order they ocurred to me):
The Girl with All the Gifts
Raising Stony Mayhall
The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead
GURPS Zombies
and of course, my personal roadmap to this genre ghetto, The Walking Dead, Compendium 1

Have you ever seen Zombieland? There's a part when they talk about interesting zombie killing. There's an old lady that rigged a piano to her doorknob, when she pushed it, it fell on the zombie.





In the outbreak phase, there is very little law and order. It's a mad panic as we just try to survive. We won't know how the zombie thing works, the authorities will try to maintain order, but will probably be overwhelmed. It's all fast-paced and scary.
Then ... hopefully! ... we get to a normalisation phase when we learn how to live in a post apocalypse world. We build shelters. Restore some law and order. People come together to form communities. The pace slows down. While the fear is always there we develop coping mechanisms.
Some stories never get past the outbreak phase. Some start in a normalisation world. Some deal with the transition from pure terror to a more settled form of survival.
TBH, I don't mind what kind of zombie story we get. Outbreak stories are probably the scariest, but normalisation stories are also fun possibly because we have more time to deal with character.

Still, the suspense and terror of a good outbreak gets me every time!


You definitely need to read the Arisen series:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/bookseries/...
Their hordes number in the millions...and the books have overly long descriptions and details of the weaponry. A lot of military acronyms too.

You definitely need to read the Arisen series:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/bookseries/...
Their hordes number in the millions...and the books have overly long descriptions and details of the weaponry. A lot of military acronyms too. "
Thanks Randy, I'll check it out.


Initially, I really liked it, but later it just got too tedious for me.
Well written, but I wasn't enjoying it.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Walking Dead: Compendium One (other topics)The Girl with All the Gifts (other topics)
Raising Stony Mayhall (other topics)
GURPS Zombies (other topics)
The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead (other topics)
More...
I think a good zombie book is the same as a good anything book. Good story, characters, etc. with zombies.