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World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War Hardcover – September 12, 2006
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We survived the zombie apocalypse, but how many of us are still haunted by that terrible time? We have (temporarily?) defeated the living dead, but at what cost? Told in the haunting and riveting voices of the men and women who witnessed the horror firsthand, World War Z is the only record of the pandemic.
The Zombie War came unthinkably close to eradicating humanity. Max Brooks, driven by the urgency of preserving the acid-etched first-hand experiences of the survivors, traveled across the United States of America and throughout the world, from decimated cities that once teemed with upwards of thirty million souls to the most remote and inhospitable areas of the planet. He recorded the testimony of men, women, and sometimes children who came face-to-face with the living, or at least the undead, hell of that dreadful time. World War Z is the result. Never before have we had access to a document that so powerfully conveys the depth of fear and horror, and also the ineradicable spirit of resistance, that gripped human society through the plague years.
THE INSPIRATION FOR THE MAJOR MOTION PICTURE
“Will spook you for real.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Possesses more creativity and zip than entire crates of other new fiction titles. Think Mad Max meets The Hot Zone. . . . It’s Apocalypse Now, pandemic-style. Creepy but fascinating.”—USA Today
“Will grab you as tightly as a dead man’s fist. A.”—Entertainment Weekly, EW Pick
“Probably the most topical and literate scare since Orson Welles’s War of the Worlds radio broadcast . . . This is action-packed social-political satire with a global view.”—Dallas Morning News
- Print length342 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherCrown
- Publication dateSeptember 12, 2006
- Dimensions9.58 x 6.36 x 1.17 inches
- ISBN-100307346609
- ISBN-13978-0307346605
- Lexile measure960L
From #1 New York Times bestselling author Colleen Hoover comes a novel that explores life after tragedy and the enduring spirit of love. | Learn more
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From the Publisher

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Customer Reviews |
4.6 out of 5 stars 6,024
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4.4 out of 5 stars 12,117
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4.5 out of 5 stars 625
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4.8 out of 5 stars 1,949
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Price | $9.08$9.08 | $14.34$14.34 | $14.35$14.35 | $6.29$6.29 | $8.49$8.49 |
More from Max Brooks: | Fully illustrated and exhaustively comprehensive, The Zombie Survival Guide is your key to survival against the hordes of undead who may be stalking you right now. | Part survival narrative, part bloody horror tale, part scientific journey into the boundaries between truth and fiction, this is a Bigfoot story as only Max Brooks could chronicle it. | The riveting story of the highly decorated, barrier-breaking, historic black regiment—the Harlem Hellfighters | The first official Minecraft novel! Max Brooks tells the story of a hero—stranded in the world of Minecraft—who must unravel the secrets of a mysterious island in order to survive. | In the thrilling sequel to Minecraft: The Island, a stranded hero stumbles upon another castaway—and discovers that teamwork might just be the secret to survival. |
Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“Max Brooks has charted the folly of a disaster response based solely on advanced technologies and brute force in this step-by-step guide to what happened in the Zombie War. He details with extraordinary insight how in the face of institutional missteps and greed, people in unexpected ways achieve unique, creative, and effective strategies to survive and fight back. Brooks’s account of the path to recovery and reconstruction after the war is fascinating, too. World War Z provides us with a starting point, at least, a basic blueprint from which to build a popular understanding of how, when, and why such a disaster came to be, and how small groups and individuals survived.” —Jeb Weisman, Ph.D.,Director of Strategic Technologies, National Center for Disaster Preparedness
“Possesses more creativity and zip than entire crates of other new fiction titles. Think Mad Max meets The Hot Zone . . . It’s Apocalypse Now, pandemic-style. Creepy but fascinating.”
- USA TODAY
“Prepare to be entranced by this addictively readable oral history of the great war between humans and zombies. . . . Will grab you as tightly as a dead man’s fist. A.”
