

|
Loading... World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War (original 2006; edition 2007)by Max Brooks
Work detailsWorld War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brooks (2006)
Good book! Definitely can see that this might be better as an audiobook than print/electronic. It is interesting to see how the author incorporated present pop culture with future pop culture. The footnotes are sometimes hilarious, disturbing, or confusing. Despite there being nearly no zombie action, this book can be gruesome. ( )Polished this book off before the film comes out. Love the cold, factual, UN-like nature of this book, and while the stories of the individuals do become a little repetitive - it's an interesting take on the post-apocalyptic zombie tale. I have a feeling that the film is going to be nothing like this, however, doing the background research has been an interesting exercise nonetheless. Really good zombie apocalypse book. Should have been titled World War Zzzzzzzzz...., of all the accounts told in this story only two are worth listening to. Terrible, book, terrible layout, nothing in this book surprises, nothing in this book captured my imagination, blah blah blah blah, boring! Interested in more of my reviews? Visit my blog! I did like this one surprisingly. I say surprisingly because this is ultimately a documentary of what happened in 'World War Z' and had great potential of being boring. I thought it was a nice change up in writing style. Considering the fact that all of these personal statements, made by different individuals involved, were conducted after the war was 'over' it didn't have the excitement or in the moment terror that I always love in a zombie novel. Despite the fact that I didn't enjoy the political aspects, they were nonetheless extremely interesting as they were detailed and very thorough. Everything was covered quite comprehensively in this book; it could be an actual testimonial of a real zombie war. I had attempted to read this book before but failed to get very far; I found it hard to read something written in such a way. The audiobook was completely different for me. The audiobook added more to the story than was present in the ‘print’ story. Each individual making their statement regarding what happened was spoken by a different individual rather than the narrator alone using different voice inflections. This was my favorite part and what made it even more real for me. Definitely a winner for any zombie lover out there.
And while all the action and drama is top notch, it would just be a mechanical exercise if it weren’t for the sociological commentary inserted. It may be out in the open but Brooks does not beat you over the head with it. I love how he shows how both the general public and governments deal with zombie crisis, mainly with denial. If you want, zombies are simply a symbol for the entire real world such as climate change or a dwindling supply.
References to this work on external resources.
|
Google Books — Loading...
Popular coversRatingAverage: (4.1)
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||