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Tooth And Nail

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As a new plague related to the rabies virus infects millions, America recalls its military forces from around the world to safeguard hospitals and other vital buildings. To succeed in this mission to help save what's left of society, the men of the Second Platoon will face a terrifying battle of survival against the very people they have sworn to protect, people turned into a fearless, endless horde armed solely with tooth and nail.

First published January 1, 2010

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About the author

Craig DiLouie

62 books1,516 followers
Craig DiLouie is an author of popular thriller, apocalyptic/horror, and sci-fi/fantasy fiction.

In hundreds of reviews, Craig’s novels have been praised for their strong characters, action, and gritty realism. Each book promises an exciting experience with people you’ll care about in a world that feels real.

These works have been nominated for major literary awards such as the Bram Stoker Award and Audie Award, translated into multiple languages, and optioned for film. He is a member of the HWA, International Thriller Writers, and IFWA.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 135 reviews
Profile Image for T.W. Brown.
Author 96 books303 followers
September 12, 2011
28 Days Later was one of those moves that really helped push the zombie back to the forefront. Only…zombie purists will tell you, “It’s not a zombie movie.” In many ways, Tooth and Nail by Craig DiLouie is much the same. In fact, this book could be seen as the Americanized version. And I mean this in a good way.

While Lieutenant Todd Bowman is named on the back jacket, there are a number of characters in this fast-paced tale. Some might complain about the number of characters—a criticism I never quite understood—but each one is three-dimensional. What I mean is that each is given enough depth for you to care about their fate. DiLouie doesn’t simply fill his story with cannon fodder and mow them down. He brings you into the heads and lets you look through their eyes.
There is a lot of military jargon here, but he doesn’t overwhelm the reader. There is a real feeling of authenticity here. At times, you can get sucked in and feel the emotions swirling as the soldiers talk during the lulls in the action. DiLouie uses dialog to a supreme effect in this regard.

The military and medical aspects of this story all felt plausible and real. It was a rich addition without making you feel like you were reading a medical journal. It was how the “Lyssa” virus worked that really gave this story its 28 Days Later feel. And for the most part instead of the regular citizens, there was a different level of tension than what you find in many stories of this genre. Gone are the obligatory headshots and the sometimes awkward ways in which the protagonists must “discover” how to bring down the monsters. But rest assured, there will be astronomical body counts by the time you reach the last page.

As always, there are a few critiques to go with the praise. I wasn’t fond of the tense in which DiLouie told the story. At times it jumbled the scene. And, of course, you will find a typo or two. However, Tooth and Nail is a clean read for a small press.

I very strongly recommend Tooth and Nail by Craig DiLouie. It is fast-paced and rich with characters that are brought to life in your mind as the story draws you deeper and deeper into the chaos. This story will pluck you from your comfy chair and have you pacing the room as you get to the last dozen pages where the climax becomes all too real.
Profile Image for Patrick D'Orazio.
Author 22 books62 followers
January 4, 2011
Tooth and Nail is blistering fast military-focused thrill ride into the apocalypse. I scanned some of the other reviews and a comment that comes up with some frequency is that the nemesis here are not technically zombies. From a purist perspective, that is certainly true. The Hong Kong Lyssa Virus does not kill its victims...the ones that go "Mad Dog", as they are called, have symptoms similar to someone infected with rabies...along the lines what we saw with 28 Days Later and Rec, as far as movies are concerned. They are fast, they are lethal, and their desire is to spread the virus rather than devour the living, although they are not above tearing someone apart that gets in their way. The effect of this is that the author went to some pretty good lengths to detail out this virus and its effect, giving it a realistic edge where the science felt pretty solid.

That is not where the realism in this tale stops. The story focuses on Charlie Company, who are stationed in Manhattan, guarding one of the hospital where Lyssa patients are being attended to. As the story starts, the city is already on lock down. The U.S. troops have been recalled from all across the globe to deal with the growing threat in America and we are just getting a small taste of what these Mad Dogs are capable of. The Lyssa Virus itself is just like any other flu, or so it seems, but with a small percentage of those getting sick turning into rabid killers. But that number is increasing as it is discovered that this isn't just an airborne virus and the Mad Dogs are growing as a part of the sick population at an exponential rate. At the same time we are seeing what Charlie Company is up against, we are also introduced to a research facility in Manhattan, where a Russian Doctor is discovering the truth about the virus and more specifically, the Mad Dogs, and trying desperately to come up with a vaccine or cure.