- Entertainment Weekly, EW Pick
“Probably the most topical and literate scare since Orson Welles' War of the Worlds radio broadcast. . . . This is action-packed social-political satire with a global view.”
- Dallas Morning News
“Brooks [is] America’s most prominent maven on the living dead. . . . Chilling. . . . It is gripping reading and a scathing indictment of weak responses to crises real and over-hyped.”
- Hartford Courant
“A sober, frequently horrifying and even moving account. . . . Brooks has delivered a full-blown horror novel, laced with sharp social and political observations and loads of macabre, gruesome imagery. . . . The real horror of World War Z comes from the all-too-plausible responses of human beings and governments to the menace.”
- Fangoria
“A horror fan’s version of Studs Terkel’s The Good War. . . . Like George Romero’s Dead trilogy, World War Z is another milestone in the zombie mythology.”
- Booklist
“Brooks commits to detail in a way that makes his nightmare world creepily plausible. . . . Far more affecting than anything involving zombies really has any right to be. . . . The book . . . opens in blood and guts, turns the world into an oversized version of hell, then ends with and affirmation of humanity’s ability to survive the worst the world has to offer. It feels like the right book for the right times, and that’s the eeriest detail of all.”
- A.V. Club, The Onion
“The best science fiction has traditionally been steeped in social commentary. World War Z continues that legacy. . . . We haven’t been this excited about a book without pictures since–well, since ever.”
- Metro
“Each story locks together perfectly to create a wonderful, giddy suspense. Brooks also has the political savvy to take advantage of any paranoia a modern reader might feel. . . . The perfect book for all us zombie junkies.”
- Paste
“This infectious and compelling book will have nervous readers watching the streets for zombies. Recommended.”
- Library Journal
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
WARNINGS
GREATER CHONGQING, THE UNITED FEDERATION OF CHINA
[At its prewar height, this region boasted a population of over thirty-five million people. Now, there are barely fifty thousand. Reconstruction funds have been slow to arrive in this part of the country, the government choosing to concentrate on the more densely populated coast. There is no central power grid, no running water besides the Yangtze River. But the streets are clear of rubble and the local "security council" has prevented any postwar outbreaks. The chairman of that council is Kwang Jingshu, a medical doctor who, despite his advanced age and wartime injuries, still manages to make house calls to all his patients.]
The first outbreak I saw was in a remote village that officially had no name. The residents called it "New Dachang," but this was more out of nostalgia than anything else. Their former home, "Old Dachang," had stood since the period of the Three Kingdoms, with farms and houses and even trees said to be centuries old. When the Three Gorges Dam was completed, and reservoir waters began to rise, much of Dachang had been disassembled, brick by brick, then rebuilt on higher ground. This New Dachang, however, was not a town anymore, but a "national historic museum." It must have been a heartbreaking irony for those poor peasants, to see their town saved but then only being able to visit it as a tourist. Maybe that is why some of them chose to name their newly constructed hamlet "New Dachang" to preserve some connection to their heritage, even if it was only in name. I personally didn't know that this other New Dachang existed, so you can imagine how confused I was when the call came in.
The hospital was quiet; it had been a slow night, even for the increasing number of drunk-driving accidents. Motorcycles were becoming very popular. We used to say that your Harley-Davidsons killed more young Chinese than all the GIs in the Korean War. That's why I was so grateful for a quiet shift. I was tired, my back and feet ached. I was on my way out to smoke a cigarette and watch the dawn when I heard my name being paged. The receptionist that night was new and couldn't quite understand the dialect. There had been an accident, or an illness. It was an emergency, that part was obvious, and could we please send help at once.
What could I say? The younger doctors, the kids who think medicine is just a way to pad their bank accounts, they certainly weren't going to go help some "nongmin" just for the sake of helping. I guess I'm still an old revolutionary at heart. "Our duty is to hold ourselves responsible to the people." Those words still mean something to me . . . and I tried to remember that as my Deer bounced and banged over dirt roads the government had promised but never quite gotten around to paving.
