I am beginning to think Kaye
George has a secret zombie addiction that she does not talk about. Her column
this week is on another book that has zombies in it. Today she reviews Allison Hewitt is Trapped by Madeleine
Roux. If you are like me and not in to zombies, or even if you are, scroll back
in time on the blog and check out the numerous other posts making up the “Monday
With Kaye” segments. Between her posts and FFB each week one could come up with
quite the reading list.
“Allison Hewitt is Trapped” by Madeleine Roux
In this novel,
written as a blog complete with comments, we join a huddled mass, mid-
zombie-apocalypse, hiding out in the employee break room of a book store. We
never find out where the book store is located, but this reader's best guess
would be Wisconsin or Minnesota, perhaps Illinois or Indiana. This reluctance
to locate the first part of the story is puzzling, since the other bloggers
give their locations and the last part of the book takes place in very specific
places.
That was about the only problem I
had with the novel, though. The blog device is well used and the book is
liberally sprinkled with humor. A military wifi called sNet has survived The
Outbreak, even though military personnel seem not to have, and, across the
globe, whenever laptop owners can get recharged, they hang onto this tenuous
thread to keep up each others' spirits.
Allison Hewitt, book lover and
employee of Brooks & Peabody book store, is the blogger who keeps them all
together. She also assumes leadership of the other employees when the manager
holes up in his adjacent office. The others, at the start, are two assistant
managers, Janette and Matt, and two customers, Holly and Ted, who have a
relationship that earns them the nickname Hollianted. The closed circuit
cameras, that keep running on emergency power unlike the heat (it's late
September and getting cold out), enable the band to keep track of where the
zombies are and to make forays for vending machine junk food and diet sodas. Allison,
back at the first invasion, remembered the ax from the glass fire alarm case and this
weapon serves her well as she battles the two types of zombies, Floaters and
Groaners.
The group eventually has to leave
the bookstore and make their way cross-country on a quest for a place they can
settle in relative safety. Some of the original band don't survive, but they
pick up others, becoming a fluid group hacking their way through zombies,
splattered with zombie juice, and ever in danger of infection.
This manuscript, consisting of the
blog entries, is submitted in 2018, one hundred years later, for inclusion in a
volume commemorating the event. The book begins with the query letter, followed
by the blogs. The ending is excellent!
Reviewed by Kaye George, Author of A Patchwork of Stories
for Suspense
Magazine
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