This is a spectacular and highly necessary book about resurrection and the preaching thereof. Working from Revelation, Paul, and Mark, Blount reestablishes the centrality of apocalyptic in Christian thought and life. Christian faith is about resurrection, not just as a historical event, but as a future reality that breaks in -- invades -- our age of living death. Preaching, and ecclesial life, is called to articulate and practice this future reality in the present, by expressing the inclusion, justice, equality, and love revealed in Jesus. Some may be turned off by the military imagery, and the seeming transcendence implied by terms like "invade." That should be no obstacle to being fed by this wonderful book.
Near the end of the book, I started to get the impression that Mark should almost be read backwards, beginning with the resurrection and then following the risen Lord back to Galilee, where he builds a community of radical inclusion and healing. (To me, this feeds into ideas in writers as diverse as Lohfink and Schuessler-Fiorenza, who emphasize Jesus as less a Special Individual, and more representative of a new community.)
Blount spices his book with lots of cultural references, especially to Zombies, as the way we are trying secularly to deal with issues of living death. Blount suggests in different ways that the infection/invasion of a future resurrection into the present redeems some of these myths and turns them, interpreting this movement as one of life, hope, and revolution.
Blount effectively downplays the Cross as something inevitable (and necessary) because of who we humans are as the living dead under the grip of the principalities and powers of domination, but not as the locus of salvation. That happens at the resurrection, which must never be forgotten. The Cross is easy to be coopted by the forces of evil; while for resurrection this is impossible.
Finally, I am struck by Blount's reclaiming of this apocalyptic (and therefore anti-imperialistic, anti-colonialist) imperative within "Progressive" Christianity, especially when there are many popular writers seeking to write apocalyptic out of the narrative as "too violent." Comfortable academics may shy away from violence, but too many people in the world today know violence as a daily experience. To them apocalypticism's rendition of the violence of an imploding empire can only bring hope, especially because of the inevitable, and indeed already accomplished, triumph of love.