I had a devil of a time finding the place. Officially, it didn't exist and therefore wasn't on any map. I became lost several times and had to ask directions from locals who kept thinking I meant the museum town. I was in an impatient mood by the time I reached the small collection of hilltop homes. I remember thinking, This had better be damned serious. Once I saw their faces, I regretted my wish.
There were seven of them, all on cots, all barely conscious. The villagers had moved them into their new communal meeting hall. The walls and floor were bare cement. The air was cold and damp. Of course they're sick, I thought. I asked the villagers who had been taking care of these people. They said no one, it wasn't "safe." I noticed that the door had been locked from the outside. The villagers were clearly terrified. They cringed and whispered; some kept their distance and prayed. Their behavior made me angry, not at them, you understand, not as individuals, but what they represented about our country. After centuries of foreign oppression, exploitation, and humiliation, we were finally reclaiming our rightful place as humanity's middle kingdom. We were the world's richest and most dynamic superpower, masters of everything from outer space to cyber space. It was the dawn of what the world was finally acknowledging as "The Chinese Century" and yet so many of us still lived like these ignorant peasants, as stagnant and superstitious as the earliest Yangshao savages.
I was still lost in my grand, cultural criticism when I knelt to examine the first patient. She was running a high fever, forty degrees centigrade, and she was shivering violently. Barely coherent, she whimpered slightly when I tried to move her limbs. There was a wound in her right forearm, a bite mark. As I examined it more closely, I realized that it wasn't from an animal. The bite radius and teeth marks had to have come from a small, or possibly young, human being. Although I hypothesized this to be the source of the infection, the actual injury was surprisingly clean. I asked the villagers, again, who had been taking care of these people. Again, they told me no one. I knew this could not be true. The human mouth is packed with bacteria, even more so than the most unhygienic dog. If no one had cleaned this woman's wound, why wasn't it throbbing with infection?
I examined the six other patients. All showed similar symptoms, all had similar wounds on various parts of their bodies. I asked one man, the most lucid of the group, who or what had inflicted these injuries. He told me it had happened when they had tried to subdue "him."
"Who?" I asked.
I found "Patient Zero" behind the locked door of an abandoned house across town. He was twelve years old. His wrists and feet were bound with plastic packing twine. Although he'd rubbed off the skin around his bonds, there was no blood. There was also no blood on his other wounds, not on the gouges on his legs or arms, or from the large dry gap where his right big toe had been. He was writhing like an animal; a gag muffled his growls.
At first the villagers tried to hold me back. They warned me not to touch him, that he was "cursed." I shrugged them off and reached for my mask and gloves. The boy's skin was as cold and gray as the cement on which he lay. I could find neither his heartbeat nor his pulse. His eyes were wild, wide and sunken back in their sockets. They remained locked on me like a predatory beast. Throughout the examination he was inexplicably hostile, reaching for me with his bound hands and snapping at me through his gag.
His movements were so violent I had to call for two of the largest villagers to help me hold him down. Initially they wouldn't budge, cowering in the doorway like baby rabbits. I explained that there was no risk of infection if they used gloves and masks. When they shook their heads, I made it an order, even though I had no lawful authority to do so.
That was all it took. The two oxen knelt beside me. One held the boy's feet while the other grasped his hands. I tried to take a blood sample and instead extracted only brown, viscous matter. As I was withdrawing the needle, the boy began another bout of violent struggling.
One of my "orderlies," the one responsible for his arms, gave up trying to hold them and thought it might safer if he just braced them against the floor with his knees. But the boy jerked again and I heard his left arm snap. Jagged ends of both radius and ulna bones stabbed through his gray flesh. Although the boy didn't cry out, didn't even seem to notice, it was enough for both assistants to leap back and run from the room.
I instinctively retreated several paces myself. I am embarrassed to admit this; I have been a doctor for most of my adult life. I was trained and . . . you could even say "raised" by the People's Liberation Army. I've treated more than my share of combat injuries, faced my own death on more than one occasion, and now I was scared, truly scared, of this frail child.
