The story: The "story" unfolds via a man's poetry journal. Intending to document the glory of life, it ends up recording the downfall of civilization as he:
runs from zombies,
is bitten by zombies,
becomes a zombie,
bites and creates more zombies,
and embarks on the never-ending quest for fresh flesh and the all important zombie food source, brains.
Some of this anonymous man's poetry is only so-so (but what do you expect of a man who keeps a haiku poetry journal), and his pre-zombification haiku are as pretentious and pointless as you'd want them to be. But when said poet gets bitten, things take a turn for the worse -- while his haiku takes a visceral turn for the better, in my opinion. Dripping blood and pus and various other fluids onto the pages of his precious journal, he goes in search of the first of a slew of meals - -I mean, victims. (I'm not going to tell you who the first victim is, but ugh).
My thoughts: I previewed a few of the disgustingickyawesome haiku on a previous teaser tuesday, but they were just the, *ahem* tip of the juicy cortex. Though there are throwaway bits, there are some moments of gross brilliance in here. Our mysterious zombie man retains his vocabulary pretty much intact (which somehow doesn't seem ridiculous), but everything becomes a little stilted and skewed, creating a nicely eerie, Other effect. And of course, some of his phrasing, reactions and desires are just hilarious. Some of my favorites:
I keep saying "brains."
I remember other words,
but I just need one
Little old ladies
speed away in their wheelchairs,
frightened meals on wheels.
Everything I thought
tasted a lot like chicken
really tastes like man.
He tends to not flinch
though I'm yelling in his ear,
which is in my hand.
I remember other words,
but I just need one
Little old ladies
speed away in their wheelchairs,
frightened meals on wheels.
Everything I thought
tasted a lot like chicken
really tastes like man.
He tends to not flinch
though I'm yelling in his ear,
which is in my hand.
But even in all the slapstick and predictable freak out of zombie-time, there is still a nice undercurrent of just how gross and wrong this is. Mecum made some nice choices in how he slides things in to keep the reader from getting complacent. I thought this was absolutely brilliant, simple yet jarring:
Bodies pile up.
It seems bullets can stop us,
not that it stops us.
It seems bullets can stop us,
not that it stops us.
On the subject of choices, I think Mecum was pretty dead on through out. The progression from surviving human to crumbling zombie is interesting, and the choice of haiku, these short little bursts of thought, is fitting in a way that seems so far-fetched and yet obviously appropriate that it ends up being the perfect choice for a zombie narrator.
Design: And the design of this book is brilliant. It is the perfect complement to the text, adding a layer of ick and reality that makes you feel more like you are holding someone's bloody journal, discarded after the world has ended. There are polaroids of zombies "taped" into the journal, maggots, green and bloody smears, sketches, grime and clumps of hair -- it all works together to make the book more of an experience. And it is crucial, I think, because in spite of the continually funny and occasionally brilliant haiku, the book would be too slim and inconsequential without really great design.
My final say: Long story short, if you're in to zombies, looking for a light/fun/gross/seasonal read, this is a great way to go.
Bonus Material:
Zombie Haiku has its own awesome website with a zombie blog, haiku, sample pages, and haiku sent in by authors, comedians, random celebrities, etc., inspired by the zombie mayhem. Some of my faves:
Brain eating monsters
Make disappointing lovers
Because of the fear
- Michael Ian Black, comedian and writer of My Custom Van: And 50 Other Mind-Blowing Essays That Will Blow Your Mind All Over Your Face
The day I died you
tried to put a bullet in
my head. You missed. Lunch!
- David Wellington, author of the terrifying Monster Island trilogy
You are my desire.
Eating your luscious love thoughts
My Junk Just Dropped Off
- Christopher Moore, author of many great books including You Suck: A Love Story
On the site, there's also a page where Mecum mimics the style of famous poets -- if they were zombies. Things like:
Zombie Haiku by William Shakespeare
To bite through the skull
or beat it against the wall?
That is the question.
Two lobes in the skull.
I eat the bloodier one –
not much difference.
Zombie Haiku also has its own Myspace page, which is the location of the blog.
Design: And the design of this book is brilliant. It is the perfect complement to the text, adding a layer of ick and reality that makes you feel more like you are holding someone's bloody journal, discarded after the world has ended. There are polaroids of zombies "taped" into the journal, maggots, green and bloody smears, sketches, grime and clumps of hair -- it all works together to make the book more of an experience. And it is crucial, I think, because in spite of the continually funny and occasionally brilliant haiku, the book would be too slim and inconsequential without really great design.
My final say: Long story short, if you're in to zombies, looking for a light/fun/gross/seasonal read, this is a great way to go.
Bonus Material:
Zombie Haiku has its own awesome website with a zombie blog, haiku, sample pages, and haiku sent in by authors, comedians, random celebrities, etc., inspired by the zombie mayhem. Some of my faves:
Brain eating monsters
Make disappointing lovers
Because of the fear
- Michael Ian Black, comedian and writer of My Custom Van: And 50 Other Mind-Blowing Essays That Will Blow Your Mind All Over Your Face
The day I died you
tried to put a bullet in
my head. You missed. Lunch!
- David Wellington, author of the terrifying Monster Island trilogy
You are my desire.
Eating your luscious love thoughts
My Junk Just Dropped Off
- Christopher Moore, author of many great books including You Suck: A Love Story
On the site, there's also a page where Mecum mimics the style of famous poets -- if they were zombies. Things like:
Zombie Haiku by William Shakespeare
To bite through the skull
or beat it against the wall?
That is the question.
Zombie Haiku by Sylvia Plath
From head to black shoe,
daddy, I had to eat you
because I’m starving.
Two lobes in the skull.
I eat the bloodier one –
not much difference.
Zombie Haiku also has its own Myspace page, which is the location of the blog.
I loved this one. The lines about meals on wheels just cracks me up! I have a sick sense of humor. Did you see they have a Vampire Haiku book out now? I saw it in the store the other day.
ReplyDeleteI actually laughed out loud for the meals on wheels. I did not know about vamp haiku. I will have to look it up, but frankly, I think haiku was perfectly suited to zombies, so I don't know...
ReplyDeletei loved this book, but i think the vampire haiku one is better.
ReplyDeletegreat blog. love the layout. i'm following you now. you should pop over/follow mine. i have all things books. also have a free book give-a-way and interview going now.
ReplyDeletexo
Meals on wheels!! How cute is that!
ReplyDeleteHow weird's my definition of cute...?
great review! love the extra zombie goodies you added!
ReplyDeleteGood review, I haven't read this book, but it really sounds like fun! :)
ReplyDeleteThis is absolutely awesome! Thanks for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteYay zombies.
Hi- I just wanted to thank you for becoming a follower over at What Book is That?
ReplyDeleteAlso, this book is definitely on my TBR pile now, it sounds interesting for sure.
Emily
I won this from Cecilia of The Epic Rat during Zombie Appreciation Month. I'm yet to read it, but I think it's genius! It sounds so funny and wrong all at the same time! I can't wait for a lull in reading where I can pick this up. I'm looking forward to being grossed out! :D Awesome review!
ReplyDeleteAll you need is a little lull. You can read it in about an hour.
ReplyDelete