![]() ![]() Some just dance lightly around the subject of trying to grasp what is going on inside the brain of a zombie, while others plunge in head first, making their whole focus about the life and times of the undead. We’re even going to be seeing a movie with this slant in early 2013 with “Warm Bodies”. There have been, by my reckoning, a handful of novels that are told from the viewpoint of the zombie. Despite his fears of them, they don’t seem very interested in him, and when a truck pulls up outside and a couple of men step out looking for some undead to capture, Edward begins to realize what he is…or at least what he used to be. They are clearly not normal-shambling looking dead things that have no reason to still be upright. ![]() ![]() He sees a couple of other people in the store who scare him. ![]() Edward is an average guy from Wisconsin who wakes up one day in an abandoned WalMart dazed, dirty, and confused by the fact that he has maggots crawling out of rotten holes in his arm. The Reanimation of Edward Shuett is a zombie tale for folks who are looking something that injects something entirely new and different into the genre. Review of Derek Goodman’s “The Reanimation of Edward Shuett” ![]()
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