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dEaDINBURGH (Din Eidyn Corpus) (Volume 1)…
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dEaDINBURGH (Din Eidyn Corpus) (Volume 1) (editie 2014)

door Mark Wilson (Auteur)

Reeksen: Din Eidyn Corpus (1)

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dEaDINBURGH is a bold first step into a new genre by Mark Wilson, author of Amazon bestseller, The Man Who Sold His Son. Edinburgh, 1645: The bubonic plague rages. In a desperate attempt to quarantine the infected, the city leaders seal the residents of Mary King's Close in their underground homes. 2015: Mary King's Close is reopened, unleashing a mutated plague upon the city residents. The UK government seals the entire city. Declaring it a dead zone they seal the survivors inside alongside the infected. dEaDINBURGH is declared a no man's land, its residents left for dead and to the dead. 2050: Joseph MacLeod, born onto the cobbles of the Royal Mile and stolen from the clutches of the infected is determined to escape the quarantined city. Under the guidance of former -marine Padre Jock, he leaves the confines of the city centre and learns how to survive the dead city. Alys Shephard, born into an all-women farming community, believes a cure lies in the south of the quarantined zone. The finest combatant in the dead city, Alys burns with anger. The anger of an abandoned child. Something much worse than the infected waits for them in the south, in the form of a religious cult led by a madman named Somna who collects gruesome trophies and worships the dead body of a former celebrity. Added to this, the enigmatic Bracha, a supreme survivalist and sadistic former-Royal with his own agenda stalks the teenagers. A self-contained story, dEaDINBURGH is a character-driven Dystopian/Horror novel, exploring the human capacity for good, evil and for survival. Inspired by George A Romero's 'Dawn of the Dead', the works of Robert Kirkman and Jonahan Maberry's 'Rot and Ruin' series. What the Readers say: "Wilson has created a story of horror, yes, definitely, but it's also one of friendship, loyalty, betrayal and intrigue with a good dash of humour." "Throughout this novel, the reader is given tantalising pieces of information which ratchets up the tension." "The plot had me screaming out loud, normally I see the plot coming from a mile away. Boy, this one had me surprised." "For a book that's considered young adult, I found it very realistic, harsh, and mature in its themes of friendship, survival and family. There is no fluff in this story. Oh, and did I mention the twist at the end? Never saw that coming." "I think I liked this better than Rot and Ruin...just don't tell Jonathan Maberry." "This book for me was more than just another zombie story it was a story of how humankind adapts and changes in order to survive."… (meer)
Lid:cassie.peters1
Titel:dEaDINBURGH (Din Eidyn Corpus) (Volume 1)
Auteurs:Mark Wilson (Auteur)
Info:CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform (2014), 348 pages
Verzamelingen:Books, Jouw bibliotheek, Aan het lezen, Te lezen, Gelezen, maar niet in bezit, Favorieten
Waardering:
Trefwoorden:to-read

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dEaDINBURGH (Din Eidyn Corpus) (Volume 1) door Mark Wilson

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Wowwowwow! So much to love!

I love the subcultures that formed in the aftermath of the zombie plague. I especially delighted in the religious concepts behind The Brotherhood and The Exalted. I though those were brilliant.

I'm thrilled to see genuinely strong female characters. Characters that do some saving and sometimes need some saving right alongside their male counterpoints. It's great that toughness wasn't a trait reserved for only main characters either.

Mark Wilson also has a nice descriptive style that pulls you right in to the action and make his world so easy to visualize.

And the end! Oh. Nicely done, sir, nicely done.

I didn't care for the romance because I am that reader whose eyes autonomically roll back into their skull when a love story pops up. With that said, it was tolerable and inoffensive. It did not overwhelm the story or even rear its mushy little head too often.

On a somewhat less subjective note, in chapter 19 as Joey and Alys are reacting to descriptions of pre-zombie life, the author hits the zombie to modern man metaphor a bit too hard. Great analogy, but I think a more subtle presentation would have been preferable. It just sort of screamed METAPHOR for a brief moment.

The biggest criticism I have is regarding one scene which just didn't read emotionally true for me. I include it in the following spoiler tag as it reveals a delightfully gruesome surprise and I wouldn't want to deny anyone the pleasure of the reaction I had to it. Joey and Alys are smiling and flirting while her cousin lies unconscious on the ground with her eyeball hanging out. Really? I just don't find that credible. It was especially disappointing considering how competent both characters had been portrayed as being and suddenly they're mooning at each other while her cousin's eye is hanging out of her skull. Just no.

With all the animadversion above, the 5 star rating might seem in err. However, the book was overall a thrill to read and difficult to put down to do other stupid things such as work or eat or sleep. The end was a powerhouse and I want more story NOW! ( )
  Zoes_Human | Aug 16, 2023 |
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dEaDINBURGH is a bold first step into a new genre by Mark Wilson, author of Amazon bestseller, The Man Who Sold His Son. Edinburgh, 1645: The bubonic plague rages. In a desperate attempt to quarantine the infected, the city leaders seal the residents of Mary King's Close in their underground homes. 2015: Mary King's Close is reopened, unleashing a mutated plague upon the city residents. The UK government seals the entire city. Declaring it a dead zone they seal the survivors inside alongside the infected. dEaDINBURGH is declared a no man's land, its residents left for dead and to the dead. 2050: Joseph MacLeod, born onto the cobbles of the Royal Mile and stolen from the clutches of the infected is determined to escape the quarantined city. Under the guidance of former -marine Padre Jock, he leaves the confines of the city centre and learns how to survive the dead city. Alys Shephard, born into an all-women farming community, believes a cure lies in the south of the quarantined zone. The finest combatant in the dead city, Alys burns with anger. The anger of an abandoned child. Something much worse than the infected waits for them in the south, in the form of a religious cult led by a madman named Somna who collects gruesome trophies and worships the dead body of a former celebrity. Added to this, the enigmatic Bracha, a supreme survivalist and sadistic former-Royal with his own agenda stalks the teenagers. A self-contained story, dEaDINBURGH is a character-driven Dystopian/Horror novel, exploring the human capacity for good, evil and for survival. Inspired by George A Romero's 'Dawn of the Dead', the works of Robert Kirkman and Jonahan Maberry's 'Rot and Ruin' series. What the Readers say: "Wilson has created a story of horror, yes, definitely, but it's also one of friendship, loyalty, betrayal and intrigue with a good dash of humour." "Throughout this novel, the reader is given tantalising pieces of information which ratchets up the tension." "The plot had me screaming out loud, normally I see the plot coming from a mile away. Boy, this one had me surprised." "For a book that's considered young adult, I found it very realistic, harsh, and mature in its themes of friendship, survival and family. There is no fluff in this story. Oh, and did I mention the twist at the end? Never saw that coming." "I think I liked this better than Rot and Ruin...just don't tell Jonathan Maberry." "This book for me was more than just another zombie story it was a story of how humankind adapts and changes in order to survive."

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Mark Wilson is een LibraryThing auteur: een auteur die zijn persoonlijke bibliotheek toont op LibraryThing.

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