The boy began to twist in my direction, his arm ripped completely free. Flesh and muscle tore from one another until there was nothing except the stump. His now free right arm, still tied to the severed left hand, dragged his body across the floor.
I hurried outside, locking the door behind me. I tried to compose myself, control my fear and shame. My voice still cracked as I asked the villagers how the boy had been infected. No one answered. I began to hear banging on the door, the boy's fist pounding weakly against the thin wood. It was all I could do not to jump at the sound. I prayed they would not notice the color draining from my face. I shouted, as much from fear as frustration, that I had to know what happened to this child.
Product details
- Publisher : Crown; First Edition (September 12, 2006)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 342 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0307346609
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307346605
- Lexile measure : 960L
- Item Weight : 1.25 pounds
- Dimensions : 9.58 x 6.36 x 1.17 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #52,195 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #140 in Science Fiction Short Stories
- #862 in War Fiction (Books)
- #1,988 in Science Fiction Adventures
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Max Brooks is the author of World War Z, the Zombie Survival Guide, Minecraft: The Island, and Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre. His graphic novels include GI Joe: Hearts and Minds, The Extinction Parade, Germ Warfare: A Graphic History, and The Harlem Hellfighters.
Brooks holds dual fellowships at the Atlantic Council’s Brent Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security and the Modern War Institute at West Point.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers enjoy the book's engrossing and creative storytelling. They praise the writing style as intelligent and well-thought-out. The stories feel real and believable, with great characters and biases. Readers appreciate the intelligence and research provided by the author. They value the realistic approach and psychology, which makes the world they inhabit seem so real. The sociopolitical commentary and class perspective are also appreciated.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book engaging and engrossing. They appreciate the creative ideas and the story's flow. While some readers felt the realism was lost, most enjoyed the gory and exciting aspects of the book.
"...Brooks spends lots of time on this, and it is very engaging reading. And because they're already dead, water is no problem for zombies...." Read more
"...I would say this is definitely a great book to read if you enjoy fast-paced, gory, and realistic reads...." Read more
"...The stories are gory, exciting, and interesting, yet their real purpose is to provide a social commentary...." Read more
"...I didn’t want this to end and yet, I did. It’s harrowing, amazing, thrilling and above all, it’s humane...." Read more
Customers find the writing style well-thought-out and intelligent. They appreciate the fresh tone and ideas, as well as the realistic reads. The author does an amazing job bringing believable voices to the narrators. Readers find the concept extraordinary and creative, with amazing detail and translation to visuals.
"...creative, and fun, and the value-added is that it's really well thought out, an almost scholarly meditation on what it really would be like if the..." Read more
"...a great book to read if you enjoy fast-paced, gory, and realistic reads. It’s definitely not the same as the movie, but I did enjoy the book more." Read more
"...World War Z" is a story rich in symbolism, irony, humor, horror, gore, excitement, and tragedy...." Read more
"...found this way of writing, the whole concept behind this book, utterly extraordinary...." Read more
Customers enjoy the engaging storytelling. They find the stories fascinating and informative, making them feel realistic. The human characters and biases make each story believable. Readers appreciate the clever plot that doesn't have a traditional plot. They also appreciate the gaps in the storyline that leave you wondering how certain events unfolded.
"...out fictional oral history, a collection of interviews and short memoirs of survivors of the global zombie war..." Read more
"...starts off with the plague’s first victim, not having to dilly dally with a whole backstory; instead, the book gives you the backstory as it goes..." Read more
"...There are many individual stories in the book and many of them could be considered short stories by themselves, but taken together they remind one..." Read more
"...Each story is unique and adds a piece of the puzzle while never revealing the full picture. Each voice is distinct and authentic...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful and engaging. They appreciate the thorough research and multiple points of view. The story is well-thought-out and intelligent, with an analytical tone and fanciful elements. Readers describe it as a brilliant concept for a zombie story.
"...does the book take place worldwide, but the time and thought put into the book are tremendous...." Read more
"...Rather it intrigued me! I found it to be a very engrossing book from start to finish in this format...." Read more
"...Over all, it was a fun and insightful read I would recommend to those looking for a good zombie read. A very close 4 stars for me...." Read more
"...because Max Brooks clearly did his research and had really accurate viewpoints about the states of countries throughout the world, their religions,..." Read more
Customers enjoyed the realistic approach and psychology of the book. They found the military scenes fascinating and the closeness to reality fascinating. The vivid descriptions made the world feel believable and memorable. Readers appreciated the brilliant dissection of human nature.
"...the world and not just to one specific region or country, making it so much more realistic...." Read more
"...in my opinion, reaches further into this subgenre and creates a greater work of fiction by using the zombie to make an important statement about..." Read more
"...for what’s being shared, what’s being exposed and this is felt in every word and page. I didn’t want this to end and yet, I did...." Read more
"...but I do not think they are supposed to be, the world and it's plight are memorable and that's what the reader should focus on...." Read more
Customers find the book's sociopolitical content insightful and realistic. They appreciate the class perspective and culturally relevant occurrences that reflect historical events. The book explores the apocalypse from a solid class perspective, with actual names and culturally relevant observances. Readers appreciate the author's keen eye for real-world current events and global politics. The oral histories provide insight into global politics, medicine, military, and themes of survival, uncertainty, and darkest thoughts.
"...thinking rationally, but he never ever stops, with no pain, remorse, ethics, morals or fear, so our humano-centric military doctrine goes right out..." Read more
"...are gory, exciting, and interesting, yet their real purpose is to provide a social commentary...." Read more
"...It’s also about how individuals from different cultures, backgrounds, ages and occupations, with different needs, wants and desires, respond to a..." Read more
"...Through subtle and clever cultural references and deep political background we see the world as it might become in the face of such catastrophe,..." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing. Some find the progression of the book great, with several outstanding action set pieces and impressive scope. They describe it as powerful and inspirational at times. However, others feel the pacing is boring, repetitive, and slow to get going. There are also inconsistencies between perspectives and some readers felt the book was slow to get going.
"...It holds together very well, and is very interesting and thought-provoking...." Read more
"...I have about this book is that some of the perspectives that were documented seemed repetitive or not as interesting as others...." Read more
"...Such as it goes into detail about the Redeker plan that started to turn the tide. I found this absolutely fascinating in concept...." Read more
"...It plays every fear to the hilt, and never falters. Simply put, this is a book that doesn't screw around. It goes right for the throat...." Read more
Customers have different views on the character development. Some find it creative and vivid, with a full cast of voice actors reading all the different characters. Others feel that the characters are only developed episodically, with no real protagonist to follow throughout the book. The names of the characters are not memorable.
"...Brooks manages to inhabit every character, no matter who they are, where they’re from or how brief their story...." Read more
"...The names of the characters are not memorable, but I do not think they are supposed to be, the world and it's plight are memorable and that's what..." Read more
"...Each and every character within the book reads as a real person...." Read more
"Connected short stories. Great characters. Easy to get to a stopping point but hard to put down. Would recommend to anyone" Read more
Reviews with images

Chapter transition isn't as fluid as I wanted it to be. Audiobook would probably be better.
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2011I was expecting something lighthearted, tongue-in-cheek, a global melee of headshots and brain-eating--in the vein of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, a zombie take on General Sir John Hackett's 80s classic The Third World War--yet was very pleasantly surprised to find instead this deep, well thought out fictional oral history, a collection of interviews and short memoirs of survivors of the global zombie war (this is a future history, a la Kunetka and Strieber's still surprisingly comparable War Day). It holds together very well, and is very interesting and thought-provoking.
First off, there is no attempt whatsoever to explain the scientific basis for zombies, which is just as well. We know only that they came out of mainland China, strongly implying an avian influenza-type mutation, or at worse military medical-chemical experimentation gone really wrong. Coming up with some kind of zombie science, of course, would be a self-defeating exercise, inventing necessarily ridiculous and bogus medical/scientific descriptions, which in the end would subtract from the true power of these (fictional) oral histories. This book is not about the origins and rise of the global zombie threat, it's about how mankind reacted. It really doesn't matter why/how the zombies emerged; they did, and the far more interesting story is how mankind couldn't imagine it, ignored it, initially failed to address it, and eventually rose to the challenge.
This book takes on most of the big-picture issues of what a global zombie war would involve and affect. It talks strategic decision-making, unpleasant sacrifices, economic effects, military strategy, operations and tactics, as well as communications and the role of propaganda, politics and international relations, with some unanticipated nuclear exchange thrown in for fun. But the one issue I was really hoping Brooks would take on, that he would have some of his narrators latch onto and wrestle with, was religion. Disappointingly, religion didn't get a thorough treatment. Brooks touches on it here and there, but never fully confronts and tackles it. World War Z sure as hell ain't The Rapture, but it's a resurrection, and not the good kind. So what does this do the Big Three belief systems, and how do they fare? What new beliefs come about, and how do they evolve and then grow/fade?
I really enjoyed Brooks' deep exploration on the true nature of the zombie enemy, and how to beat him. He's not bright, fast, or thinking rationally, but he never ever stops, with no pain, remorse, ethics, morals or fear, so our humano-centric military doctrine goes right out the window. The zombie is a "...self-contained, automated unit...;" there is no reasoning with him, and no single or collective will to fight to target and cripple. The only option is eradication, and it has to be done with proper training and equipment. Brooks spends lots of time on this, and it is very engaging reading.
And because they're already dead, water is no problem for zombies. They can't swim, so they sink, or more correctly, sort of wander around the bottom, and if the water gets shallow, they can come on up and grab you. I never thought of that before, but Brooks sure does explore it, in a number of fascinating ways. But the narrative went a bit off the rails here. We saw on land that animals would not go zombie (zombie raccoons, bears, coyotes, deer would have made it really interesting), so it was unclear--and not addressed--if sharks or other sea predators would have a carnivorous go at zombies, and if you would then end up with Great White zombies (isn't that a Danish thrash-metal band?). Wouldn't that be awesome, a horde of zombie sharks? I see a wide-open opportunity for the zombie fiction oceanographer...and an enterprising B-movie producer...
Lots of people and organizations get a grilling, and some folks get good press. The underfunding of the FDA is decried. Vapid celebrities like a certain unnamed "...little rich, spoiled, tired-looking whore," and her idiot-ilk get what they deserve, from zombies and an enraged human populace. Military greats MacArthur, Halsey and LeMay are called "...insipid, egocentric clowns..." Political decisions are implicitly criticized, such as any number of US "brushfire wars." A certain Vermont "whacko" (Howard Dean, mayhaps?) gets a lot of time, most of it positive. Colin Powell (apparently) comes through as The Man, President of the United States, and REM's Michael Stipe apparently makes it through.
Brooks is good on his terms and equipment, getting the use of "ChiCom," "maskirovka" and many others right, as well as just about perfect descriptions of almost every modern weapon system and their employment. His geography is spot-on.
Great to see a name-check of the 3rd Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry. I played rugby with and against these guys in Germany in the 80s. We even get a mention of the Tri-Nations tournament and a notional trouncing of the All Blacks by the Springboks, and later another All Black mention. Good on ya, Mr. Brooks.
And in the end, what did it all mean? For those who survived, it was a forced return to the vitality and reward of life, having to be aware and alert, having had to defend globally against a common enemy for survival, and a forced return to a simpler, significantly more empty planet. It wasn't about starting over, but still a fundamental re-set. In the end, it was a cleansing, with the weak and ignorant culled without mercy, an undead Malthusian solution.
Bottom line: this book is surprisingly inventive, creative, and fun, and the value-added is that it's really well thought out, an almost scholarly meditation on what it really would be like if the dead were to rise. This book does not read like some idiotic first-person shooter video game; instead it's a thoughtful exploration of what it would really be like if the zombies came.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2022I give World War Z a 4 1/2 out of 5-star rating. Overall, the book is fast-paced and unlike most zombie books you would read. The beginning already starts off with the plague’s first victim, not having to dilly dally with a whole backstory; instead, the book gives you the backstory as it goes along with the action which I find very interesting since then I don’t have to read 40 pages of just backstory before getting into the actual story. It then moves through the “Zombie War” in chronological order with each part split up based on what was happening. This helps give an actual feel of what an actual zombie outbreak would be like today.
Also with the fact that the “journalist”, who is the one taking account of all the records, takes you all over the world and not just to one specific region or country, making it so much more realistic. It’s nice to have it be in multiple places like an actual pandemic since then you get to see different perspectives of all the people. Not only does the book take place worldwide, but the time and thought put into the book are tremendous. How countries deal with the outbreak is scarily accurate and some parts I hadn’t even thought about would ever happen. The book goes in-depth into the many different factors and things that each country did to save its own people and exterminate the zombies and all of them made terrifying sense as to how and why all of it would be done. It also resembles how COVID affected us for the last few years but of course, COVID was on a smaller scale compared to the book.
The “journalist” mentioned before is how the book is formatted. It’s a format I’ve never seen in a published book before I very much liked it. It’s like the “journalist” does interviews with each person but it’s more led by the interviewee than the interviewer themselves; so the interviewee talks about themselves more without the questions or as many questions as usual from the interviewer.
The only complaint I have about this book is that some of the perspectives that were documented seemed repetitive or not as interesting as others. I understand that the book is trying to be as realistic as possible, but sometimes that would make it boring for a page or two but then it would dive right back in when it switched to another. This is honestly my only reason for me giving a half-star less than a full five.
I would say this is definitely a great book to read if you enjoy fast-paced, gory, and realistic reads. It’s definitely not the same as the movie, but I did enjoy the book more.
Top reviews from other countries
- MariamReviewed in Belgium on February 20, 2024
3.0 out of 5 stars This book is political.
I though I would be reading fiction. But it’s like a political science book and leftist too.
- jeevan a.Reviewed in India on July 25, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars The best out there....
What a book ! Okay for fellow readers out there, this is not a big novel with a protagonist and a plot but this book is in a universe where a zombie apocalypse would take place and the stories of people from different backgrounds responding to it and their ways of adaptation. The author has a truly unorthodox way to write books I believe so. This would be the hands-down best book to read if you are into zombie horror books.
Overall, ranging from paper quality to font size and reader experience, its a 5 out of 5.
- Cliente de AmazonReviewed in Mexico on December 14, 2020
5.0 out of 5 stars Humanity criticism nicely done.
We may not be facing zombies but we are reacting these ways to current world situations. Hopefully we’ll be able to see how terrible our reactions have been.
- Phil ChaReviewed in Canada on March 22, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Maximillian Brooks is a Genius. A good "toilet" book
This is a great book from Max Brooks. I know he probably doesn't want to ride off the coattails but I was dumbfounded when I found out his dad was Mel Brooks. Now with that said, this book is really well researched and it really feels like Maximillian was able to get into the perspectives of many different people. The book is a collection of different people's experiences during the zombie apocalypse. Now the reason I said it's a good toilet book is that each story can be read fairly quickly and it's a "low time investment" book. You can put it down after a small part. I got this book for a friend who doesn't really read and I don't care if it takes 3 years, the book can be read like a series of short stories. Highly recommended.
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RafaelReviewed in Brazil on March 14, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Muito bom
Muito bom