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The Zona [Kindle Edition]

Nathan Yocum
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (40 customer reviews)

Digital List Price: $4.99 What's this?
Print List Price: $12.95
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Book Description

Praise for The Zona:

"The Zona is a brutal glimpse into a post apocalyptic world that is all too plausible... If you enjoy your apocalyptic fiction gritty and with a hint of the new old-west, The Zona will blow you away."
-- Paul Antony Jones, Author of Extinction Point and Towards Yesterday

"A striking, fierce, powerhouse of a book."
-- Cheryl, Goodreads Reviewer

"This is what we all fear will happen if we continue to abuse the Earth. Nathan does a phenomenal job of painting the bleakest environment we could face and showing us the path we are on. He can use words to paint such a grand picture and leave you astonished at the final act."
 -- Albert Robbins III, Amazon reviewer

About the Book:

Welcome to the Arizona Reformed Theocracy, otherwise called THE ZONA. Here the Church rules with power absolute. The laws are simple: all sin is punished swiftly. Preachers enforce the Church's words like old West lawmen. But what happens when a Preacher refuses to kill? What happens when men of honor take a stand against their rulers?

More Praise for The Zona:

"It did not surprise me to learn that Nathan Yocum, author of The Zona, is an award-winning screenwriter. As I was reading this, his debut novel, I could not stop picturing it as a movie. (I will honestly be very surprised if it isn't optioned, especially with the popularity of dystopias generally and the upcoming Hunger Games specifically!)"
 -- Taryn, Bookwanderer Reviews

Fans of The Zona should be sure to check out more titles from Curiosity Quills Press:
  • For paranormal mystery in the highest levels of US Federal Government, search for The Department of Magic by Rod Kierkegaard, Jr.
  • For excellent cyberpunk-fueled dark sci-fi, look for Shadow of a Dead Star by Michael Shean
  • For a high-concept action-packed technothriller, seek out The God Particle by Rod Kierkegaard, Jr.
  • For lovers of detective noir with a horror twist, look up Michael Panush's Stein & Candle Detective Agency series


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Nathan L. Yocum is an author, teacher, and entrepreneur living in the jungles of Hawai’i. As a writer Nathan’s inspirations include Kurt Vonnegut, Cormac McCarthy, George Orwell, Aldous Huxley, Charles Bukowski, but admits that the list goes on and on. Nathan is also the editor-in-chief of SpecLit Masters Magazine, an eZine featuring the best in new speculative short fiction, as well as an award winning screenwriter for Catbrain Film Factory. His first novel, The Zona, was published via Curiosity Quills Press in February, 2012.

Product Details

  • File Size: 1378 KB
  • Print Length: 253 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1620070219
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: Curiosity Quills Press (February 14, 2012)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B00797RDWA
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #340,952 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Gritty and graphic post apocalyptic October 20, 2011
By SM
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is an interesting, post apocalyptic story, set in a violent, destroyed future American southwest (Arizona, Utah, etc), which follows a "Preacher" named Lead and warring groups of religious extremists who are trying to control the future, apocalyptic world via their own violent versions of religion.

Gritty and graphic, I would recommend this book to anyone who is a fan of the post apocalyptic genre. And the book ends with the possibility of a sequel, which I would be very interested in reading if it is written.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars When the world turns against us...make every bullet count September 18, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition
Reviewed by wornpagesDOTcom

In the mid 1960's Italian film director Sergio Leone made three iconic westerns starring newcomer Clint Eastwood. They portrayed a world of hot deserts and dusty towns made of wooden shacks, where the gun was law and fear governed. Imagine a story where the setting for A Fistful of Dollars meets the Spanish Inquisition and you have The Zona in your sights.
Nathan L. Yocum has envisioned a world (a comparative paradise) that is destroyed by man's inability to control global warming. First rains and then floods, followed by the winds and disease. A catastrophe of biblical proportions removes the last two hundred years of human technological advancement with divine indifference. A small amount of tech survives but it is mainly military and controlled by The Church; a reprehensible organisation performing sadistic acts in God's name.
The story unfolds in post-apocalyptic Arizona, in an area now called The Zona.
We travel with Lead, full name Leonard Marchez, as he performs the Church's work as a Preacher by making sinners repent by rope or blanket. Either be bound and delivered to the local parish for mock trial and execution, or just cut to the chase and agree to be shot immediately (with an ancient .38 revolver), then covered by the blanket. Placing his trust in a Higher Authority means that Lead never really considers himself responsible for his own actions; in fact he never considers his actions at all. One day he is charged with making another sinner repent; Terence Wood. When he discovers that Terrence is an old Preacher, Lead cannot bring himself to pull the trigger, and so starts the process of questioning divine authority. This is an extremely unhealthy option when the Church is sole judge, jury and executioner...and heresy has a rope or blanket solution.
Almost unwillingly and certainly without premeditation Lead finds himself on the wrong side of God's wrath in the shape of Eliphaz, a church Crusader. Crusaders are the elite killers, equipped with body armour and semi-auto handguns; for when their bibles need backup. No sinner ever escapes the pursuit of a Crusader, and Eliphaz enjoys his work with a disturbing zeal. The plot ramps up to speed quickly and we are soon following Lead and Terrence as their desperation becomes increasingly evident as they realise who is hunting them down. Their only chance for escape is to make a run for New Pueblo near the Mexican border, where they have heard rumour of a society outside the influence of The Church's unholy justice. Will Lean and Terrence survive the chase and make it to the sanctuary of New Pueblo? Does New Pueblo even exist outside the minds of those so desperate to believe in it?
The Zona makes many entertaining twists and turns as its one hundred pages fly by. Along the way we meet some interesting characters; Reverend Greek and Eric "I'm not a witch" The Dead to name my two favourites. The Zona is unsuitable for the younger reader mainly due to the adult nature of Lead's interaction towards the middle of the story with the Purgatory camp, although its inclusion is necessary to complete the picture of the The Zona population's ruthless suppression. When I first started reading this it took me a while to get used to Lead's name appearing so frequently within the text. Then I accepted that this was the author's style, and it was the most efficient way of moving the story along without causing unnecessary ambiguity. The author has employed The Church as the evil seeping through the plot like a divine disease; light becomes the dark. In the end The Zona is an enjoyable study of how evil men can manipulate society through fear of Divine retribution, and of those who dare to question. Do Lead and Terrence escape hell or will it be a case of paradise lost?
Why not put your feet up, open a cold beer and read The Zona to find out.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Post-apocalyptic powerhouse of a story November 9, 2011
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
The Zona by Nathan Yocum is a striking, fierce, powerhouse of a book. Post-apocalyptic Arizona ("the Zona") is a beautifully described setting: bleak, depressing, oppressive and stark; the people who populate the Zona, likewise, are downtrodden, living a hardscrabble life. They call their era the "Broken Times," and that is the strong impression that the reader is left with -- the world is broken, and savage, and short on hope. As one of the characters says, "Peaceful men don't live anymore. Good men don't live any more. We're just winding down the clock until the Earth finishes us all off with weather and viruses or we finish ourselves with our own viciousness."

Our guide through this harsh, Wild-West world is Lead (named after his military division, Lead Group Two). Lead is a Preacher, an enforcer for the Zona's iron-fisted Theocracy; his job is to unquestioningly stamp out dissention by hunting down those who the Church have marked as troublemakers. When a Preacher tracks down a Mark, he gives them the Church's choice of rope or blanket -- to be tied with rope, and taken back to the Church for punishment, or to be shot dead and covered with a blanket.

At the beginning of the book Lead comes across as an arrogant, hard, instrument of the Church. However, as a series of life-changing encounters unfold, we see that he has a conscience and (even more surprisingly), a capacity for hope and joy in living, despite the bleak circumstances of his existence. Consider this passage, as he is running for his life: "The winds shifted, the sands settled. Night had fallen and the stars stretched out to infinity, tracing their slow spiral through the moonless sky. Despite his many and varied travels, Lead had never seen the evening sky so radiant. It felt to him as though God were reaching out with hands that comforted and yet proved conclusively what a diminutive and insubstantial creature man is." Lead's metamorphosis is compelling, as is the strength and courage of the hard-working and oppressed ordinary citizens of the Zona. Though the author's vision of the future is bleak, there is also hope, and it is especially precious when held against the bleak environment.

I found the world of The Zona completely believable and engrossing. I also greatly enjoyed the characters that Lead encounters...even very secondary characters are vividly portrayed, and leave a strong impression. I just finished the story last night, but I have a feeling that The Zona will stick with me for a long time. Fingers crossed for more books based in this fascinating world.

Four & a half stars.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
1.0 out of 5 stars Glad I got it free
I'm glad I got this book when it was free because I just couldn't get into it. I struggled along to 10% and gave up. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Patricia Kenworthy
4.0 out of 5 stars A solid (though graphic) PA story
This was in general a good read and fans of PA books should enjoy it. Like some others I felt that the first quarter to third of the story dragged a bit and some of the early... Read more
Published 4 months ago by azgrad
2.0 out of 5 stars Difficult to follow
Interesting story concept, but the writing style was very distracting - some cross between faux Elizabethan and Charlton Heston's (speaking) role as Moses.
Published 5 months ago by Ernest W. Wilder
3.0 out of 5 stars Worth The Read
Warning: Spoiler Alert

The Zona was a short, post-apocalyptic story that took me almost two weeks to read. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Christina White
5.0 out of 5 stars OUTSTANDING!
I loved this book! I am a HUGE apocalyptic thriller fan and this was right up my alley. Had a religious contest that kept it interesting. A great "end-of-the-world" read. Read more
Published 7 months ago by atabarac
4.0 out of 5 stars Praise the lord...or else.
I enjoyed this book, it was well written post apocalyptic thriller. This story is overtly religious in content, but that is a good aspect to the story. Read more
Published 10 months ago by RyZen
4.0 out of 5 stars You can feel it.
The Zona is a grim world described so well by Yocum that you can almost feel it. The Preacher flashback reveal of what happened to destroy the U.S. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Kat
4.0 out of 5 stars Good read
I like the theme of a post-apocalyptic world where things are run by a seemingly unstopable power. Being from AZ it was interesting to envision areas I'm familiar as being a part... Read more
Published 10 months ago by copperg
3.0 out of 5 stars Middle of this book is great!!
I'll be real honest, I almost gave up on this book after reading 20% of it. It was filled with typos, the characters were not engaging to me, and I was confused about what was... Read more
Published 11 months ago by L. Land
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely outstanding
I couldn't get through this book fast enough, it was so good. Great plot, excellent characters, interesting setting and situation, and the writing style itself was excellent. Read more
Published 11 months ago by C. Hamilton
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More About the Author

Nathan L. Yocum is a writer, teacher, and entrepreneur living in the jungles of Hawai'i. His first novel, The Zona, is available through Curiosity Quills Press.



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