PDA

View Full Version : Anyone pick up World War Z?



CoinReturn
14-Sep-2006, 09:11 PM
I'm 100 or so pages in, and its grabbing like its predecessor, The Zombie Survival Guide did. Good stuff.

Tullaryx
14-Sep-2006, 09:17 PM
Indeedy-doo.

I have a well-read ARC copy and a well-protected signed ARC copy by Mssr. Brooks himself. And yesterday I received my hardcover version of the book and the 5-disc audiobook. I've already read and re-read it six times. :D

Here's my Amazon review for it.


I was one of many who heard about Max Brooks' satirical guide book The Zombie Survival Guide: Complete Protection from the Living Dead. Being a huge fan of George A. Romero's Dead series of films and just the zombie subgenre in general, I was intrigued by the release of this guidebook. From the first page to the last I was impressed, entertained, and hooked on Brooks' serio-comic take on how to survive a zombie outbreak. One section of the book which really caught my interest and has remained a favorite to reread over and over was the final one which details the so-called "historical" instances of past zombie outbreaks throughout history. From as far back as Ancient Egypt and Rome up to the late 1990's. My only gripe about that section of the book was that it was all-too-brief. I felt that it could've been made longer and even would've made for a fine book on its own. Maybe I wasn't the only one to have wished for such a thing to happen for it seems that Brooks himself might have thought the same thing. His latest book in his trip through the zombie genre is titled World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War and it takes the final chapter of his previous book and expands on it. But instead of using past "historical events" to tell his story Brooks goes into the near future to describe what would happen if the zombies ever did bring the human race to the brink of extinction and how humans finally learned how to fight back and take back the world.

World War Z is a fictional account of a worldwide outbreak of the living dead in the near future and judging from some of the descriptions of places and events in the beginning of the book it won't be too far in the future. WWZ is done in an interview-style format with each chapter consisting of first-person interviews of individuals who lived through the Zombie War from its initial outbreak to it's final battles and mop-up operations. The sampling of survivors interviewed range from soldiers who fought the losing battles in the early going of the war when lack of information, outdated tactics, and illogical reactions to the zombie outbreak contributed to humanity almost losing the war. These soldier survivors explain how humanity became its own worst enemy when it came to protecting its own and combatting the growing ranks of the zombies. Some of the mistakes were unavailable as information on how to combat the zombies were far and few and even then most were unreliable. Some mistakes on the other hand many today would consider as unconscionable as war-profiteers and those willing to put keep a hold on their own power would sacrifice their own people to keep it so.

There's also regular people who survived the war and who made great contributions during the dark days when humanity were pushed into isolated and fortified pockets of resistance as everywhere around them the zombie army grew exponentially. Some of these people were just children when the outbreak first began as rumors and unsubstantiated news reports. It's the words of those children now adults that show how war and conflict really takes the biggest toll on the smallest and helpless. One could substitute the wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, The Balkans and even Africa in lieu of Brooks zombie war and this book would still resonate. There's a particular entry of how children left to their own devices to try and survive alone in the wild with zombies all around have turned feral to the point that their capacity to learn and develop into adulthood has become stunted or even halted permanently.

Brooks' novel also puts in little veiled references to the events occurring now in the real world. There's mention of the unpopular war in the Persian Gulf as having a detrimental effect on the morale of troops once they returned home and how this helped make the initial fight to stem the tide of the zombies a losing proposition from the outset. There's also mention of Iran as having acquired a nuclear arsenal and how this leads to an incident early in the Great Panic of the zombie outbreak that speaks volume of what could happen if unstable states acquire weapons of mass destruction. Brooks' also gives a prescient look into a near future where the US and Europe stop being the economic superpowers of the world and step aside for the economic juggernaut that is China and India. All these inferences of today's geopolitical and economical events mirrors what might just come into fruition.

The interview format really gives the book a sense of realism despite the outrageous and fantastical nature of the book. As I read the book I was reminded of Stephen A. Ambrose's books on the men and women who fought during World War 2. Ambrose also used interviews and personal accounts to make up the bulk of his books like in Citizen Soldiers and Band of Brothers. Having a personal take on the events gave his books more emotional impact and really brought the emotions of the conflict to those who never experienced it. The same could be said about Max Brooks' World War Z. Even though it's fictional thru and thru it still made the reader think of how such an event, if it ever came to pass, could be so tragic, disheartening but in the end uplifting as it once again shows that humanity could still pull itself together through all its petty misunderstandings to survive. On a more stylistic point, Brooks' novel shares some similarities to Theodore Judson's sci-fi epic Fitzpatrick's War. Judson's book also tries to chronicle a future war which was shaped by religious and ideological forces. Where Judson goes way into the future of an alternate Earth, Brooks smartly stays to a more forseeable future that readers of his book would most likely see happen; hopefully a much brighter and less-zombified one.

Brooks' decision to forgo the usual linear and narrative style for this book also allowed him a certain bit of freedom to introduce one-shot characters in addition to those who appear regularly. In a more traditional novel such one-shot characters would seem useless and even unnecessary, but in this interview format it makes more sense since it's really just a collection of personalities trying to describe their own take of the Zombie War they lived through. Some people I know who have read advance reader's copies of the book (I was lucky enough to procure an ARC copy myself months in advance) have said that there's little or no talk of love and relationships in World War Z. I for one was glad that Brooks didn't try to force certain "interviews" where it talks of survivors finding love and relationships during the outbreak, through the war and all the way to the mop-up. This book chronicles tales of survival and horror. As much as a tale of love would've been a change of pace to all the death and horror in the interviews it would've been too drastic a change of pace. I would think that the last thing that most people would have in their minds when trying to survive day-to-day, if not hour-to-hour would be to stop for a moment and have sex, cuddle or other less-than survival behaviors.

All in all, Max Brooks' World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War takes a serious look at a fictional and fantastical premise and event with a serious eye. The book manages to be tragic and terrifyingly sot-on about how the world governments today could fail when confronted by such a horror of tremendous proportions. Unlike his funnier first book on the zombie subject, World War Z shows the flaws and failings of humanity and how it almost led to its extinction, but it also shows humanity's stubbornness in the face of total annihilation and how it could come together in cooperation to not just survive but take back the world. In times of extreme adversity man can be brought to his knees but also show his resilience. A great novel and one that deserves reading from not just fans of the horror and zombie subgenre, but those who enjoy taking a peek into what could be, no matter how outrageous.

Skold
15-Sep-2006, 02:17 AM
i'm about 60 pages in and i agree with you both - it is fantastic. A must-read for everyone!

Lord_Galvatron
16-Sep-2006, 06:20 AM
I NEED to get it. No money. Must. Try. Library! :mad:

jim102016
16-Sep-2006, 07:13 AM
I found this interview with Max Brooks, from 2004, he talks about his first book.

http://suicidegirls.com/interviews/Max+Brooks/


I read the Zombie Survival Guide a few years ago, thought it was an excellent book. I would never suspect someone coming from his background would write it, let alone what sounds like an outstanding sequal. World War Z sounds great.

jdog
16-Sep-2006, 09:57 AM
i need to find this book. not much luck in my neck of the woods and i have no credit card so i cant use ebay looks like a screwed for now.

Lee
17-Sep-2006, 06:25 AM
Yeah, I just got it today, and it's a pretty good read, actually.

kidgloves
17-Sep-2006, 10:28 PM
Im curious about this as the first one being a hand/reference book didn't grab me at all. In fact i found it to be quite boring and obvious to people who are into the zombie genre.
So is this similar to the first or does it offer something different?

Tullaryx
18-Sep-2006, 07:10 PM
Im curious about this as the first one being a hand/reference book didn't grab me at all. In fact i found it to be quite boring and obvious to people who are into the zombie genre.
So is this similar to the first or does it offer something different?

It's the polar opposite of the first book. This one is pretty much a straight-up horror/apocalyptic novel that references the survival guide. It references the first book as a guideline in how the world finally got its act together to fight the war.

ssbib
19-Sep-2006, 03:24 PM
Got my copy through today, looks mint (quite a tall book though dont you think). Gonna start it in a few days, still readin my Alien Omnibus book.

CivilDefense
20-Sep-2006, 01:57 PM
I am doing the audio book on my commute? is that mark hamill? Hes good!


Anyway.. I notice Larry the Cable guy makes an appearance.

bassman
20-Sep-2006, 02:00 PM
Anyway.. I notice Larry the Cable guy makes an appearance.

That sentence just made me lose any interest I had in this book.....

CivilDefense
20-Sep-2006, 02:28 PM
That sentence just made me lose any interest I had in this book.....



Its not a speaking role, its more of an exploding role :eek:

bassman
20-Sep-2006, 02:54 PM
hrmmm.....I retract my previous statement. That give me MORE interest in the book!:p