REVIEW FROM SOMEONE WHO WATCHED THE TV SHOW FOR FIVE SEASONS AND THEN READ THE COMICS UP TO THE TIME FRAME IN THIS BOOK.
Out of the three Walking Dead novels, this one was the hardest to get through and the least shocking. I don't know if it's because I read the comics that coincide with this story right before reading the book or what, but I just wasn't interested. I literally felt like I was reading the comic book twice in a row, only it wasn't as good. The dialogue was IDENTICAL. There was nothing added from the author except scenery description and explaining what the characters were doing when they said the dialogue from the comic books, which is unnecessary because we can all see what they were doing when we read the comic book. OK, just had to get that rant off my chest first. That said, the entire book wasn't all bad.
Again the book focuses mostly on Lilly Caul, but she has shed her wimpy skin for a tough one. But she does a flip-flop out of nowhere in this novel that I just don't understand at all. In the beginning of the second book she's trying to kidnap and kill the Governor and his cronies because of how evil they are. In this book, she is defending him saying he is doing the right thing and Woodbury is the best place they can be. I don't know if it's a brain malfunction from a parasite (wink) but she is just not herself anymore and I don't like it.
The new love interest she has, Austin, is an OK enough guy. I don't know why she is judging him based on his lack of a job plan if the apocalypse ever ends. I don't think anyone in that situation would be like "if this ever ends I'm going to go back to school and finish my law degree or become an accountant." They're only worried about surviving the zombies and how they're going to do that. Even though he does not have the zombie killing experience the author says Lilly has (where exactly did she get this zombie killing experience because as long as I've known her Josh Hamilton did all the killing and then she was protected in Woodbury...) she is teaching Austin all she knows. Again I can relate to her by picking a younger guy to hook up with. My husband is only twenty-three too although I am two years shy of my thirties, unlike Lilly.
The Governor is just as evil in the book as in the comic book, which I'm glad to see they didn't change like in the TV Show. I understand why they couldn't display all he did to Michonne on AMC. It was downright disgusting and cruel and no one would want to watch that. But the evilness felt lackluster because I'd just read in for the firs time in the comic book so I knew what was going to happen.
Michonne, Rick, and Glenn made appearances in the town, as in the comic books. On the back cover I was promised a look into the characters I know and love and I would get to "see these characters in a whole new light". There was no new light. They were shown exactly as they were in the comic books. Maybe these novels are meant for people who do not like comic books so they only follow the TV show. In that case, yes it's a whole new light for those people. For people like me, it was redundant to read this book and I'm not as excited to read the next one, especially since my new book of twelve comics is in the mail and waiting to be read too. No matter which one I attempt first, it will spoil the other. That wasn't a great plan on Kirkman's part. I think if I lent it to my dad, he'd enjoy it a lot more than I did because he's never read the comic books.
The only thing that could have saved this book for me is if something truly surprising happened with Lilly and that group, since I haven't seen them in the comic books yet, but there wasn't. Her story line was extremely predictable.