Craig DiLouie has created a very tightly knit story here with a great deal of depth of detail when it comes to military protocol and actions. Since I haven't served in the military, I can't attest to the specific accuracy of everything, but clearly, the author knows his stuff. There is no one single main character here, instead, the cast is more like an ensemble and the story reminded me, in parts, of the movie "Black Hawk Down", where it seems at every turn things are getting worse and worse and the local population is turning more savage by the minute as the military tries to complete their mission. Despite the lack of a main character, the author did a great job of providing the reader with some fully fleshed out characters that were easy to grow attached to for me. Their interactions felt real and natural given the circumstances, not awkward or forced. If I had a complaint about this story, it was with the tense change that occurred at a few points of the story. I can understand the merits of going present tense with a book that moves at the hectic pace of this one, but there are some parts of the book that are in past tense and others in present, which is a shift that isn't always easy to adapt to as a reader. Despite this minor quibble, the book is solidly written and the story well paced. I do hope to see a sequel to this book, but it certainly can stand on its own as a excellent entry into the infected/zombie apocalypse genre.
Profile Image for Kat.
477 reviews184 followers
May 18, 2011
As something of a closest 'Zombiephile', I randomly stumbled upon Tooth and Nail in my Amazon recommended list. With so few reviews, and a synopsis that hinted heavily at a military focus, it was with a slightly closed mind that I purchased this book.
And instantly I was pleasantly surprised.

Tooth and Nail starts with a disease that sweeps through the city with rapid pace, beginning as a virus with a high mortality rate, and morphing into a 'zombie' disease.

The pace is fast, and at first I found it slightly difficult to keep the characters straight in my mind - perhaps because as military, they seem to blend together more easily than say, a group of civilians.

It's also pretty light on the whole anatomy of a virus scenario - this is something that has resulted to me skimming in other novels of the same genre (I read these books for a guilty pleasure, not to increase my knowledge of virology!).

I read this in three days, squeezing in a quick chapter wherever possible, as it is very addictive!

I've not come across Craig DiLouie before, but am really looking forward to reading more!
Profile Image for Kaisersoze.
736 reviews30 followers
January 7, 2015
One of my favourite reads of last year came from author Craig DiLouie. I was so impressed with his The Infection that I rushed out to order this earlier novel from his word processor. At first glance, they seemed quite similar. Both deal with an apocalyptic end of the world scenario, featuring creatures that, more or less, are zombies. Both follow groups of characters trying to survive as said apocalypse unfolds. Both are written in the present tense and both involve small groups battling superior enemy numbers.

But there the similarities end.

Unlike the book that would ultimately follow it, Tooth and Nail is told almost exclusively from the POV of a number of members of the U.S. Army, so it lacks some of the more colourful characters present in the Infection. It's also very technical in detail, meaning those who enjoy reading about particular types of weapons, the calibre of bullets they use, and the damage they can inflict will be right at home here. Additionally, the threat itself is far more straight forward - a virus which turns people into "Mad Dogs" with the virus being passed on by any bite from an infected individual - and there are none of the fantastical monsters which DiLouie deployed to such creative effect in the Infection.

I guess what I'm, trying to say is: Tooth and Nail reads like a first try at an apocalyptic novel, complete with numerous issues, and it seems DiLouie then went away and re-wrote the book in a superior fashion, coming up with The Infection in the process. The most prominent support of this is how one dimensional most of the characters in Tooth and Nail are. Reading this at times felt like watching Battle: Los Angeles. Dispensable and interchangeable grunts battling a superior foe in an attempt to complete their mission and save the human race. I failed to care about any character in that movie (when I could tell them apart), and I had much the same trouble here for everyone other than Bowman, Mooney and McLeod, until very late in the novel. As such, I was never as fully engaged nor entertained by what was taking place.

