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Zombie Authors Speak Out
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Jonathan
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Nov 01, 2010 09:00AM

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I would say that it has much to do with disbelief as anything.
I am a huge zombie fan, have been for years. If I were to be walking down the street tomorrow and see a zombie shambling towards me, my initial response would most likely be, "No f'ing way!"
I would say that most authors, myself included, prefer to leave that period of disbelief intact.
With that being said, my first book involved a group of people who were prepared for zombies and knew exactly what to do about it. =)

My favourite response had to be:
QUESTION 3: Zombie stories lend themselves to metaphor and subtext. Why is that?
JOE HILL: Do they lend themselves to metaphor and subtext? I thought people liked movies and books about zombies because everyone digs the idea of fighting their way through hoards of the undead with a fuckin’ chainsaw.
Makes me laugh everytime I read it.
Thanks again for sharing!
IDGS
Grey Dogs: Zombie Survival


The good ol' Lucio Fulci ZOMBI 2, eh?
Still, I wonder who ever won that fight...

We had this exact same discussion at work - I also felt that the author is essentially asking you to assume that the setting is in a world where the concept of zombies or undead has never been imagined, and that the living population is learning "the rules" for the first time. That also helps explain how so many people fell victim to the initial outbreak, including armed citizens and the military; it's a huge step to make the decision to gun down "infected civilians," and then they still have to learn the shoot-in-the-head rule after that decision is made. The time it takes to conquer disbelief gives the zombies a heck of a head start. :-)

We had this exact same discussion at work - I also felt th..."
Very true. As a horror writer, I've found it very difficult to tackle this issue as well, so I went for the 'ignorance is bliss' route.
The mainstream may be more versed in zombie literature than it ever has been, but I'm not sure my father would recognize a zombie when he saw one - so I suppose it's not completely far-fetched. As well, I think the government would really hesitate to call the infected 'zombies' in order to keep some sense of social order.
IDGS
Grey Dogs: Zombie Survival



IDGS
Grey Dogs: Zombie Survival

This is another reason why I loved the film Zombie Strippers so much. The elite Army clean-up crew sent in to mop up at the beginning of the film knew right away what they were dealing with. "Zombies. Shit."

This is another reason why I loved the film Zombie Strippers so much. T..."
Zombie Strippers was actually good, eh? I'll have to check it out - I've seen it at BlockBuster but I kinda pushed it into my "See if nothing else is out" pile. Thanks for the heads up!
IDGS
Grey Dogs: Zombie Survival


Have you seen Zombies, ZOmbies, Zombies, which is similar to Zombie STrippers, but (I thought) more fun? It has zombie strippers versus zombie hookers and the tongue was more firmly in cheek... That being said, I enjoyed Zombie STrippers too.




Zombies of Mass Destruction is funny as hell and also very gory...

Thanks, Natalie! Off to read it!

Well written review Natalie, and I completely agree, it's a great zombie flick.


Seriously, a very entertaining zombie prom romp.

"Where are you going?"
"To the prom, to kick some zombie ass."
It was a lot more fun than I thought it'd be.

It was a lot more fun than I thought it'd be."
Absolutely, even if I identify more with the crazy gym teacher than anyone else in the movie. =)

Books mentioned in this topic
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Patient Zero (other topics)