I really don’t think there’s anything in the world that’s going to make me LIKE zombies. But, if I’m going to read a collection of stories about them, I might as well make it count. ZOMBIES: Encounters With the Hungry Dead, published in 2009 and edited by splatterpunk co-founder John Skipp, collects 32 short stories by some of the most respected and established names in the genre, as well as some authors just coming into their own and starting to make their marks. And let me tell you, this thing is serious business. Clocking in at 700 pages and weighing nearly 5 lbs, look at the bright side: if you don’t like reading about zombies, you can use this thing to brain a few when the apocalypse comes.
John Skipp definitely knows his horror, knows his authors, and knows his zombies, packing this anthology full of all different kinds of stories and all different kinds of zombies, showcasing the diversity of the genre. And I loved that about this book because, for me it’s most authors’ insistence on writing the same friggin story over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over that so quickly puts me off them as an antagonist in horror fiction. Yes, we get it, the dead have risen and mankind is reduced to a few scrappy survivors trying to eke out a living in whatever random hovel they’ve chosen as their refuge. Next?
Now, I won’t say ZOMBIES: EwtHD doesn’t have a few of these types of stories as well, but it’s got so many more of the better kind, the original kind, the stories that give me reason to pause and think there just might be something to this after all.
In Robert Bloch’s “A Case of the Stubborns”, Grandpa has died in the night. The next morning, he comes down for breakfast as if nothing’s happened, insisting, “Ain’t nobody got a right to put me six feet under ‘thout my say-so.”
In Adam Golaski’s “The Dead Gather On the Bridge to Seattle,” Roger is driving to Seattle to see his sister who is sick in the hospital. He’s kept up to date through intermittent calls from Vivienne’s husband while all over the country, something bad is happening to the recently-dead. This was a very intense, deep and effective story told with a ton of emotion and insight.
Another one packed to the rafters with emotion was Jack Ketchum’s “The Visitor” about Will and the way he handles the death, return, and second death of his wife Beatrice. I won’t go into any more plot details as the story is only 6 pages, but those 6 pages lend credibility to many others’ belief that Ketchum is simply one of the best in the business. Excellent story and a great perspective to look at the zombie apocalypse.
Cody Goodfellow’s “We Will Rebuild” tells a story of the aftermath of the zombie rampage as the small town of Ocotillo tries to allow their returned from the dead residents to keep their status as law-abiding and law-protected citizens of the world. This was, for me, one of the most unique looks at the zombie story and one of the best-written of the whole collection.
Honestly, I could go on much longer; the ratio of good stories to bad is very uneven, in favor of the good, and some of the other names appearing in these pages are immediately recognizable as giants within not only the speculative fiction genres, but in writing in general: Ray Bradbury, Stephen King, Neil Gaiman, Joe R. Lansdale, Max Brooks. The list goes on.
Having previously edited three or four other, smaller, zombie anthologies, Skipp had a vast collection of stories to choose from in compiling his be all end all tome and I think he chose very wisely. The book wasn’t without its flaws, but those can be attributed to a simple difference in taste; like I said, I don’t like zombies. But Skipp is a good editor and his commentaries that accompanied each story offered smart insights not only into the stories, but into the level of Skipp’s own expertise in the horror field.
While 32 stories and 700 pages doesn’t do a thing to convince me zombies aren’t lame, I do have a newfound respect for John Skipp and his dedication to horror as well as the newfound ability to say that yes, I have read zombies stories that I liked, some that I loved, and they’re not ALL bad. ZOMBIES: Encounters With the Hungry Dead is a respectable work with good intentions and I would have to say it deserves to be on the list of must-reads for horror fans everywhere. And for horror writers? That’s a given. You can’t claim to write horror and by-pass this one for historical and educational value alone.