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The Rising [Mass Market Paperback]

Brian Keene
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (290 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 1, 2004
The dead are returning to life as intelligent zombies. Trapped by the undead, escape seems impossible for Jim Thurmond. But Jim’s young son is alive and in dire peril hundreds of miles away. Despite overwhelming odds, Jim vows to find him— or die trying.

Joined by an elderly preacher, a guilt-ridden scientist, and a determined ex-prostitute, Jim embarks on a cross-country rescue mission. They must battle both the living and the living dead. And for Jim and his companions, an even greater evil awaits them at the end of their journey. This is the time of...The Rising.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 321 pages
  • Publisher: Leisure Books; paperback / softback edition (January 1, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0843952016
  • ISBN-13: 978-0843952018
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (290 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #391,872 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

BRIAN KEENE is the author of over thirty books, including Darkness on the Edge of Town, Dead Sea, Urban Gothic, Ghoul and The Rising. He has also collaborated on novels with J.F. Gonzalez and Nick Mamatas. He also writes comic books such as The Last Zombie, Doom Patrol and Dead of Night: Devil Slayer. His work has been translated into German, Spanish, Polish, Italian, French and Taiwanese. Two of his works -- Ghoul and The Ties That Bind -- have been adapted for film. Keene's work has been praised in such diverse places as The New York Times, The History Channel, The Howard Stern Show, CNN.com, Publisher's Weekly, Fangoria, and Rue Morgue Magazine.

Customer Reviews

I didn't care about any of the characters. Auri De'Leon  |  39 reviewers made a similar statement
This is a book I would recommend to anyone who likes zombies. Built to fall  |  44 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
94 of 109 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Good old fashioned zombie fun January 10, 2004
Format:Mass Market Paperback
I enjoy reading all types of horror stories, but I have always had a special place in my heart for apocalyptic tales. I don't know what it is about these sorts of yarns, but give me a disastrous end of the world scenario along with a band of disparate and desperate survivors attempting to eke out an existence in a devastated world and I am there. I've probably read Stephen King's "The Stand" at least four times, along with "On the Beach," "Earth Abides," "Swan Song," and many, many more stories concerning the end of humanity. The method of destruction doesn't make much of a difference in whether I will read the story, either. Give me nuclear bombs raining down from the heavens, killer viruses or related plagues, or out of control technology, and I'm happy. Brian Keene took a slightly different tack with his horror novel "The Rising." Instead of vaporizing cities with megaton yield weapons or employing a killer flu, he decided good old-fashioned zombies would do the trick. Yep, the world as we know it doesn't go out with a bang in Keene's book; it goes out with chomp, a chew, and a swallow. "The Rising" is light years ahead of the other apocalyptic zombie book I read a couple of years ago, Candace Caponegro's "The Breeze Horror."

We learn quickly that the world went insane when some scientists working in one of those secret weapons laboratories experimented with a new particle accelerator. Whoops. The experiment had all sorts of important functions, at least on paper, but warnings that strange incidents could take place went largely ignored by the technicians involved in the project. When reports began surfacing about the recently dead suddenly reanimating and wreaking havoc, people wrote it off as nonsense....

One of these survivors is Jim Thurmond, a construction worker living in West Virginia. Hiding away in a bomb shelter he constructed in case the world ended from Y2K, Thurmond now uses it to hold off packs of roving beasties, one of them his recently deceased second wife. Jim laments his condition, sick to the very marrow of his being that he will never again see Danny, his son from his first marriage. Thurmond's son lives in far off New Jersey, a long trip under normal circumstances but now seemingly unreachable considering current affairs. Then something amazing happens that sends Jim off on a quest fraught with peril: his nearly dead cell phone rings with a message from his son. Danny whispers into the phone that things are bad where he is at but that he and his mother are currently hiding from the zombies. Thurmond resolves to leave that very minute in order to rescue his son. Just getting out of the bomb shelter presents a host of gruesome problems, problems requiring Jim to commit violence against his former neighbors and even his reanimated wife. Thurmond learns a few other things too, namely that the zombies he encounters do not resemble the shambling creatures from horror movies. The undead in this world possess the ability to think, drive cars, use weapons, and set traps for the living. New Jersey looks further and further away with every passing second.

Other poor souls wander through the deteriorating cities and countryside of the United States. Thurmond meets Martin, an elderly black minister, soon after he leaves his house. The two join forces to find Danny and soon run into plenty of life threatening situations, everything from packs of roving zombies to backwoods cannibals seeking some extra food to undead wildlife. At the same time, Frankie, a down on her luck heroin user and woman of the night who narrowly escapes disaster in the Baltimore Zoo also begins a trek out of the cities and into the country. We also keep tabs on one of the scientists in charge of the particle accelerator as he too seeks his destiny in a world full of the undead. You know all of these people will come together at some point in the novel; seeing how Keene pulls it off is the fun part. The conclusion to the story delivers plenty of gory violence, but also gives us an ending that raises more questions than answers. Keene's story is one of the few mass-market horror paperbacks I have read in the past few years that makes you think after you finish the book.

