Thursday, June 30, 2011

Blog Posting on Zombo's Closet

On 29 June, Zombo's Closet posted my first in a series of articles on how to write a novel.  This posting is titled The Four Stages of Your Writing Career.  Please drop by Zombo's Closet and check it out.  (For those who think this sounds familiar, this series was originally posted a year ago on Dawn's Reading Nook, but has been slightly updated to include those experiences acquired since then.)

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Review of THE ZOMBIE AUTOPSIES


I’m trying a new approach with my blog.  During the Stoker Weekend two weeks ago, I had the pleasure of chatting with many of my fellow authors, including Jonathon Maberry, Scott G. Browne, Scott Kenemore, and John Cozzoli.  One of the many topics discussed was blogging, and how to make our blogs more appealing to readers.  Talking with them, I realized that what my blog is lacking is less material about me and more postings that will be of interest to the wider genre community.  So I decided to make some changes in the coming months, make my blog less “me” centric, and post the occasional review of zombie and vampire books and movies.

So with that, here’s my review of Steven C. Schlozman’s The Zombie Autopsies: Secret Notebooks from the Apocalypse.

Author: Steven C. Schlozman
Publisher:  Grand Central Publishing
Date: 2011
Pages: 190  
Available from Amazon.com






Blurb:  As the walking dead rises up throughout the world, a few brave doctors attempt to find a cure by applying forensic techniques to captured zombies. Based on the research of renowned zombie expert Dr. Stanley Blum, performed at a remote island where a crack medical team has been sent to explore a radical theory that may lead to a cure for the epidemic, THE ZOMBIE AUTOPSIES documents for the first time the unique biology of zombie organisms. Twenty-five detailed drawings of the internal organs of actual zombies provide an accurate anatomy of these horrifying creatures, including zombie brains, hearts, lungs, skin, and the digestive system, while Dr. Blum’s notes reveal shocking insights into how they function, even as Blum and his staff themselves begin to succumb to the plague. No one knows the ultimate fate of Dr. Blum or his researchers, but now that his notebook, THE ZOMBIE AUTOPSIES, has been made available to the UN, the World Health Organization, and the general public, his scientific discoveries may provide the last hope for humans on earth!

Word of mouth from other blogs and forums has been giving The Zombie Autopsies good reviews, so the last time I was at the bookstore I picked up a copy.  I’m glad I did.  As a psychiatrist on the faculty of Mass General Hospital and a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, Schlozman has used his medical background to provide a unique entry to the zombie genre.

The Zombie Autopsies focuses on the private, hand-written diary of Dr. Stanley Blum, the last scientist sent to the United Nations Sanctuary on the island of Bassas da India in the Indian Ocean where researchers from the UN and the World Health Organization are conducting autopsies on fully-animated zombies to find a cure for the living dead plague that has ravished a third of mankind.  Everyone else who has ever traveled to the sanctuary has become infected and eventually turned into a zombie, so for Dr. Blum volunteering for this mission is a death sentence.  In conjunction with Dr. Banca Gutierrez and Dr. James Pittman, the current researchers who are rapidly progressing from Stage II to Stage IV of the virus, the trio perform graphically detailed autopsies of the brain and internal organs of fully animated zombies.  Their research soon unearths a frightening fact – the virus that has wiped out much if the world was most likely engineered by man.  

An interesting twist to the novel is the bureaucratese that dominates the text.  Because The Zombie Autopsies is written like a scientific paper, it has a detached feel about it.  The zombie plague is referred to as Ataxic Neurodegenerative Satiety Deficiency Syndrome (ANSD), the “internationally accepted diagnostic term.”  Those infected with ANSD are referred to as “humanoids” until they reach the final virulent Stage IV and become “No Longer Human” (NLH) and can be “deanimated.”  Schlozman also includes references to the Treaty of Atlanta, the meeting of scientists, ethicists, and religious leaders to reach a consensus on how to characterize and deal with the infected (ethicists have been arguing that killing in mass self-defense can only be justified as an act of war, which does not apply in this scenario since the zombies did not formally declare war).  Anybody who has watched the complete ineffectiveness of governments in the face of Hurricane Katrina, the earthquake in Haiti, and the tsunamis that recently devastated Japan will find these sections disturbingly authentic.  

As a tongue-in-cheek nod to genre fans, Scholzman uses the autopsies to explain the physiology of the traditional shambling zombies of the Romero mythos (no fast zombies here), providing a medical basis for why the living dead possess voracious appetites, why they walk with their arms held out in front of them, and a host of other characteristics.  And it would be remiss not to mention the gruesome illustrations by Andrea Sparacio, which in and of themselves are worth the purchase price of the book. 

The Zombie Autopsies is a unique novel that should be included in any zombie aficionados’ book shelf.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Monday, June 20, 2011

Hellnotes Reviews The Vampire Hunters

Sheila M. Merritt of Hellnotes published a review of The Vampire Hunters this weekend, stating that the book "gets the blood flowing, without noticeable clotting in the plot."  Even Cocoa's character -- Van Helsing -- got a shout out, being referred to as "the warm and fuzzy" that offers "a stabilizing contrast to the febrile frenzy of killing."  (Cocoa gives that part of the review a paws up).  Please check it out.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Father's Day Edition of the Sunday Bunnies




















Happy Father's Day.  Hope all the dads out there have a special day and get a kiss from their kids, furry or otherwise.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Heading Off to the Stoker Weekend in New York Tomorrow

I have not blogged in a while, and worst of all, I failed to post the Sunday Bunnies.  I was down with a bad head cold all weekend, and am still feeling the tail end of it.  Nor did it help that I had some major changes take place in my life this week with all the accompanying pressure that brings. 

Tomorrow morning, I'm heading up to Long Island to attend the Horror Writer's Association Stoker Weekend 2011.  Tomorrow night is the mass book signing that is open to the public, and the remainder of the weekend is filled with panels and forums.  I'm definitely looking forward to this, and to the chance to get away for a few days. 

I'll post more about the event as they happen. 

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Status Update

I finished the first draft of The Walking Monster yesterday afternoon.  It's just under 75,000 words.  I'll be sending it off to my readers in the next few days for their feedback, and will begin the revisions of the manuscript later this summer. 

On Sunday, Matthew Scott Baker (how ironic is that) posted a review of The Vampire Hunters on Hayes Hudson's House of Horrors, calling it a "fun and loudly entertaining vision of vampires versus the living." 

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Sunday Bunnies

















You go play with your novel.  We'll lie here in the sun and cuddle.  Just wake us when it's treat time. 

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Check Out My Interview In Eerie Digest

The June edition of Eerie Digest ran interviews with me and several other entertainers/artists.  In my article, I discuss my (unsuccessful) career as a writer of techno-thrillers as well as the upcoming releases of The Vampire Hunters: Dominion and Rotter World