SRP76
19-Sep-2007, 04:20 AM
It's old (I read it about 15 years ago), but great, if you can find it:
http://209.85.48.11/9089/183/upload/p9008106.jpg
Book of the Dead, by John Skipp and Craig Spector.
If you happen to see this on a shelf, grab it!
This is a collection of 16 short stories, all related to the Romero-movie inspired world of the living dead.
In it, you will find even Stephen King makes a contribution, with "Home Delivery", about a pregnant woman dealing with the horror on a small island off the coast of Maine.
Also of note are "Jerry's Kids Meet Wormboy", about a man who has the perfect place to hide from the dead (a graveyard; why would they "home in" on a place they never went while alive?), "Like Pavlov's Dogs", a story about a team of scientists in a sealed "bio-sphere", trying to keep the zombie phenomenon outside the walls of their sealed environment, and "Choices", a first-person account of a lone man, surviving on the road during the entire nightmare.
If you like zombie flicks and so forth, you'll enjoy this book. There are a few crappy stories, but the top ones more than make up for it.
http://209.85.48.11/9089/183/upload/p9008106.jpg
Book of the Dead, by John Skipp and Craig Spector.
If you happen to see this on a shelf, grab it!
This is a collection of 16 short stories, all related to the Romero-movie inspired world of the living dead.
In it, you will find even Stephen King makes a contribution, with "Home Delivery", about a pregnant woman dealing with the horror on a small island off the coast of Maine.
Also of note are "Jerry's Kids Meet Wormboy", about a man who has the perfect place to hide from the dead (a graveyard; why would they "home in" on a place they never went while alive?), "Like Pavlov's Dogs", a story about a team of scientists in a sealed "bio-sphere", trying to keep the zombie phenomenon outside the walls of their sealed environment, and "Choices", a first-person account of a lone man, surviving on the road during the entire nightmare.
If you like zombie flicks and so forth, you'll enjoy this book. There are a few crappy stories, but the top ones more than make up for it.