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Xombies: Apocalypse Blues [Paperback]

Walter Greatshell (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 29, 2009 Xombies (Book 1)
When the Agent X plague struck, it infected women first, turning them into mindless killers intent only on creating an army of "Xombies" by spreading their disease.

Running for her life, seventeen-year-old Lulu is rescued by the father she has never known and taken aboard a refitted nuclear submarine that has one mission: to save a little bit of humanity.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A triumph, both epic in scope and entirely unpredictable, and anchored by one of the most refreshing and unique voices in modern horror fiction.  Expect great things from Mr. Greatshell in the future." --Nate Kenyon, Horror World Reviews

"The writing is fast paced and keeps you hooked.  The book itself is a cross between Night of the Living Dead and an end-of-the-world-type premise like Earth Abides, one of my all-time favorites." --Roundtable Reviews

"I loved [this] book." --David Wellington, Author of Frostbite

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Ace (September 29, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0441018351
  • ISBN-13: 978-0441018352
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.3 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #128,626 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Walter Greatshell is the author of XOMBIES (August 2004), XOMBIES: APOCALYPSE BLUES (September 2009), XOMBIES: APOCALYPTICON (February 2010), XOMBIES: APOCALYPSO (March 2011), and MAD SKILLS (January 2011), all published by Penguin Books. His short-story THE MEXICAN BUS is featured in the anthology THE LIVING DEAD 2, published by Night Shade Books.


 

Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars For Anyone Who Likes their Science Fiction Smart and their Zombies Running, October 4, 2009
This review is from: Xombies: Apocalypse Blues (Paperback)
I first read this book when it was titled simply "XOMBIES," and I keep returning to it again and again.

There's more to DAWN OF THE DEAD-style zombies than rotting flesh and cannibalism. Not that I'm dissing either of those elements... but I'd argue that the MOST frightening & characteristic element of George Romero's zombies is THEY WANT YOU, and if they catch you, you'll become just like them. They'll chase you down no matter what. They'll find you no matter where you are. Infection, absorption, conformity. Once you're a zombie, you'll be just part of the herd.

XOMBIES focuses on this aspect of zombies, ditching the flesh-eating and decomposition -- although there's still plenty of gore and dismemberment as the humans try to defend themselves. The book has a tongue-in-cheek sense of humor, with some elements that are absurd and bizarre, although the characters' plight is always serious -- it never degenerates into parody. Lulu Pangloss, the sole uninfected woman/girl surrounded by armies of pissed-off, paranoid, misogynistic men (who've had to witness all other women on earth turning into ravening monsters), is a great protagonist. Aside from the fast-moving Xombies, the most notable theme this book shares with 28 DAYS LATER is the idea that most men are scumbags, which expands into a general meditation on gender issues. If this sounds too talky, don't worry: it's still a science fiction/horror novel, not a graduate thesis.

The Xombies are genuinely horrifying and nigh-unstoppable, and the mysteries of the plot peel neatly away like several layers of an onion (although not all questions are answered). Like many zombie films, there's ultimately a lot of infighting between the human survivors, but the Xombie scenes are very good, and the whole thing is well-written, with an overall mood of cynical resignation rather than slam-bang catastrophe. It's like they say: "This is how the world ends... not with a bang but a whimper."
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Worth the second reading!, October 22, 2009
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I also read this book when it was titled simply xombies several years ago. The editing this time around was alot better. The story evolves around a girl that is swept up in a plague that takes over the Earth. This happens right when she has the very real drama of trying to reconnect with a father she has never known. She is the only female who has not been affected, and she is put in a situation on a submarine full of men and teenage boys. Now the biggest change in the newer version of the book seems to have been the ending. The first time I read the book the ending did not make sense to me. There were some connections that were not explained. The editing made the ending smoother and made more sense. This tale does have some zombie elements to it, but as a whole it is much more. I was not sure about paying for this book a second time, but I am glad that I did.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good, if a touch monochromatic..., July 26, 2010
This review is from: Xombies: Apocalypse Blues (Paperback)
Xombies: Apocalypse Blues / 978-0-441-01835-2

I love zombie fiction, and seem to be going through a lot of it lately. "Xombies" is one of those apocalypse novels where the emphasis is so much more on the human reaction to the breakdown of society, rather than on the cause of the breakdown itself - to the point where the zombies (or "xombies", if you prefer) could be just as easily replaced by space aliens or an invading force of Teletubbies and the book would still read pretty much the same.

