Picture of author.

Scott Edelman

Author of The Gift

119+ Works 334 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Scott Edelman

Image credit: By K Tempest Bradford from New York City - Awards Are Scary - Jetse de Vries and Scott Edelman, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3068361

Series

Works by Scott Edelman

The Gift (1990) 20 copies
What Will Come After (2010) 19 copies, 1 review
Things That Never Happened (2020) 10 copies
Texas Rattlesnake (2000) 9 copies
What We Still Talk About (2006) 9 copies
These Words Are Haunted (2001) 4 copies
The Last Supper 4 copies
Doorway to Nightmare #5 (1978) — Author — 2 copies
Doorway to Nightmare #1-5 — Author — 2 copies
The Avengers Versus Thanos 1 copy, 1 review
Big Bangs 1 copy
Goobers 1 copy
Are You Now? 1 copy
Glitch 1 copy
Petrified 1 copy

Associated Works

The Living Dead (2008) — Contributor — 991 copies, 22 reviews
The Living Dead 2 (2010) — Contributor — 354 copies, 9 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Awesome Comic Fantasy (2001) — Contributor — 202 copies, 1 review
The Mammoth Book of Zombie Apocalypse! (2010) — Author — 177 copies, 4 reviews
Horrors! 365 Scary Stories (Anthology) (1998) — Contributor — 137 copies, 1 review
Zombies: The Recent Dead (2010) — Contributor — 132 copies
The Mammoth Book of Monsters (2007) — Contributor — 128 copies, 4 reviews
The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction: Volume 3 (2009) — Contributor — 106 copies, 3 reviews
Nebula Awards Showcase 2003 (2003) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Metahorror (1988) — Contributor — 95 copies
Zombies! Zombies! Zombies! (2011) — Contributor — 91 copies, 1 review
The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror 22 (2011) — Contributor — 86 copies, 2 reviews
Treachery and Treason (2000) — Contributor — 83 copies, 2 reviews
Once Upon a Galaxy (2002) — Contributor — 80 copies, 2 reviews
Miscreations: Gods, Monstrosities & Other Horrors (2020) — Contributor — 73 copies, 1 review
Moon Shots (1999) — Contributor — 66 copies
Best New Horror 4 (1993) — Contributor — 61 copies, 1 review
Forbidden Planets (2006) — Contributor — 60 copies, 3 reviews
Omega: The Unknown Classic (2006) — Writer (7) — 58 copies, 2 reviews
The Dead That Walk: Flesh-Eating Stories (2009) — Contributor — 57 copies, 1 review
The Book of All Flesh (2001) — Contributor — 57 copies, 1 review
Mars Probes (2002) — Contributor — 56 copies
The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror 08 (1997) — Contributor — 54 copies
Crossroads: Tales of the Southern Literary Fantastic (2004) — Contributor — 53 copies, 2 reviews
100 Fiendish Little Frightmares (1997) — Contributor — 49 copies, 2 reviews
Men Writing Science Fiction As Women (2003) — Contributor — 47 copies
Genius Loci: Tales of the Spirit of Place (2016) — Contributor — 45 copies, 2 reviews
Psychomania: Killer Stories (2014) — Contributor — 43 copies, 1 review
The Book of Final Flesh (All Flesh Must Be Eaten) (2005) — Contributor — 43 copies
The Book of More Flesh (2005) — Contributor — 41 copies
Essential Marvel Horror, Volume 2 (2008) 34 copies, 1 review
Chiral Mad 3 (Anthology) (2016) — Contributor — 31 copies
The Giant Book of Terror (1994) — Contributor — 25 copies
You, Human: An Anthology of Dark Science Fiction (2016) — Contributor — 24 copies
StokerCon 2025 Souvenir Anthology (2025) — Contributor — 23 copies, 13 reviews
Summer Chills (2007) — Contributor — 22 copies, 1 review
If This Goes On: The Science Fiction Future of Today's Politics (2019) — Contributor — 21 copies, 1 review
Postscripts Magazine, Issue 15: Worldcon 2008 Special (2008) — Contributor, some editions — 15 copies
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 28 • September 2012 (2012) — Contributor — 15 copies, 1 review
The Unquiet Dreamer: A Tribute to Harlan Ellison (2019) — Contributor — 15 copies
Zombies: Shambling Through the Ages (2013) — Contributor — 11 copies
Postscripts Magazine, Issue 30/31: Memoryville Blues (2013) — Contributor — 8 copies
Postscripts Magazine, Issue 19: Enemy of the Good (2009) — Contributor — 7 copies, 1 review
The Comics Journal #100 (1985) — Contributor — 5 copies
The Comics Journal #97 (1985) — Contributor — 4 copies
The Comics Journal #98 (1985) — Contributor — 4 copies
Time Warp 04 (1980) — Author — 3 copies
The Comics Journal #115 (1987) — Contributor — 2 copies
The Comics Journal #99 (1985) — Contributor — 2 copies
Qualia Nous: Vol. 2 — Contributor — 2 copies
Dark Discoveries Issue Number 30, Winter 2015 (2015) — Contributor — 2 copies
Superman Family [1974] #194 (1979) — Author — 1 copy
Science Fiction Eye #07, August 1990 — Contributor — 1 copy
House of Mystery # 270 (1979) — Author — 1 copy
Daily Science Fiction: August 2011 (2011) — Contributor — 1 copy, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Edelman, Scott
Legal name
Edelman, Scott
Birthdate
1955
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
This collects various Avengers/Thanos comics from 1963-1972, presenting the story of Thanos' quest to become a god and destroy all life in the universe, and Avengers' efforts to stop him.

