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Zombies...Slow or Fast?
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Kilgallen
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Mar 30, 2012 08:39PM

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Well, ummmm, neither should zombies... :)
Once you accept that premise that a zombie can exist, you're in a whole different ball park of reality. Maybe "decay" doesn't even exist for them, or is a completely different process.


As to the 'rotting' thing, I would have to disagree. Most zombies are shown to have been effected by the elements, not specifically rotting (in George Romero and Zack Snyder's universes, anyway.) If they rotted they would be done for fairly quickly. It's whatever keeps them alive that propels their hunt.
And @Darrell--have you seen 28 Days Later/28 Weeks Later? They have 'infected,' which are basically just crazed, diseased humans who do actually need to feed in order to survive.

Those rules apply in the first few days and weeks of the apocalypse. They might change as the timeline evolves. By the way, the timeline in Voyage of the Dead starts on April 1, 2012.
How's that for a teaser?





SAB...check out some slow, redneck zombie action at: http://mylifeinthezombieapocalypse.bl...



I don't like super human fast. I only think the zombie should move as fast as the human could in life if it is fresh.

"There's nothing like the smell of frying zombie in the morning...it smells like...like..."

As for Scott's comment (and the Scott character in my books probably wishes you were right), the zombies in Voyage of the Dead and Flotilla of the Dead suffer from "super rabies" which instills severe hydrophobia. It's water, not fire, that forms the best defense.
No more spoilers.

This is genius!!! I would love that. I prefer fast zombies. Especially as it parallels how the speed of our society has increased. The metaphors just line themselves up :)

Fast is one thing, but sprinting at full speed for several miles is quite another.

...another thought...and I'm not saying that this is or will be a part of my novel/series My Life in the Zombie Apocalypse: Bettie Page and the Chicken Ranch War (because that would be blatant self-promotion and a spoiler and it's really not covered in the first book because I didn't want to spend 100 pages explaining how the plague started, etc.), but I have "slow" zombies (I don't think the rednecks in my story could handle a fast/smart zombie...think "Tucker and Dale v. Zombies" here)...After time, however, they get faster and smarter because the zombie plague is caused by nanotechnology designed to "heal" damage to soldiers on the battlefield, but is discovered and weaponized by terrorists in Afghanistan/Pakistan to teach us (the good ole US of A) a lesson. Anyway, the weaponized version nearly destroys the brain and turns about 99% of the population zombie...but then, a curious thing starts to happen (not that the non-infected have a clue)...the nanos mutate slightly and (in addition to turning people into zombies) go back to doing their original jobs (healing physical damage) and the zombies start getting better, though the non-infected don't realize it for a long time...
Now, this begs a few questions...after years of cracking zombie skulls, how does the non-zombie population react to this revelation? Guilt? Self-loathing? Fear? Indifference? Wonder and amazement?
And...how does the reawakening zombie population feel about the non-infected once they get their wits about them?
And what if the zombie "plague" ultimately results in a new, almost invulnerable, and possibly immortal, species of human? Would they get rid of the non-zombie population? Enslave them?
And at some point does my story become a blatant rip-off of "I Am Legend"?
Darn it...there really ISN'T any such thing as an original idea...
;)

For me, the beauty of the original story is the twist at the end (view spoiler) . Except for The Last Man on Earth, the films based on the book drop that. I'm curious to see how the latest remake will handle it.
Similar to how the remake of Rollerball dropped the whole political angle -- which was the very reason for the story in the first place.

But how did she get into the house?"
Now, don't start bringing facts and logic into the conversation...haha... ;)

For me, the beauty of the original story is the twist at the end [spoilers removed]. Except for The Last M..."
Well...money people in Hollywood don't actually read, so how can you expect them to be aware of the subtleties of a book? I liked about 75% of the latest movie version of "I Am Legend." I just wish they had called it something else, and that VO and ending really, really sucked...shoulda been called "Will Smith Saves the World Part IV"
Rollerball...now THERE'S a remake that could have been timely and had a lot to say about our current so-called "society/civilization." But I'm pretty sure that movie was made by a group of drunk monkeys in suits...

I'm pretty sure they mention it. I am under the impression she was bit stumbled over to Annas house whose door she knew is kept unlocked and then turned once inside. After that all she'd do is sniff out the fresh meat inside.

Makes sense.
I had a similar issue with the legless zombie up in the pipes down in the parking garage of the mall. How did it climb up there, without legs? But when I thought of it as someone who was bit climbing up into the pipes to escape zombies, then dying up there while they gnawed his legs off, it makes perfect sense for him to be up there.

In 28 DAYS LATER, the zombies are living humans who have been infected with a hate virus. Similarly, in Joe McKinney's DEAD CITY, the zombies are still alive, even though their vitals have slowed way down due to an infection.
Some traditionalists deem these examples to be outside of the zombie genre, but... a genre is like a language. It's alive. It changes as new definitions are added. Just as "gay" use to mean "happy," "zombie" used to mean "undead." But that has started to change. Now "zombie" more commonly refers to an infected or reanimated human who wants to eat or kill other human beings.
Personally, I think both types of zombies are terrifying. Slow zombies tend to be better for effecting dread, whereas fast zombies are great for frenetically-paced action. Each has their place, and I love what writers have been doing for the genre!



I'm a fan of both slow and fast zombies, dead or infected, but use fast-infected ones because my books are more sci-fi-adventure than pure horror. My zombies also have some unique quirks caused by the specific infection. I think there is room for all types of zombies and wanted to add something a little different to the genre.





That cracked me up Karol. It's funny cause it's true!

I really enjoyed the book...was an interesting take. and hope that if zombies happen in RL, the people would have seen enough/read enough about "zombies" that it will all be over in a few headshots...