Convoy 19 sounds like your average zombie book – military convoy is set up to do “one last run” before abandoning zombie infested San Diego. Cue the zombies and a cookie cutter trek through zombie land. I've read plenty of variations on Escape from Zombietown over the years – some good, some bad. But like any idea ripe with possibility – it suckers me back in even though I think I know what I'm getting. So I picked it up for 99 cents for the hell of it and decided to give the book a try.
I'm happy to say that I was wrong about this book. While the basic premise of the story is as it sounds, but the details of this story make it stand out. What you get is a mix of Day of the Dead and Black Hawk Down.
Firstly, this story takes place mid-apocalypse. Society knows the horrors of the living dead, but they have not succumb to it completely. There's pockets of humanity scattered around in various rescue stations, on a navy flotilla, and rampaging gangs of survivors mixed with healthy amounts of the dead. Thankfully, the author shies away from the typical evil biker gang out other obviously evil example of the fall of man or as a display of man and not the zombies as the "real" enemy. Instead, the author makes a clear, but not overreaching our bludgeoning example of government incompetence as the major enemy.
The writing is good, but not perfect. There's not a ton of character development, but in a story like this, I'm okay with that fact. Dialogue, pacing, and so on are decent, but the real winner I'd the level of detail. The author provides fully realized view of the apocalypse not always seen in books like this. A lot of times there's the sense that the buildings are all locked up like for a long weekend, but everything seems basically intact. Not so here. The city feels properly ruined, gutted, and smashed but not totally abandoned. There's a lot of little details present, from the propaganda posts inside an abandoned school to descriptions of the wrecked streets of the city.
While there are a few issues - some of the action seems a bit too over the top given the high body count, the military lingo isn't always 100% spot on, and the story goes on about 20 pages to long - but all in all, this is one of the best zombie books I've read in years.