All of this is making it sound like Tooth and Nail is a poor book when it most certainly is not. It's a perfectly serviceable one. It just isn't great like The Infection.

2.5 to 3 LTs ordering FPF from SAW and RPGs for Tooth and Nail.
Profile Image for Felicia A Sullivan.
445 reviews
October 14, 2010
Tooth and Nail features "infected", not "zombies", and the virus is a genetically altered mutation of the rabies virus. So not exactly zombies, but similar, though it reads like a true zombie book.

For a zombie-type book, it had enough of a different bent that it wasn't like just reading another self-published fanboy/fanfic piece focused on guns, gore, guts and rape scenes.

This book has a great premise, a good story arc, and good intentions. It does not, however, have a good execution.

The writing is cumbersome and difficult to wade through, the tenses are not consistent, the dialogue is truncated and distant and the editing is nearly non-existent.

The good thing about the editing, though, is that this time it's not for horrid mistakes that a simple spell-check or basic middle school English class could have corrected. No, in this book it is less of a proofreading issue and more of a REAL editing issue. A professional editor would have been able to release the writing from its distant, stiff and tight confines, enabling this story to flow effortlessly from chapter to chapter, bringing us all along for the ride.

There are a lot of characters to keep track of, none of which are particularly well developed, but it is clear that the author has some knowledge of military procedures and uses that knowledge to drive this book. It's a good thing, though.

POSSIBLE SPOILER BELOW! POSSIBLE SPOILER BELOW!

You've been warned...........

The Mad Dog angle and exponential rate of infection is a good one, as is the military rescue of the scientist who identified the Mad Dog strain and its methodology.

The medical science and military knowledge was believeable enough that it could carry this book through to the end, but the sequel, which it's clear is coming since this ends on such a bloody cliffhanger, is going to need A LOT of work.
Profile Image for Joe Crook.
10 reviews1 follower
January 23, 2011
I feel like in order to truly enjoy this book you have to be in the army or some other armed service. People in that situation don't feel the same terror from a zombie plague situation as a normal person would and it showed I'm the writing. It lacked emotion, and focussed more on military strategy and combat. I felt like they could have been fighting any kind of enemy and the book would have read the exact same way, it just so happened they were fighting zombies.
Profile Image for Tor Gar.
419 reviews48 followers
October 26, 2017
Hace una semana que lo acabé y ya no recuerdo nada. Intrascendente pero se lee. No estorba. Historia de unos militares en NY cuando se expande un virus que convierte a las persona en zombies. No hay mucho que decir, es una novela de zombies pero un poco diferente.

Me recuerda a la última película de Godzilla (Shin Godzilla, la de la Toho) ya que se ofrece el punto de vista de los militares* donde cunde la desorganización y el no saber como afrontar algo así. En particular de las categorías inferiores militares, las que están a pie de calle y tienen que lidiar con todo.

*en la película era más completo. El punto de vista comprendía a todo el estamento gubernamental del país
Profile Image for Steven Konkoly.
Author 70 books1,230 followers
June 3, 2012
Tooth and Nail is one of the most immersive experiences you can find as a fan of apocalyptic fiction. As a former military officer, I can attest to complexity and uncertainty of the difficult decisions faced by second lieutenant Todd Bowman and his men, as they faced an increasingly deadly and nebulous viral threat on the streets of Manhattan. The buildup of tension, confusion and violence was expertly drawn from start to finish. Each soldier's role in the story is examined and expanded through gritty action, well constructed conversation and personal narrative introspection.

Although DiLouie's story leans heavily on brutal action, which becomes a necessary way of life for the platoon, he takes the time to explore the bonds that strengthen this small community of warriors as they try to carry out their orders and makes sense of the madness that has descended on the world. This is one of the most realistic fictional representations of platoon interaction that I have read in this genre.