It ought to be exciting, right?

I remember liking these comics as a kid. Really I do. And Marvel has given us some good movies over the last several years, using the Avengers. I was really pleased to see this available in Kindle Unlimited.

Unfortunately, it's just silly and disjointed, and the art isn't that show more good.

Yes, these are separate comics published over a period of about a decade, from different specific lines, focused on different main characters. But it's presented as being the story of the Avengers battling Thanos to protect the universe, as if there's a coherent story, here.

There isn't. Repeatedly we see Thanos finally and completely defeated, and then back in the next part of the sequence, present as if the previous defeat hadn't been presented as decisive. New characters appear, presented as if we should already know them.

And really, in the end, I don't care. There's backstory that I don't remember, if I ever read those particular comics, that isn't here, that would probably make it all feel a bit more coherent. In what is included here, Marvell and his alter ego, Rick Jones, are the only characters whom I was able to feel much connection to at all, and even that was tenuous.

Mostly, I just didn't care what happened to these characters.

Clearly, I'm not the intended audience here. I suspect the intended audience for this collection is the audience of readers who loved these comics when they were younger, and never stopped loving the Marvel universe.

I read this for free from Kindle Unlimited, and that's a bit of a relief.
show less
(Reprinted from the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com]. I am the original author of this essay, as well as the owner of CCLaP; it is not being reprinted illegally.)

Early in the zombie story collection What Will Come After, author Scott Edelman actually flat-out states what exactly is wrong with penning a collection of zombie stories: "The writer types out many variations of this outline, because that is all he knows how to do, and when there are no more stories show more to tell, he's going to continue to tell them anyway. Some of his tales are set in city streets. Some are on country roads. Still others take place in zoos, in shopping malls and schools and airplanes. But whatever the setting, at their heart, they are all the same. Shuffle. Shamble. Shuffle a little more quickly. Run. (Well, as zombies run anyway.) Run, run, run. Eat!" But unfortunately, Edelman ignores his own revelation here, turning in a story collection that gets very tedious very fast: because he's right, zombies as a literary device are not that different from a natural disaster like a fire or a tornado, and there's simply not much to be said in a story about natural disasters besides, "Natural disaster hits town; humans in that town run away." This leads Edelman then into trying out a whole series of gimmicks in order to maintain our attention, which after all is what most zombie stories in general do; and so do we get a story about a dysfunctional family that are fleeing zombies, and a story about a bookish intellectual who is fleeing zombies, and a story about a theatre owner who is fleeing zombies, not to mention a whole series of ultra-gimmicky zombie mashups of famous older literary stories. ("It's John Steinbeck meets zombies!" "It's Shakespeare meets zombies!" J-sus, ask me how ready I am for that literary trend to be over!) A big disappointment from the normally great PS Publishing.

Out of 10: 4.8
show less

Awards

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
119
Also by
59
Members
334
Popularity
#71,210
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
2
ISBNs
18
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs