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World War Z
by: Max Brooks

 : World War Z

List Price: £8.99
Amazon.co.uk's Price: £6.99
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Binding: Paperback
EAN: 9780715637036
ISBN: 0715637037
Label: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd
Manufacturer: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd
Number Of Pages: 352
Publication Date: July 27, 2007
Publisher: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd
Studio: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd




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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - An excellent and original take on a tired idea
It's finally happened. The zombie apocalypse has come and devastated civilisation...but in the end, civilisation rallied and won. Using tactics pioneered in South Africa and bankrolled by Cuba, the largest nation to remain infection-free, the world's armies successfully defeated the undead menace, but only at a staggering cost in lives and resources. Ten years after victory was declared, a journalist travels the world, listening to the stories of the survivors, from those who were there when the outbreak began to those who listened in the corridors of power as key decisions were taken to the stories of everyday men and women thrust into circumstances beyond their control. From Hawaii to China, even to the isolated crew of the International Space Station, this is the story of that war.

World War Z is that most beloved of Hollywood ideas, 'high concept'. One of those ideas that makes other writers go away smacking themselves in the head thinking, "Why didn't I think of that?" Zombies are very much 'in' these days, but after several years of zombie movies and computer games the appeal was waning, until Brooks' interesting take on the concept revitalised interest. Most zombie fiction is somewhat nihilistic, ending with the world overrun by the undead hordes or humanity reduced to tiny enclaves battling the mindless hordes, so the fact that World War Z features a victory is interesting enough. The stories of what sacrifices were necessary to achieve that victory makes up the book, which is essentially a 'mosaic' novel rather than a standard work of fiction. The book shifts between the different interviewees, some of whom appear only once but most of them reappear periodically throughout the book, as we find out how they survived the decade of the war and what happened to them along the way.

It's an excellent device and Brooks employs it skillfully. Some of the stories border on the silly - the blind Japanese gardener taking on the zombie hordes with a sword in a park full of traps stretches credulity - but elsewhere Brooks nails the feeling of total horror, with the computer nerd trying to flee his infested Japanese apartment block or the soldiers fighting to clear the catacombs under Paris. Elsewhere Brooks takes the capabilities of the zombie menace to their logical conclusion, with heavily-armoured divers fighting off zombie forces underwater, or the US army making full use of dogs (who are driven wild by the presence of zombies) in fighting the hordes and the fates of both the animals and their handlers during and after the war.

This is a widescreen story, with a truly global perspective, told economically and well. There are some good laughs (the new US zombie-dispatching firearm is nicknamed a 'Meg', as it resembles a Megatron toy from Transformers; during one battle a nun and REM lead singer Michael Stipe help fight off the zombie hordes), but Brooks takes his subject mostly seriously and sounds some cautionary notes along the way. To some extent the story isn't really about the zombies, but about people and what they are capable of when their backs are against the wall.

World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War (*****) is a gripping, page-turning, memorable read which throws some fresh impetus on an old idea, and makes it work brilliantly. The book is available in the UK from Duckworth and in the USA from Three Rivers Press. A movie version is in development, with a script being written by Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Straczynski.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Max Brooks has written the best book of the Zombie genre - hands down
Read this straight away - Don't read the survival guide first (if at all).

Max Brooks has written the best book of the Zombie genre - hands down.

It is told in a collection of personal stories that as a whole give a good view of the Zombie war or World War Z. Nearly all the stories are tense and the others hold different horrors. Max has developed all characters well and given them strong supporting backgrounds - he also explores the human factor of the survivors and brings many interesting psychological effects of this World Armageddon.

It is a stong point that the story is told from many countries and here Max has done his research, bringing out national characters, the Israelies enter into a voluntary quaranteen and close their borders, South Africa brings out a survival plan based on the horrors of Apartheid, the zombie outbreak is helped by black market body part sales and human trafficking, the infected running from developing countries escape into the underbelly of the Western Cities where the unwanted and unnamed live. So it is not only about our war against zombies, it is also about our contemporary world with the Zombies as an instigator of our collapse.

On another level it explores the Global effect of Romero's Zombie movies, what happens everywhere else?

I really enjoyed reading this book, it was tense, gripping and even made me think a little. On the whole probably the best horror novel I have read. I wish I hadn't bothered with the survival guide however, I felt I had to read it first but World War Z stands alone and nothing in the survival guide is needed to read WWZ. After reading both I'd recommend skipping the survival guide entirely.

But read this one, they are already making the movie and the book is brilliant.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Tedious and Disappointing
I wouldn't bother leaving such a negative review, but I do feel a bit cheated into buying this book by all the other ultra-positive posts here. They must be friends and relatives, zombie fan-boys, or (like the author clearly is) survivalist fantasists.

I was so looking forward to reading this, but was very disappointed. The structure (made up of 60 or so interviews) at first seems innovative, but it means there are no central characters and hence no real plot or jeopardy. Worse, they all sound the same. It gets really tedious. And cliched.

According to Mr. Brooks all politicians and businessmen are corrupt liars, the army is incompetent (except of course for the brave foot soldiers), the media only say what the big corporations let them, and most deserving of contempt are all those folk who work in offices and never bothered to learn any proper survival skills.

Credibility is virtually absent - on almost ever page I thought "No, that wouldn't happen" such as in the daft Battle of Yonkers where a bullet apparently enters and exits a zombie's skull ('skimming the inside') without causing catastrophic damage. No, that wouldn't happen...

On the other hand, if you're into zombie stuff, Max Brook's other book The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead makes for quite an entertaining read. As for zombie fiction, check out Steven King's Cell which is set to be filmed in 2009 by (wait for it!) Rob Zombie.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - I couldn't put it down
An amazing story set all over the world during the zombie uprising, Brilliantly written, Superb development of the zombie war from outbreak to control and eradication. I really enjoyed the style in which it was written with each chapter like a short interview with a survivour. This is the first zombie novel I have bought and in my humble opinion it would make an excellent film.

This simply will not disappoint !



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - I'VE READ IT TWICE SO FAR
What a great book, I turned away from reading horror books because I felt the genre was becoming too samey. A friend of mine recomended this and I couldn't put this great book down, a great book for your collection.




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