Beyond military realism is a well developed scientific scenario that gives you a break from the intense military action. I recently saw that the author re-released one of his previous works, called The Thin White Line, which is a research based, fictional account of an avian flu pandemic. I was not surprised to find out that he had started working on Tooth and Nail soon after publishing this work. The exhaustive research in The Thin White Line played out beautifully in Tooth and Nail, adding yet another layer of realism. This aspect is delivered in the form of a parallel, yet crucial side story about several virologists trapped nearby in a secure research facility.

I appreciated the dichotomy of these two worlds: [Brute strength, flexible/quick decision-making and firepower] Vs. [Scholarly intellect, detailed research and organized thought] AGAINST the same enemy. Watching the two merge in this story is a bonus.

DiLouie's story has been called Black Hawk Down meets 28 Days Later. I agree, but would add elements of Zulu Dawn and 300 Spartans to that list. What starts out as a relatively straight forward operation for 2LT Bowman's platoon turns into an epic battle for survival, with more than just his platoon's fate at stake.
Profile Image for Booksofdoom .
201 reviews8 followers
February 21, 2012
Amazing macho zombie slaughter of the best kind.

A cold and distant reflection on the apocalypse from a military point of view.

Focus is on the individual soldier and its struggle both with survival, conscience and keeping a sane head during Armageddon.
Profile Image for amber.
155 reviews1 follower
August 25, 2011
Didn't love it. Couldn't get attached to any of the characters. Was mostly just happy to get it finished. I didn't find it engaging or believable.
Profile Image for Mia Cervantes.
136 reviews2 followers
August 6, 2023
This was a very entertaining read for me. I enjoyed the writing and the fast pace of the story was extremely engrossing. Sometimes in stories such as this one it’s common to find the pace to be great and very fast and gory but the characters tend to be bland and forgettable, however I didn’t find that to be the case here. I thought the characters were very realistic and well flushed. I was invested in their life and their stories. The atmosphere was terrifying, it pulled me right in. I loved the ending even though it broke my heart.
Profile Image for Karolmarce.
138 reviews1 follower
December 11, 2019
Jmmmm me costó terminarlo, para ser este género no le vi nada de atractivo. Los eventos eran medio monótonos no generaban ansiedad ni mucha emocionalidad en general, fue difícil conectar con alguno de los personajes y a pesar que el argumento de la enfermedad fue bueno, como que era un todo revuelto sin mucha coherencia.
Profile Image for Mihir.
658 reviews311 followers
December 3, 2011

Original review over at Fantasy Book Critic

OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: Tooth and Nail from its blurb quintessentially seems to be a zombie military novel and whilst I went in with those thoughts, the actual book turned out to be a bit more than that.

For one the zombies in this book are scientifically explained. It turns out that something called Mad Dog or Lyssavirus is infecting people in the United States of America and turning them into slobbering angry creatures whose sole instinct/purpose is to bite and eat the other non-infected people. Such is the tremendous assault of the virus that the government has recalled all of its troops from all of its foreign bases and one such group is the second platoon which has been stationed in New York City in one of the interim Mad dog patient hospital camps.

The tale beings by introducing us to Private Mooney who is being acclimatized to this sudden trip home. However home (NYC) seems to be more different than he can remember. The novel then shows the various scenarios of all the characters as they see the people infected with the virus and also some of the more violent confrontations they have with the Mad Dogs.

Thus begins the story as the second platoon receives word about Dr. Valeriya Petrova who seems to have made a breakthrough with the virus and has created a pure sample which can be utilized to create a vaccine. However the lab which she is working in is locked out and is surrounded by Mad dogs both within and without. The journey begins when the soldiers of the second platoon which will see them go through various horrors in order to get Dr. Petrova and the possible cure.

There were a couple of issues that arose during my reading of this novel. Primarily being that the author has written this book with constant POV switches in between lines and paragraphs. This broke up the flow of the story because I was following a certain character it would switch to someone else and then back again and this goes on through out the entire book. This was not only confusing but made it hard for me to follow the story and what character was doing what. This style distracted me enough to prevent me from enjoying the story properly.

