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Ryan Brown

Author of Play Dead

14+ Works 138 Members 12 Reviews

Works by Ryan Brown

Associated Works

First Thrills (2010) — Contributor — 277 copies, 9 reviews
Fear: 13 Stories of Suspense and Horror (2010) — Contributor — 198 copies, 7 reviews
Nights of the Living Dead: An Anthology (2017) — Contributor — 121 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Collection, Vol. 2 (2012) — Contributor — 85 copies, 4 reviews
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Guide to the Universe (1987) — Illustrator — 50 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The IDW Collection, Vol. 12 (2021) — Illustrator — 35 copies
First Thrills: Volume 1 (2011) — Contributor — 25 copies
Armide [sound recording] (2008) — Conductor — 10 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures #5 - Something Fishy Goes Down (1989) — Cover artist, some editions — 3 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Adventures #7 (1989) — Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Macro-Series #1 - Donatello (2018) — Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Macro-Series #2 - Michelangelo (2018) — Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Macro-Series #3 - Leonardo (2018) — Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Macro-Series #4 - Raphael (2018) — Cover artist, some editions — 2 copies
Maskerade Volume 1 (2023) — Illustrator, some editions — 2 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
male
Relationships
Brown, Sandra (mother)

Members

Reviews

12 reviews
I know what you're thinking. Football and zombies? A fantastic and energetic sport combined with the gruesome and not so energetic undead? Well…yeah! When you think about it they're actually pretty similar. In football, players try to kill each other to get control of the ball; zombies…well, they may try to rekill each other to get control of your brains. Stick them together and you've got a winning combination.

PLAY DEAD by Ryan Brown was fascinating mainly because I wasn't expecting it, show more yet it combined two of my favorite things. I love football and I love zombies. I've read a number of stories where the paranormal has been thrown into something pretty well known but this is the first time I personally have seen football hit with the paranormal bug. I'm loving it.

The plot for this is pretty straightforward. The Killington High School football team ends up drowning in a river after their bus decided it needed a little bath. Cole, the quarterback and star of the team is the only survivor. Something just isn't right though. Cole has a feeling the accident wasn't truly an accident and he believes that their rivals, Elmwood Heights, is behind the tragedy. So what's a quarterback to do when a major game is coming up and his entire team is dead? Turn to black magic of course!

That is some serious commitment to football! The football scholarship on the line may have influenced Cole a bit as well.

Successfully risen from the dead, the football team must not only hide their secret from their parents and rest of the town, but fight to actually claim victory in their beloved game as well. There's more than reputation at stake here - their very souls are on the line. Add in a little romantic touch with the coach's daughter, Savannah and Mr. Brown has created a fantastic read.

For those readers out there who may be shying away because the book involves football, I'll tell you up front that there are football references within the story. Plays and penalties are explained; famous players are described. I understand the references so I can't make too much of a judgment call as to how easily someone unfamiliar with the sport would be able to understand these references. What I can say, however, is that the general plot of the book will not be lost if you simply skip over the technical passages within the story.

Aside from the awesome idea behind this story, my favorite aspect of PLAY DEAD was the writing. The game scenes were described in such a way that it was easy to visualize what was going on. The main characters were developed well and there were even a few side characters that became pretty memorable.

Fair warning time: There is a decent amount of cussing throughout the book. Normally that bothers me in a story but oddly enough, it actually flowed well in PLAY DEAD. Who knows, perhaps I’m just predisposed to accepting cussing in football or from the undead.

I would recommend this book to any thriller fans out there (and no, I don’t mean Michael Jackson’s Thriller), football fans, or zombie fans. This is a great book for lovers of the game or those who get a certain tingly thrill from reading about decomposing undead.
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Not being much of one for zombie thrillers, I opened this book with a bit of trepidation. Oh ... my .... goodness!! WHAT a TOTally fun book!!! I zinged through it in less than 24 hours ... and it's not a small book!

You'll be smack-dab entranced within the first 10 pages .. I kid you not! There are zingers and twists and little tidbits that make you chuckle. You have the obligatory "boy meets girl, girl hates boy, boy hates her back" type of romantic entanglement, BUT you have so much more! show more The action is fast-paced, the characters are believable (even if what happens to some of them is not), the writing is engaging and funny.

A couple of my favorite lines:

"I think you're going to have to kill him, Logan"
"Why?"
"'Cause he said the game would only happen over his dead body."
"Shit."

"It's Hubie. Freddy's in the crapper."
"When's he back?"
"Oh, I'd say about two Marlboro's and an Archie comic from now."

Maybe I'm twisted (well, alright, maybe I am, just a little), those lines just cracked me up!! (You'll have to read the book to see why!) Seriously, buy it!!
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½
A surprisingly engaging story, moreso than one would expect from a book easily summarized as "zombie football book." Play Dead is the tale of a scrappy football team murdered by its rivals, and subsequently resurrected by a local witch. the problem is, the players have "come back wrong," Pet Semetary-style, and now the surviving QB must lead them in a final game against their murderers. A fast-paced tale of small-town supernatural high-jinks, peppered with sports fever and a little romance. show more Suitable for mature high-schoolers (a lot of foul language and some sexual content.) show less
Play Dead by Ryan Brown is frightening, fast and flat-out funny. Definitely not a book you want to take seriously. I was a little concerned half way through that the plot had gotten a little flat and more horrifying than hilarious- not that horror is a bad thing. Football isn't for everyone. Neither are zombies... but combined? Brilliant!

The Killington High Jackrabbits has never had a successful football team, but their time has finally come. They have two games left to claim the district show more championship. At the final game they will come head to head with their number one rival, the Elmwood Badgers. There has been bad blood between the two towns since the time they were first founded and it is time for them to duke it out on the field. But a terrible prank prevents the Jackrabbits from even making it to the stadium. Their team bus goes over the bridge and takes a trip down the river- eventually sinking, pinning and drowning every player but QB Cole Logan. Now there is only one thing left for Cole to do. Get revenge.

So, just how does one go about getting revenge and settling the score? Turn to black magic, of course! Haha. Now that Cole has magically brought his entire team back to life, he has 48 hours to win a game and send his team back to their grave before all hell breaks lose. He and Savannah, the coach's distant daughter, must control the team as they can't stop themselves from eating everything... horses, cows- even their parents. Can Cole and Savannah beat this race against time and secure a victory to save the souls of his teammates and spread revenge amongst the berating Badgers?

I truly loved our hero, Cole Logan. He is your typical high school bad boy- motorcycle, piercings, daddy issues and a past. Although he is a loner, he will live and die for his football team. He's counting on the team to help him win a college scholarship- he's got to get out of Killington. My favorite moment! Cole throws himself off a cliff into the river to rescue his teammates from the water logged bus. Cole is incredibly passionate and the whole scene is ridiculously intense. This isn't the only time Cole shows magnificent passion. There is a very fun "beat down" scene that I enjoyed- Cole knows how to stand up for himself and those that he cares for. Savannah is another story. She doesn't seem passionate- her character is a little flat. Cole makes up for that.

I have to say that I was pretty excited to receive this book in the mail for review. I love zombies! (You can thank Robin Becker of Brains for that.) The cover alone got me excited to read this. Play Dead was full of fresh ideas that are wildly engrossing. It was a quick, entertaining read and I recommend it to any zombie or football lover. (Don't worry, the football isn't overwhelming- read it even if you aren't a fan of football!)
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Statistics

Works
14
Also by
17
Members
138
Popularity
#148,170
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
12
ISBNs
23

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