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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

World War Z: an Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brooks


This is, quite simply, one of the more interesting books I've read in the last year. It’s not exactly a novel - somewhat in the spirit of The Good War - it’s a collection of (fictional) reports about an outbreak of zombie-ism that nearly wipes out the human race. Ten years after humankind manages to survive this worldwide effort to wipe out the living dead, a U.N. worker is compiling these oral histories into a report on what happened - for better understanding of the events and to prevent them from reoccurring.

While it would seem that dozens of stories might get confusing, or at least not give a very clear picture of the war, the author makes it easier by setting things up linearly, moving forward in time from the earliest signs of the upcoming plague, through the sudden massive outbreaks, the disastrous first responses, the turning point, the end, and the aftermath of the war. One can get a clear impression of the general order of the plague and the war.

While a zombie "novel", if one can call it that, the focus isn't actually on the zombies. They are omnipresent, of course, but these are very human stories. Stories about how doctors failed to understand the problems at first. Stories about government corruption. Stories about panic. Stories about heroism, villainy, triumph, and failure, about tough moral choices and about how morality can go out the window in times of difficulty. In short, the horror in this book is less about the zombies and more about the humans.

And above all, the human stories are so real. While one or two may force you to suspend disbelief (in particular, a blind swordsman) most are quite realistic, perhaps even painfully so. People head north because the zombies tend to freeze in cold temperatures, forgetting that, frankly, so do humans. A company releases a placebo vaccination that people buy by the scores - even after it’s revealed it doesn't work, just for that glimmer of hope. And so on, and so on. Almost every action taken, good or bad, you completely believe that the human being there might have taken it.

Another strong point of this book is that while all the stories are written by one man, he manages to give the individual people telling their stories their own voices. Each story doesn't just read like the same person telling it, a great danger in this kind of book. What lapses there are can be easily explained by the fact that one man is collecting the stories, but all in all the rural Chinese doctor and the hardline Israeli soldier and the scared Japanese youth all sound different enough for it to be believable.

This book doesn't exist in a vacuum, it has a companion, somewhat more lighthearted book called How to Survive a Zombie Uprising which I admittedly have not read, and there is an audio-version of World War Z, with different actors playing the parts, which is supposedly brilliant (I've not listened to it yet). It may not be everyone's cup of tea, but it can appeal to a far wider audience than just "the horror crowd", because it’s a human story. – Reviewed by John

2 comments:

The Erudite Ogre said...

Good review! I can heartily recommend the audiobook version of this; I have listened to chunks of it and the actors really enliven the stories.

Anonymous said...

The only thing bad about the audio book is that it is abridged
I suggest reading the novel first and then to the audio book
Mark Hamill plays an American soldier, its awesome