Secondly the story didn’t have a proper conclusion. It picks from this vantage point wherein the virus has already spread and infected large numbers of people and then ends on another point just after they reach Dr. Petrova but the reader will only be able to fill in as to what might have happened next from his/her imagination.

Tooth and Nail isn't all filled with issues, there are plenty of positives of the novel. This story is very gritty and gruesome as it is told from the eyes of the soldiers in the front and it pulls no punches as the reader sees the fear, the tension and the all pervasive feeling of doom. This reminded me a bit about Glen Cook’s Black company books if they ever had a zombie problem. The book is very realistic in its approach to the life of the foot soldier and kudos must be given to the author for revealing it to be such. The body count is also high as no character is truly safe as would be the case in a real-life scenario.

In the end I can say that while this book was a good one, the plot and structural issues threw me a bit off and therefore did not allow me to enjoy the book as much as I could have imagined. Check this one if you are a fan of Glen Cook’s Black Company books or you like gritty military zombie fiction.
Profile Image for laurel [the suspected bibliophile].
2,042 reviews755 followers
September 30, 2016
First, I’d like to pause and take a chuckle at the publishing company. Schmidt Haus. Very witty.

Second, I’d like to note that at this time I am preparing my bug-out-bag, complete with bushknife, ka-bar, 12 MREs, 12 shotguns, 15 millions rounds of ammo, three gallons of water, a first aid kit, sleeping bag, two turtle doves, kitchen sink, industrial strength hair dryer, and anything else I can’t live without when the proverbial s&$! hits the fan

This particular book (1) terrified the hell out of me and (2) made me very glad I am no longer active duty. Then again, this book is about an Army battalion. For the record, the Marine unit took over Staten Island and killed everything. Oorah.

When all military units are redeployed to the homeland to respond to a mass epidemic called HK Lyssa, Second Platoon is pulled out of Iraq and dropped into the heart of Manhattan to guard a hospital. The Lyssa virus is a lot like the flu, but a small percentage have the virus go to their brain, start frothing at the mouth, become enraged and attack everything in sight. They are called Mad Dogs. Fairly soon, these Mad Dogs start spreading, and it becomes pretty apparent that they spread their version of Lyssa through biting. Soon, all of New York starts teeming, and the Army begins to lose its hold on the city. The government collapses, and Second Platoon must fight to survive.

Unlike a lot of zombie books where it seems like no one on the planet knows what a zombie is, in this one they do, but it takes a while to connect the dots. I enjoyed that the author really thought about the implications of deploying active military forces onto American soil, and the thoughts and feelings of the soldiers who are suddenly faced with the dread possibly of shooting their own countrymen to survive. A lot of the soldiers cracked under the strain of murdering unarmed citizens, and others cracked because they weren’t able to save the uninfected. And bonus: the military stuff seemed pretty legit. Army is different from Marines (like officers calling enlisted by their first names—what?), but he got the feel of it dead-on.

It’s not a terribly deep novel, but it definitely made me wonder about following orders, duty (to family, country or organization) and survival. Like any good zombie book, it got right into the psychological terror of survival at all costs.
Profile Image for Pamela Murphy.
483 reviews30 followers
January 19, 2024
Antes de empezar con mi opinión debo decirles que he leído demasiados libros sobre zombis y por eso mis expectativas siempre son elevadas, dicho esto empezare por decirles que la calidad en la redacción de esta novela me impresiono bastante, en verdad es una historia muy bien contada (que al final de cuentas es lo que más importa) y un plus extra que tiene son los sub títulos que el autor a colocado a lo largo de toda la historia, una pequeña frase que encontramos al inicio de cada capitulo y que da un toque muy original (tipo diario) a este libro.

Otra cosa que me sorprendió de esta novela es que realmente se da una explicación detallada, real y creíble del origen de la epidemia y eso se agradece completamente, no es como todas esas otras historia en las que nadie tiene idea de como surgió el virus. Además de que las escenas están muy bien descritas y el lector puede imaginarse cada una de las situaciones que presenta el autor.

