Title: World War Z
Author: Max Brooks
Genre: Horror
Thingummies: 5
Synopsis: A collection of fake first person accounts of the zombie apocalypse.
Thoughts: So I'd read Max Brooks' Zombie Survival Guide, which is fairly kitschy fun. This...is not that.
Brooks has put an incredible amount of time into thinking through how a theoretical zombie apocalypse might go down, from the pharma-profiteers' fake vaccines to Israel being the first mover on closing down borders to the logistics of how to clear beaches when all the zombies who have fallen overboard continue to emerge at random intervals from the surf. Biology, geopolitics, economics--he's thought it all out here.
Which I'd kind of expected. What I didn't expect, however, was how moving his fictional accounts would be. This rings ridiculously true--the raw emotions, coherent strategies, well-thought-out psychology all remind me of the accounts of real disasters. People doing terrible things, people doing heroic things, people doing terrible things that must nevertheless be done and then trying to find a way to live with themselves afterwards--it's amazing how well he charts the way we truly react to disasters. The fundamental premise might well be absurd, but the portrait of how humanity would respond is devastatingly accurate, yet hopeful.
Given that you almost never revisit a voice, the series of short--usually just a couple pages--interviews form a coherent narrative. Each voice feels distinct, and many of the characters stuck with me the way that the best fictional characters do.
This could have easily been schlock. By all rights, perhaps it should have been. But Brooks manages to reach down into the reason why zombies are so appealing--he grasps what they fundamentally tell us about our hopes and fears about our own true natures. And somehow what should have been a book cashing in on an internet meme became profound.
Author: Max Brooks
Genre: Horror
Thingummies: 5
Synopsis: A collection of fake first person accounts of the zombie apocalypse.
Thoughts: So I'd read Max Brooks' Zombie Survival Guide, which is fairly kitschy fun. This...is not that.
Brooks has put an incredible amount of time into thinking through how a theoretical zombie apocalypse might go down, from the pharma-profiteers' fake vaccines to Israel being the first mover on closing down borders to the logistics of how to clear beaches when all the zombies who have fallen overboard continue to emerge at random intervals from the surf. Biology, geopolitics, economics--he's thought it all out here.
Which I'd kind of expected. What I didn't expect, however, was how moving his fictional accounts would be. This rings ridiculously true--the raw emotions, coherent strategies, well-thought-out psychology all remind me of the accounts of real disasters. People doing terrible things, people doing heroic things, people doing terrible things that must nevertheless be done and then trying to find a way to live with themselves afterwards--it's amazing how well he charts the way we truly react to disasters. The fundamental premise might well be absurd, but the portrait of how humanity would respond is devastatingly accurate, yet hopeful.
Given that you almost never revisit a voice, the series of short--usually just a couple pages--interviews form a coherent narrative. Each voice feels distinct, and many of the characters stuck with me the way that the best fictional characters do.
This could have easily been schlock. By all rights, perhaps it should have been. But Brooks manages to reach down into the reason why zombies are so appealing--he grasps what they fundamentally tell us about our hopes and fears about our own true natures. And somehow what should have been a book cashing in on an internet meme became profound.
no subject
Date: 2012-12-27 12:58 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: 2012-12-27 07:55 pm (UTC)From:They don't use all the POVs, but the voice actors they chose are awesome (especially Mark Hamill), and it's positively chilling.
no subject
Date: 2012-12-31 12:00 am (UTC)From: