| Feed | |||||
| Mira Grant | |||||
| Orbit, 600 pages | |||||
| A review by Michael M Jones
Enter Georgia (George) and Shaun Mason, intrepid siblings about to take on the job of their lives. She's a
hard-edged journalist with an eye for the news, he's a thrill-seeking adrenaline junkie who pokes zombies with
a stick for the delight of his audience. And they've just been accepted as the official campaign bloggers as
Senator Peter Wyman makes a run for the White House. Even in the year 2040, with vast parts of the world
considered uninhabitable due to zombie infestations, some things never change. Especially politics.
But as George and Shaun, along with their poetry-writing, technogeek companion Buffy, take to the road with the
rest of Wyman's team, they discover that not everyone wants the Senator to land the party nomination. Someone
wants them all dead, at any cost. In finding out who is behind the campaign troubles, assassination attempts,
security leaks and zombie attacks, the Masons may get more than they ever bargained for.
Combining zombies, politics, epidemiology, pop culture, blogging, humor and horror, this is one hell of a
series opener. Grant (the open pseudonym for urban fantasist/artist/songwriter Seanan McGuire) knocks the
ball out of the park with Feed. The worldbuilding is solid, the tone is believable, the character
voices ring true, and the twists and turns prevent predictability. The author knows her zombies, and has
done an exemplary job of grounding them in reality and envisioning a world that goes on despite their
existence. The human spirit may be bruised, but in the Masons, it's certainly not broken. Of course,
after the events of this book, with several threads left open for further exploration, the next in the
series can't come quickly enough.
Michael M Jones enjoys an addiction to books, for which he's glad there is no cure. He lives with his very patient wife (who doesn't complain about books taking over the house... much), eight cats, and a large plaster penguin that once tasted blood and enjoyed it. A prophecy states that when Michael finishes reading everything on his list, he'll finally die. He aims to be immortal. |
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