Un hecho muy interesante es que el autor baso el libro en el punto de vista del ejercito americano y no en la visión de los civiles (que suele ser el cliché de todos los libros de este género)

Si he de mencionar algo negativo es que el lenguaje bélico muy propio del ejercito muchas veces me confundió he hizo pesada algunas partes de la lectura. Otro detalle que no me gusto fue la trama algo “plana” no sentí que el avance de las paginas me llevara a entender o predecir el final y eso es por que el final queda abierto, dándome la completa sensación de libro inconcluso.

Esas son mis opiniones, pero como siempre digo: lean el libro, juzguen ustedes mismos y déjenme en un comentario su opinión. Muero por conocer la opinión de otros amantes del género zombi.

MI CALIFICACION:
2/5
⭐⭐
Profile Image for Heather Faville.
Author 1 book23 followers
May 26, 2012
Technically a 4.5, but worthy of a round up!

Craig DiLouie's Tooth & Nail is a zombie story filled with practically non-stop action and very realistic detail. It is obvious that DiLouie did his research before or while writing this novel. Tooth & Nail is very military focused and while I have a little bit of knowledge, I do not know a lot of the details of the military world. Therefore, I asked my husband as I was reading questions here and there about whether this would work, would they really do such and such and each time he affirmed that what I was reading was spot on. The military personal are very realistic and believable, there are no SUPERSOLDIERS who do extraordinary feats. They are simply men doing their job in a world that's gone to hell.

The other aspect we come across in reading Tooth & Nail is civilian scientists who know what caused the virus and are hoping to find a cure for it. Now there are many zombie novels out there and a lot of them do not bother to go into the reason behind the outbreak simply because it can be very difficult to pull off a believable cause for the infection. DiLouie's reason is not only believable...it is plausible, which is scary as hell.

Tooth & Nail shows us a very human side to the military during a situation in which NOBODY can really train. They have self doubt. The make good/bad decisions and all along the way their characters develop to where the reader feels a certain kinship to what they are going through.
A definite must read for all fans of the zombie genre and those who enjoy a realistic military aspect to the zombie genre.
Profile Image for Reading is my Escape.
1,005 reviews54 followers
March 11, 2015
Tooth and Nail - Review
 
 
"But it is not enough to stay alive. A man must also have something for which he wants to live as well."
 

The Lyssa virus is rapidly spreading out of control and soldiers are pulled from the Middle East to help keep order back home in the United States. They are charged with protecting a hospital in New York City and keeping the desperate crowds under control. The last stage of Lyssa causes the patients to lose their minds and become aggressive. The soldiers are calling people suffering from this stage Mad Dogs. At one point, the Mad Dogs begin attacking and biting healthy people and spreading the disease even more rapidly. The soldiers are unprepared for this and don't want to fire on their fellow American citizens. As the Mad Dogs multiply, how will the soldiers, the army and everyone else in Manhattan survive?
 
This is one of the few books I've read that approaches the zombie apocalypse from where it started. And it shows how difficult it was for the soldiers both physically and mentally. They are sworn to protect the American people and now they have to kill some of them and leave others behind to fend for themselves. I enjoyed this book. It was in turn, heartbreaking, gory, thrilling and scary.
 
A scary & heartbreaking look at soldiers fighting against the beginning of the zombie apocalypse.
 
 
Profile Image for Procrastinador Diletante.
105 reviews7 followers
September 3, 2011
No caso do "Tooth and Nail", seguimos um grupo de militares, recém-chegados do Iraque e "lançados aos lobos". A sua missão é defender um hospital numa cidade de Nova Iorque paralisada por uma pandemia global. É claro que tudo começa a correr mal a partir do momento em que os infectados começam a ser em tal número e tão agressivos que passa a ser necessário usar força letal para os deter.

Sem me alongar muito em explicações (e spoilers), posso dizer que o livro é comparável com o filme Black Hawk Down em termos de accão, mas sem esquecer as personagens. Estas parecem seres humanos reais, que se comportam como soldados de verdade (os poucos "action heroes" aqui, tal como na vida real, normalmente acabam mortos), com emoções e problemas que todos nós poderíamos sentir numa situação daquelas.

