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Book Review: Delicious Zombie by Wol-vriey

 

Delicious Zombie by Wol-vriey

Burning Bulb Publishing, 2022

ISBN: 9781948278485

Available: paperback, Kindle edition

Buy: Amazon.com

 

Would you be okay with cannibalism if it would stop the aging process?

 

That’s the idea behind Delicious Zombie, a tour de splat that adds some new twists to the zombie apocalypse storyline.  The zombies are all humans that have been infected with a virus that makes them eat anything alive– nothing new there.  But, uninfected humans who eat zombies find that the aging process slows, and actually reverses, keeping everyone in their late 20s-early 30s.  Diseases like cancer?  A thing of the past, thanks to zombie meat.  All ills have been conquered, thanks to eating undead people that used to be normal human beings.

 

However, not everyone is happy about the idea of immortality, since it involves munching on your former neighbors.  Scientist Ethan Hackman and his companions Paula and Zoe lead a clandestine mission to Ohio to recover the cure for zombies, which has been hidden away by the powers that be.  It’s a question of whether they can survive, because a LOT of people don’t want the status quo changed.

 

This author has always excelled at writing fast-paced stories with a large dose of messiness, and this one is no exception.  What makes this one good is the author’s world-building: it’s quite the dystopia!  This is one story that actually makes the zombies sympathetic characters, which is unusual in the genre.  It’s a haunting place: there is a Church of Zombie, which preaches “digestion is salvation” ; the poor zombies are kept on farms for slaughter, and some people even keep a live zombie at home to cut off a piece of meat whenever they feel the urge.  It’s factory farming gone crazy.  At the grocery store, you go up to the deli counter and order whatever cut of a person you want.  Needless to say, serious ethical questions are present in this book!  That’s why the book is much more than the standard undead stories.  It’s not just the usual ‘plucky humans trying to survive a zombie plague,’  there’s a plotline with some real thought to it.  It’s enough to keep the reader engaged right through the last pages of the book.

 

Bottom line: if you like zombie stories and are hungry for one with some originality that will make you think, this one is the way to go.  Recommended.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Review: Hares in the Hedgerow (The Gardening Guidebooks Trilogy #2) by Jessica McHugh

Hares in the Hedgerow (The Gardening Guidebooks Trilogy #2) by Jessica McHugh

Ghoulish Books, 2022

ISBN: 9781943720767

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

Buy:  Bookshop.org

 

Little did readers of Rabbits in the Garden, the first book to introduce Avery and her crazy mother Faye in The Gardening Guidebooks Trilogy, realize the full extent of the horror to come. As Avery tries to face her demons in the next book, Rabbits in the Hedgerow, by beating them out of her willing counselor while raising her sister’s daughter (Sophie), she slowly learns her mother Faye’s backstory as leader of a demented cult devoted to St. Agnes.

 

The central character in the new narrative, Sophie, is in terrible danger because she has been the victim of her boyfriend Liam’s machinations to bring her into the cult as its central figure. Sophie is blinded by her love for Liam as well as what she believes are her mother’s past crimes. Luckily, however, Sophie is smart enough to sort fact from fiction in time to make important decisions before Faye, her grandmother, leads everyone to their doom. 

 

In Hares in the Hedgerow, McHugh drives us full force into the psychological twists and turns of a cult’s sickness and the damaged minds of its victims. There is no shortage of physical violence in this book. We see the devastation of human lives up close, and it is unrelenting. The plot is a carefully layered history of three generations of women who have been their own worst enemies as well as destroyers of the people around them. Anything can happen, but none of it is going to be good.

 

Just as in the first book in the trilogy, the second is fast-paced with past and present events illuminating our understanding of the characters and leading to yet another explosive ending. But, just as compelling as the momentum is the way McHugh makes us believe we are looking into the minds of real people, the type that would have followed someone like Charles Manson. There is the fear we feel for the characters but also the fear we feel for ourselves knowing that fanaticism and a skewed perception can, in fact, exist side by side in the real world and that everyday people sometimes create horror and then willingly enter into it in senselessly appalling ways. 

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley

Graphic Novel Review: Abe Sapien: Dark and Terrible Volume 1 by Mike Mignola, John Arcudi, and Scott Allie, art by Sebastian Fiumara and Max Fiumara

Cover art for Abe Sapien: Dark and Terrible by Mike Mignola, Sebastian Flumara, and Max Flumara

Abe Sapien: Dark and Terrible Volume 1 by Mike Mignola, John Arcudi, and Scott Allie, art by Sebastián Fiumara and Max Fiumara

Dark Horse Comics, 2022

ISBN-13: 9781506733784

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, Comixology. (  Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

 

Abe, a humanoid amphibious man and member of the B.P.R.D, after awakening from a coma and mutated, leaves the B.P.R.D. to search for his connection to the mutated monsters threatening to wipe out humanity. He just doesn’t know where to look, let alone if he is even asking the right questions.

 

Necromancer Gustav Strobl searches for his own answers when his deal with the Devil ends up falling apart after Hell collapsed in Hellboy in Hell. He is convinced that Abe has the answers to making a contract with the masters of the impending apocalypse.

 

In the first chapter, Abe finds himself in a small town hiding in a church for sanctuary, after fleeing an ordeal in a railway car. The priest is surprisingly welcoming, but Abe’s presence becomes known after a contentious sermon. The priest and a number of the congregants are among those who have mutated. The priest is dragged out for a lynching, and that’s when all hell breaks loose.

 

The B.P.R.D are in close range to help Abe, but they do not forget their mission to bring him back to headquarters.

 

In chapter 2, “The New Race of Man,” Agent Vaughn, killed by the creature the priest became in the previous chapter,  has been somewhat resurrected at the hands of necromancer Gustav Strobl. Abe flees to the Salton Sea and meets Judy, Barry, and Gene camping near giant eggs laid by enormous monsters. Judy and Gene, believing a newly hatched creature is the key to humankind’s next step in evolution, are met with frustration from Barry, and he threatens and injures Abe in the process.

 

The next day, Barry is found dead on the beach. Abe offers to investigate. As he digs deeper, he discovers what happened to the creature that emerged out of one of the giant eggs on the beach, as well as the truth behind Barry’s death. Meanwhile, Vaughn tells all he knows to Strobl about Abe and is offered a choice: to remain a traveling companion and be restored to full life, or be left as he was before Strobl found him.  

 

Abe makes it to Arizona in chapter 3, “The Shape of Things to Come,” and befriends a Mexican family along the way. He wonders why they aren’t afraid of him. Elena tells him the monsters they are used to coming across are all too human. Elena tires of being teased by those around her after telling Abe of her father being convinced he is a shapeshifter and fleeing to the desert. A mysterious goat saves them from being murdered at the hands of a white trigger-happy militia member.

 

In chapter 4, “To the Last Man,” Abe reports a car accident to the local police chief, J.J., who invites him to take part in the investigation of pustules found on the corpses of Sutton Ranch’s horses  that may cause more mutations if they aren’t taken care of. Zombie-like creatures are terrorizing the small town.

 

J.J. questions the recent squatters, and acts as though Suzy Alexander and Abe are putting too much pressure on him about further investigating them. He doesn’t know how right their instincts are. Strobl finds an old “friend” has returned.

 

Chapter 5, “The Garden (I),” is told from two angles, one from the Man who saved a Woman and another from the terrorized Woman being held captive by the Man. He stands guard on the roof, and shoots when he sees Abe coming. There is an interesting intertwining of the tales of the two people, previously unknown to each other, and Abe coming to the rescue. The last panel of the comic is simply an olive branch, which is a lovely touch.

 

After saving the Woman, Grace, from her imprisonment in the crooked house, Abe welcomes her as a traveling partner in chapter 6, “The Healer.” They meet up with a couple whose son is succumbing to the effects of mutation. The find a faith healer who says he has been surviving on the water from a creek and clay and reveals an old Jesus statue, who tells Abe he cannot be healed.

 

In chapter 7, “Visions, Dreams, and Fishin’,” Grace and Abe come upon an old woman in their travels. They find a place to camp, Abe dives for fish. He meets up with that old woman again to find something he wasn’t expecting, her own mutation. Abe and Grace come to some uncomfortable conclusions after dreaming their own nightmares.


In chapter 8, “Sacred Place,” Strobl continues his search for answers about the fish man and woman who creates fire. Abe and Grace travel to Rosario, TX, where Abe was shot. Reunited with Judy and Gene, they find B.P.R.D agents to take him home.

 

This volume includes a sketchbook of character designs, covers, and storyboards with notes by Sebastián Fiumara and Max Fiumara, and collects Abe Sapien paperback volumes 3-5.

 

The opening image of Abe crouched in a confessional is reminiscent of one of Bernie Wrightson’s illustrations of Frankenstein’s creature hiding in a shed. It really sets the tone for the entire book. Abe feels lost in his own skin, especially when he is confronted with those who see him as a monster. Reading Abe’s storyline is much different from Hellboy’s, since Abe is more subdued and just a different personality. The artwork provided by Sebastián Fiumara and Max Fiumara is well executed, especially regarding high tension and action panels. I recommend this for fans of the Mignola universe, not just Hellboy and the B.P.R.D. Abe is front and center, and his journey may not suit everyone’s storytelling tastes. Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker