What’s it like to be a zombie? When a small town bank is surrounded and attacked by the zombie horde, not everyone makes it out alive. The story of the survivors, human and zombie alike, unfolds one chapter at a time. . . .
more:
editor picks
· member picks
· popular
· worthwhile
· recently vetted
· all recent additions
or jump to a random listing
Adrian’s Undead Diary is a glimpse into the mind of a survivor of the end of the world through his personal journal. The diary is that of Adrian Ring, survivor of a zombie apocalypse. Adrian is a man of many facets, on one hand a funny, wise and introspective person as well as a tormented man, struggling with the burden . . .
Left all alone in a world of zombies, Delilah must overcome her fears to find food. She finds a partner in a younger girl, Cassie, and together they set out to find a safe home. How far will they get? . . .
A meteor strikes Yellow Stone’s caldera and sets off a chain of earth shattering events. Riots and widespread panic bring cities to their knees while earthquakes ripple from sea to shining sea. As ashes fall from black clouds, people begin to die, and rise again. Zombies and super volcanoes, together at last ladies and gentlemen. The story, set in . . .
The story centers on six strangers in the bible-belt trying to survive a virus outbreak. A virus that starts out with flu-like symptoms that, if you’re lucky, kills you, and if you’re not, reduces you to man’s most basest nature. Zero reasoning skills and zero humanity, the only thing that remains is the will to exist—and the desire to destroy . . .
Ten years after the zombie apocalypse began, a journal is presented to Meaghan Ward, a Documentarian working for the Historical Society of the Republic of America. This journal contains the writings of Nora Frost, who, at 25 years old at the start of the zombie outbreak, kept what is known to be the best first person account of the events . . .
It’s about Zombies. Groaning, moaning, maddened flesh eating abominations driven by their insensate desire to feed. Zombies, a metaphor for a struggle we face every day. A metaphor for our hopeless battle against the savage throng of the human tide . . . an ocean of grasping hands, tearing, ripping, desecrating what you have, who you are. We struggle to keep our heads . . .
What’s it like to be a zombie? When a small town bank is surrounded and attacked by the zombie horde, not everyone makes it out alive. The story of the survivors, human and zombie alike, unfolds one chapter at a time. . . .
Death doesn’t have to feel like the end of the world. Zombie’s lives as they’ve known them are over, yet somehow they’re still standing. In the wake of all-consuming tragedy, they stagger forward, hands reaching out for the same people who once gave their lives hope and meaning. They need them. They’re hungry. Unable to use their own brains, . . .
It’s 1864 and the American Civil War has come to boil. A captured voodoo priest is forced by a Union general to use his powers to swing the battle in his favor, a mistake that the young country would grow to regret. A mist from the other world is spreading quickly, dragging fallen soldiers back into battle against their . . .
This is my story of post apocalyptic survival, as best I can remember. After the outbreak, with the help and support of friends and family, we created a safe, secure place for my son to be a child and grow up in a zombie infested world. There were troubles with neighbors, huge zombie hordes, and battle, but we always tried . . .
Faith’s world has ended. Broken, poisoned, and increasingly infested with the shambling dead, it isn’t much like the world she used to know. She made it through an apocalypse with a handful of strangers, but what does she do next? This is her story, told in real-time as she tries to keep a journal of her group’s journey, searching . . .
The odd tales of a pair of glasses on a zombie. It’s as simple as that . . . Or perhaps not. In a fairly standard post-apocalyptic world, we follow the tales of, well a pair of glasses, while we as the readers discover it ourselves. What happens next, no one knows . . . Not even the author. . . .
“Zombie Girls” is a well-written novel about two girls alone in a world taken over by zombies. Delilah and Cassie both had somebody to look after them but now they’re both alone. They team up to survive, watch each other backs, and find some place safe.
The story is told in [more . . .]
After reading Mr. Demchuk’s review, I found myself compelled to register simply for the opportunity to voice my disagreement with his overall assessment of AUD . . . because I’m thinking he missed a fundamental point.
I don’t believe AUD is meant to be polished. It’s not meant to be a glossy covered, shiny new [more . . .]