Several scenes of contrived coincidences, a bit of annoyance concerning Thurmond's robot-like determination to save his son, and a few characters who could have benefited from some better development isn't enough to hurt this book in the least. There is plenty of heavy gore, mach speed pacing, and an imaginative plot that doesn't give you all the answers. Even better, Keene used his apocalyptic tale as a vehicle by juxtaposing unconditional love and hope with death and destruction. "The Rising" is a good tale well told, although if the author plans a sequel perhaps he should reconsider. The conclusion is more powerful left just as it is, something a follow up novel would ruin. Read more ›

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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A Zombie tale for the 21st Century April 10, 2007
Format:Mass Market Paperback
George Romero introduced the world to the hunger of the living dead Night of the Living Dead (Colorized / Black and White). His initial three films are tentpoles in the realm of horror and remained untouchable even to this day. If you wrote about zombies then you looked to Romero's vision for guidance and inspiration. It wasn't until films such as "The Evil Dead" The Evil Dead/Evil Dead 2 - Book Of The Dead Collection and "Re-animator" Re-Animator that the zombie began to evolve. Instead of the slow ambling gait the public had known and trusted, we are introduced to zombies who could run. If the idea of being eaten alive wasn't bad enough, now we were being chased and no amount of cardio was going to help us (Zombies are dead so its not like they are going to get winded). This little change improved the zombie's status in the pantheon of monsters. I figured this was as far as the zombie genre could be taken. What other changes could be made to make zombies worse?

Then I read "The Rising".

If you are a fan of horror fiction then Brian Keene's "The Rising" is NOT unknown to you. This book is one of the most original ventures into the zombie genre you can find and I guarantee it will be emulated in the years to come. Brian Keene's zombies still hunger for the living and have the capacity to move fast after you but the worse aspect is that they think. These zombies operate vehicles, use weapons, and work together. They actually plot courses of action. How screwed is the human race?
... Read more ›
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37 of 47 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Are any Leisure Books good??? July 27, 2008
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Picking this book up I thought it would be good because of some good reviews, but now I wonder if a bulk of the people that raved about it weren't retarded.
The zombies were so cheesy. They could drive trucks, airplanes, use guns, talk... and the things they said were so laughably dumb it was almost painful. After eating a black man, one of them says, "I love dark meat".
Then later the survivors are battling the undead in a used car lot and one of them asks right before trying to eat them, "What can I do to put you in a used car today".
At one point in the book a group of the dead were riding around on Harley's wearing leather, trying to run people off the road. Totally ludacris!!
Dont even get me started on how silly the zombie animals were.
Zombie sqirrels, bunny rabbits, groundhogs, birds, even a zombie lion. At one point hunters are looking for any living deer left to eat and realize that zombie deer cornered them and ate them. Talking, thinking animals is a concept that Brian Keene could have left alone.
It was like he wrote this as fast as he could as the end result turned into a total disaster. I prefer the mindless slow zombies and for good reason too. Just read this trash and you'll feel the same way.
Im have tempted to throw this book in the garbage disposal page by page so I dont have to look at another word by Keene ever again. Over the top and cheesy. Stay away from this one!!
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Zombies or Demons? January 15, 2009
By Russ
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Every once in awhile a new twist on an old idea is hatched. This is it. Brian Keene, who I had never heard of until this book, really changes the way you look at zombies. It is rare to read a horror novel, not counting King, where there is character development, a solid plot, and action that flows like a movie script. I found myself unable to put this down. I couldn't put it down and not know what happens next. I actually cared about the characters and wanted to see them succeed. Unlike most zombie type books or even movies where all the characters are expendable, these characters are the heroes of the book. Everyone should be able to identify with at least one character. You're either a regular Joe, like Jim Thurmond, a world renown scientist, like Baker, a heroine addict / hooker, like Frankie, a person of faith, like Rev. Martin, or a mentally challenged individual like Worm. Maybe you're even a sadistic militant like some of the characters in this book. Oh yes, the bad guys aren't just zombies!

The author leaves you guessing at the end, but never fear, there is a sequel!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Rape is not entertainment
Brian Keene's writing style is reminiscent of that of Stephen King. Like King, Keene is a storyteller with the rare ability to create a visual landscape that pulls the reader into... Read more
Published 15 days ago by Lee McQueen
2.0 out of 5 stars lame
not what I'm looking for in a zombie book . not your traditional zombies , just not for me .
Published 2 months ago by jim brown
4.0 out of 5 stars A feast of Zombies
Everyone, at some time in their lives, should have the pleasure of reading a good zombie novel. Unfortunately there are many poorly written examples of this genre (refer to my... Read more
Published 4 months ago by RT Twinem
4.0 out of 5 stars A unique take on the zombie.
The Rising is an interesting and atypical journey into the zombie apocalypse. It isn't different because it portrays a unique world. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Ryan Lamb
5.0 out of 5 stars I love it
He continues to amaze me. Story after story he finds a way to shock and amaze me, and this story is no different. I will reccomend to anyone :)
Published 5 months ago by zuggislandgurl
3.0 out of 5 stars enthralling
couldn't put it down. I like all of Brian Keene's books, and this one was no exception. Buy it today
Published 5 months ago by Ruby Kelley
1.0 out of 5 stars Zombie squirrels = Worst zombie novel ever!
First off, this isn't a true zombie novel. The zombies are all re-animated corpses possessed by demons, not a virus, and they all talk and joke and make stupid wisecracks like... Read more
Published 6 months ago by Baron Von Cool
2.0 out of 5 stars The Rising Paperback
The shipping on this book was fine. However, this book has the smallest print of any book I have ever tried to read. It is literrally a miniature version of a book. Read more
Published 11 months ago by John E. Faircloth
1.0 out of 5 stars So glad I skipped to the end!
I wanted to like this book. I really did.

What many other reviewers here have said about the poor editing, misspelled words, and so on goes double for me. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Stephen L. Clancy
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Twist on Zombie Mythos
I've known about this one for a long time, but just finally got around to reading it for the first time. I enjoyed it a lot! Read more
Published 13 months ago by Todd Jacobson
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