Green Eyes
by Lucius Shepard
On This Page
Description
The most original zombie novel ever written!A carnival worker dead of alcohol poisoning, Donnell Harrison has been reborn with new memories and a profound literary talent. To reconnect him to the world and make him pliant, the reanimation team employs Jocundra Verret, a therapist who has gained the trust of numerous subjects, but when Donnell finds his latent power to control energy, Jocundra shares his doubts about the scientists' goals. Together they flee on a quest to discover Donnell's show more true origins and potential, and ultimately to confront evil at the heart of a fabulous bayou dynasty, where Donnell must restore order among strange and brutal alternate worlds.
. show less
Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
We've been taught in recent years to think of mindless brain-eaters when we hear the word "zombies". In 1984, Shepard's first novel inverted the stereotype. A secret medical project, hidden in the Louisiana bayou, has discovered how to revive the recently dead, using a bacterial dose derived from graveyard dirt. Far from mindless, the revived are mentally more vivid and alert than they ever were before dying, and have actually become different people, remembering lives that they never really lived. Their eyes shine with green luminescence from the bacterial activity in their brains and optic nerves. Most expire again permanently after only a few hours; some, after a few months. The story mainly follows one of the latter, Donnell show more Harrison, as he learns how short his expected time may be, and fights to extend it. A carnival worker dead of alcohol poisoning in his former existence, his false memory is of a life as a poet - and he can actually write new poems having true artistic value. Aided by the young, woman psychologist managing his case, he escapes the project, only to become entangled with the last heir to a sinister Louisiana family long associated with voodoo and other dark practices.
One is struck by how completely Shepard as a writer had become himself, even at this early stage in his career. The heat and humidity of the bayou, the marginal protagonist moving through a series of lushly vegetated, eerie scenes, the liminal menace, the fine writing interspersed with passages of florid description: all present. He's best known for novella-length work, but here and in A Handbook of American Prayer, it's clear he could write novels just as well.
I bought this book in 1984, and just read it now for the first time - pays to hang on to books, no? The year 1984 was vintage for SF&F, seeing the first-novel debuts of William Gibson (Neuromancer) and Kim Stanley Robinson (The Wild Shore), both, like the Shepard, "Ace Science Fiction Specials." There's a skippable introduction by editor Terry Carr.
Not in the front rank of Shepard's fiction, but gripping and thoughtful. show less
One is struck by how completely Shepard as a writer had become himself, even at this early stage in his career. The heat and humidity of the bayou, the marginal protagonist moving through a series of lushly vegetated, eerie scenes, the liminal menace, the fine writing interspersed with passages of florid description: all present. He's best known for novella-length work, but here and in A Handbook of American Prayer, it's clear he could write novels just as well.
I bought this book in 1984, and just read it now for the first time - pays to hang on to books, no? The year 1984 was vintage for SF&F, seeing the first-novel debuts of William Gibson (Neuromancer) and Kim Stanley Robinson (The Wild Shore), both, like the Shepard, "Ace Science Fiction Specials." There's a skippable introduction by editor Terry Carr.
Not in the front rank of Shepard's fiction, but gripping and thoughtful. show less
I just don't like zombies, sorry...Not a bad book, sort of reminded me of Shelley's _Frankenstein_.
Lucius Shepard's first novel. Only so-so. I don't like his stories that are set inside the U.S. so much; they're like second-rate Stephen King. Read the classic Life During Wartime instead.
Zombies.
*note to self. Copy from A.
*note to self. Copy from A.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Arthur C. Clarke Award Winners and Shortlisted Books
219 works; 14 members
Forced Exposure
83 works; 1 member
Jones & Newman: Best Horror Books Further Recommended Reading
577 works; 4 members
Author Information

151+ Works 3,992 Members
Lucius Shepard was born in Lynchburg, Virginia in 1947. He wrote in many different genres including science fiction and fantasy, cyberpunk, magical realism, poetry, and non-fiction. He published his first short stories in 1983 and his first novel, Green Eyes, in 1984. His other works include Life During Wartime, The Jaguar Hunter, and Two Trains show more Running. He won several awards including the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1985, the Nebula Award for the novella R&R, the Hugo Award for the novella Barnacle Bill the Spacer, and the Shirley Jackson Award for the novella Vacancy. He died on March 18, 2014 at the age of 66. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Some Editions
Awards and Honors
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Common Knowledge
- Original title
- Green Eyes
- Original publication date
- 1984
- Dedication
- This book is for my Mother
For all the usual and well-deserved reasons.
And for Kim
For reasons not so usual - Blurbers
- Knight, Damon
- Original language*
- English
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 339
- Popularity
- 93,173
- Reviews
- 5
- Rating
- (3.40)
- Languages
- 5 — English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 13
- ASINs
- 4






























