Até que ponto é que estaríamos dispostos a cumprir ordens e a continuar a servir o nosso País, se este nos tivesse abandonado, se víssemos que toda a civilização à nossa volta se estava a desmoronar? E se tivessemos que matar pessoas inocentes só para sobreviver e continuar a missão? Poderíamos continuar a viver com essa culpa? Estas são apenas algumas das questões que o livro levanta. Não digo que seja uma obra-prima da literatura (há sempre algumas falhas a apontar), mas vale a pensa ser lido.
Profile Image for William M..
605 reviews66 followers
April 10, 2012
This is my first experience reading author Craig Dilouie and I was pretty impressed. Out of the dozens of zombie novels I’ve read over the years, this was the first to really focus on the military aspect of the plague (other than Jonathan Maberry’s PATIENT ZERO, but that concentrated more on an isolated covert operation and included only a sprinkling of zombie action) Usually the military is used in the periphery, but in TOOTH AND NAIL, Dilouie drags the reader not only into the middle of the action, but into the minds of the soldier. Like any group of people, you have the good and bad, the courageous and cowardly.

This book keeps you on your toes, because at any moment, a character you’ve been following for hundreds of pages could die quickly and horribly. It is a tense, medically plausible, and brutally told tale. My only criticisms are that, as a New Yorker, I didn’t feel as if the author captured the locations or feel of the Big Apple as well as he could have, and I would have liked a bit more depth and insight into the characters. But I would still recommend this book to horror and zombie fans alike.
Profile Image for Netanella.
4,725 reviews38 followers
July 25, 2012
The world goes viral and America's military is recalled stateside from overseas operations in Iraq and Afghanistan to major cities such as New York, to protect its citizens - against itself. Then everything goes fubar and the military units are left in isolated pockets of humanity surrounded by thousands of Mad Dogs - technically not dead, but crazed people infected with a new kind of virus that spreads in typical zombie fashion. You know, biting.

Once I put down my smut addiction and delved in earnest into this book, I loved the pacing, the story, the gore, even the present tense writing style that gave me some troubles in DiLouie's other novel, The Infection. Written from the persepective of the soldiers in the military, the book is filled with military jargon and expressions that add to the immediacy of the story in the same way the shifting narrative and the present tense writing style adds to a disorienting and rapid-pulse feeling for the reader.

"Hoo-ya," Mr. DiLouie - a damn good read.
Profile Image for Elisa .
1,509 reviews27 followers
August 27, 2015
Gut-wrenching. Lots of military action, lingo, names, ranks, acronyms etc. I couldn't really follow who was who, but you get there. Really good, really scary and horrible. Lots of shooting and stabbing and dying. Always with the dying. But there is humor and there are good people doing their job even when it seems like they are the only ones doing it.
Anyway, if you like zombie books and following the military during the end of the world, you need to read this one. It is pretty realistic, people react like they do, there is no paranormal aspect and it sucks. It freaking sucks. I need to go read a happy book now...
Profile Image for David.
9 reviews
March 13, 2012
Wow!!!! I've read several zombiepocolypse books,but none like this one. The perspective being only soldiers is fascinating no heroic civilians but instead military men an women fighting with tooth and nail to keep honor and fight for what's right . Amazing book and I really like the idea behind the apocalypse not just some random unknown virus. Deffinetly A book I would strongly recommend to apocalypse lovers.
Profile Image for Laurie Jameson.
Author 2 books9 followers
September 26, 2011
Total guy book. Shooting, fighting, bleeding, gun size, grenades. Not my cup of tea. Oh yeah, and zombies.
1 review
February 13, 2012
DiLouie just does not interest me. I find his books dry and unoriginal.
Profile Image for Sergeant Apone.
212 reviews4 followers
February 8, 2017
Not a fan of this one at all. Full of cliches and boring. I didn't care about any of the characters. I'm surprised I finished.
Profile Image for Erika's booked.
49 reviews1 follower
October 22, 2018
The pros:
Good story concept
Good characters

The cons:
Writing style was just not enjoyable
No real story structure/plot until the last two chapters
Scene skipping

So I loved the idea of this story; you know, the usual plague epidemic turns apocalypse, with plenty of fighting and running for survival, plus throw in a mission to save a scientist that will save the world. I mean, I "one-click" purchased this book as soon as I read the synopsis.

However, I'm really not a fan of the writing style in this novel. This is written in the third-person present tense, which made if feel like I was reading a film manuscript (if that makes sense). Another issue that I had is that the story didn't have a discernable plot until about 3/4 of the way through it.

The biggest issue for me though, was that for some reason the author decided to skip past chunks of story that, as an apocalyptic/horror/action fan, I would have liked to have read. He also chose to cut to different scenes pretty abruptly, deciding to wrap up the previous scene by telling the reader what happened instead of allowing us to "see" it for ourselves.

Here's an example. There's one chapter where the battalion is fighting through the streets of Manhattan to get to a specific location. All of this chapter describes in detail their struggle to make it half way there. The auther states that they have a little over half of their journey left, but as you would expect they are having difficulty because they are fighting through mobs of "Maddies" to make any progress. The scene gets more and more intense and it looks like its going to be a close call if they even make it out of the fight they are in and back on the move. The chapter ends with "'Go, go, go!" Bowman cries. They make it."

That's the end of the chapter. The next chapter picks up after they've completed their journey and are safely at their destination. Where is the rest of the action? The gory fighting? The relief of getting there safely? The skipping to different scenes not only cut out parts that I wanted to know what happened in, but also made it pretty difficult to keep track of characters that I liked, as there are multiple groups that this story follows.

The action that I had been waiting for did FINALLY show up, halfway through the penultimate chapter (90% through the book according to my kindle) and then the book was just over, and it somehow felt like I had read a really long prologue.

2.5 stars for Bowman, Mooney and the Crazy Eights.
Profile Image for B.K. Smith.
6 reviews
September 20, 2025
Amazing

I’m usually a critical reviewer. I LOVE zombie and apocalypse books and I read them en masse. But so often, they fall short. Especially when they’re focused on soldiers. The author write unbelievable plots with super soldiers in ones and twos. It never feels real.

Craig DiLouie has joined Shane Gries in my mind for the best military storytelling for the zombie genre. As a combat veteran, I can tell you this feels real and authentic. The characters, the comraderie, the quirky individuals, the despair and the intricacies of being in the military during a chaotic movement.

You will actually care about the characters and you will be immersed. My only gripe is how long it took people to figure out what was going on when they literally saw it over and over. This is another one of those books where nobody apparently heard of ‘zombies’ and are confused by what’s going on. It was maddening watching everyone individually piece it together even when they were WATCHING it unfold. I get that it was fantastical and unbelievable but as a group it would be easier for them to come to this conclusion as opposed to individually. They were more concerned with shooting infected civilians than they were scared of the grotesque walking corpses which just kept recurring. Just when you thought they realized what was going on or came to terms with what they had to do, suddenly there’s more confusion and arguing.

The reason it doesn’t affect my rating is because it mostly didn’t affect the outcome. Unlike other books, most of the company didn’t get wiped out just because soldiers were struggling with the concept of the reality before them.

All in all, it was a great book and I’m very glad I bought it.
Profile Image for Cesare Casciani.
9 reviews
January 29, 2022
This has been such a great, quick read.
I'm biased towards infected humans over the undead, both fast and slow ones, though novels with such antagonists are few and far between. This is one of them.
There are many characters here, which might be a bit confusing at times, although DiLouie manages to confer each a unique voice and feel without wasting precious words and pages on lengthy descriptions.
Absent are the 2 biggest clichés of the genre: the ordinary folk turned zombie slayer at the blink of an eye; and 'zombies are not the biggest threat'.
Our heroes are professional soldiers armed to the teeth with automatic weapons, and still have a hard time fending off the infected.
Oh, and the infected ARE the main threat here. The only one. None of that mohawk wearing, dirtbike raiding gang of accountants-turned-marauders nonsense we get to read in so many zombie novels.
Highly recommended to lovers of the genre.
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