It should be noted that author Greatshell does not have a stellar opinion of mankind, which is par for the course for these tracts on the breakdown of human society in the face of serious disaster, but where Greatshell could perhaps be forgiven for automatically assuming most humans to be complete jerks, it's strange that he also seems to assume they will be so singular in their approach to jerk status. The conceit here is that the titular "Xombie" virus (with an "X" for X chromosomes), was first airborne and affected all the women on earth capable of menstruation (the science for this part is soft enough to spread on a biscuit, so don't think to hard about it), but since our young heroine doesn't menstruate, she's immune - a single girl among hundreds of male refugees. What's odd is that pretty much every single member of a crew of hundreds - minus, basically, the dozen named characters - absolutely hate her with a vengeance for being (a) female and (b) not their moms/sisters/lovers/daughters that they left behind.

This setup is so foreign that it seems extremely odd and alien. I've no doubt that in such a situation, there would be quite a large amount of resentment toward the surviving girl, but for basically *everyone* without a name billing to react this way is so anathema to human behavior, which is frequently varied. You'd think a good portion of the refugees would go overboard the *other* direction, adopting the girl with an uncomfortable fervor to replace the ones who were lost, but not one person in this novel ever seems in the slightest danger of doing that, and it's just...weird. The few "good" guys just sort of tolerate and accept the protagonist, for the most part. And while it seems like a small complaint, it's worth noting that the male reactions to the female protagonist in their midst take up at least half of the novel, so that's a good half that (a) isn't filled with zombies, and (b) isn't a very realistic portrayal of the variance of human emotion and is therefore distracting and odd.

Anyway, we plunge on. Obviously, what with all humans being horrible jerks and with most of the women on earth out of commission (minus the very young and the very old), it's just a matter of time before the raping begins, and probably enough said about that except that it's rather rare to see an author embrace the reality that the raping isn't going to be confined to male-on-female in a situation like this. The narrative glosses over without any gory details, but somehow this matter-of-fact handling of the horrors makes them worse, and I am forced to admit that of all the novels I've read where it seems humanity might do best to wipe itself out, Greatshell manages to make one of the most terribly convincing cases - most readers will be rooting for the xombies to win, before the end.

If I'm disappointed with "Xombies", it's perhaps because I feel a lot of potential was wasted. The titular infected only take up about a third of the novel, with the other third focusing on interim survival and humans being jerks, leaving the novel feeling a little weak on the actual horror. The infected are scary, and yet somehow hard to take seriously - they are bright blue (easy to identify) and they turn humans by kissing, rather than biting, them - a plot point that would *seem* to make it easier to prevent being turned, by handing out oxygen masks to everyone. For that matter, a lot seems to have been poorly thought out - the infected aren't put down easily, and even a loose arm or leg can continue to attack apart from the body, and while that sounds like an *extremely* fun plot point, nothing is ever really done with it, which seems very much like a Missing Moment of Awesome. There should be at *least* one scene where a peacefully sleeping person is killed by a rogue arm that made its way slowly through the air ducts, or something. And since half the xombies are intelligent, it's just plain odd that they don't rip their own limbs off in the face of destruction, to achieve this. Beyond anything else, despite these zombies being the theoretically impossible to take down with basic weapons, the humans manage to do so time and again, without any real explanation - we're just to assume that they easily and quickly bludgeon everything into a pulpy mass, and it just doesn't work well in the imagination.

I enjoyed this book overall, and I'll probably pick up the sequel, but the soft science and self-induced plot holes, the one-size-fits-all social commentary, and the slow pacing means I probably won't read this one again.

~ Ana Mardoll
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