The End
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Narrado por:
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Shiromi Arserio
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De:
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Adam M. Booth
A zombie horror told from the zombie's perspective, The End is one woman's account of the end of her life, her family, and everything.
Like many single parents in their thirties, Zoe is overworked, overburdened, and low on company, and when the zombie apocalypse begins, she is forced to face the monster that has taken her over, the horrors he shows her, and her own murky past.
How does it feel to gain consciousness, only to find you have lost everything else. How would it feel to have a destructive force take you over completely and be powerless to stop the massacre that follows? And how would it feel to finally face your past and realise that perhaps, the monster has been with you all along? Find out in The End, an examination of the inhuman condition.
©2014 Adam Booth (P)2014 Adam M. BoothLos oyentes también disfrutaron:
How does a zombie think or do they? Adam M. Booth's imagination is deep and the picture he paints is very probable.
Good story!
Different
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The introspection Zoe goes through while on her quest to get to Lucy is profound. She comes to the conclusion that even though she has just recently become a hideous, brain eating monster, that maybe her outsides just match her insides now and that she has been a monster deep down all along.
While on her trek she witnesses a family dumping a live human off at a rest stop. But all she is able to think and feel is her insatiable hunger for brains and flesh. The guy, who happens to be in an electric wheelchair, sees her and flees down the road away from the rest stop. Zoe goes after him even though she can't see him because he gets so far down the road. She just walks and walks (shuffles is probably a more accurate word) until she sees him again but this time he's just sitting in the middle of the road where his chair has died. He sees her coming and resigns himself to his fate - that she is going to kill and eat him. While he sits and waits for her, he talks to her and bares his soul to her as if she were (still?) alive or maybe he does it because she's a zombie and unable to process his confessions. He tells her how he became paralyzed and needing the chair at the age of 10 (he was hit by a car). He told her why his parents had kicked him out of the family vehicle and just left him there, helpless and stranded (they didn't like him enough to be responsible for him during the end of the world), and he tells her that he that he should have looked up more and enjoyed the beauty while he had the chance. All the while he's telling her these intimate things she just keeps coming after him, relentlessly, uncontrollably, and driven by a need that is so primal you almost feel sorry for the zombie formerly known as Zoe.
At first I was somewhat disappointed that the storyline was so dark and depressing, but after a short time I started really get into Zoe's narrative and her memories of Lucy, life before Lucy's illness and Zoe's ill-fated attempt to relieve her daughter’s pain. I didn't have an extreme reaction to any one thing I had an extreme reaction to the story as a whole.
It's easy to feel sorry for the people who are killed by the zombies, but to feel sorry for mindless zombie killing machines, well that's a whole different matter. But somehow Booth is able to, humanize Zoe enough for us readers to pity her for being stuck in a never ending loop of all her mistakes as well as all the things she'll never get to do.
The narration by Shiromi Arserio and her British accent was, at least at first, somewhat annoying. Her voice is kind of pitchy and dry, but once you get into the story her voice matches Zoe's outlook and resignation about her life.
This audiobook was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher at no cost in exchange for an unbiased review courtesy of Audio book Blast dot com
Beauty in Extreme Darkness
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Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
I would recommend this to a friend if they liked this type of book. They have to be ready for some gore. But able to appreciate the slow, literary pace.What other book might you compare The End to and why?
I would kind of compare it to Cormac McCarthy's The Road - not in length of depth, but in the subject of the doomed travel in a ruined world.What do you think the narrator could have done better?
Not talk quite. so. slowly.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
When I realized where the MC had been headed all along.Any additional comments?
This is an odd combination of gruesome detail and literary writing. I have always wanted to read a book from the zombie's point of view, and I was really able to paint the MC's thoughts onto any one of the walkers in The Walking Dead. It will make me look at the show differently, I think. The ending was amazing. This is not for people who want fast, action-packed zombie stories. But it is thoughtful and did I mention the ending is amazing? And a little terrifying.Literary and Gruesome - Great Combo
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I was very (very) pleasantly surprised by this book. When I first read the description, my reaction was 'Okay. Yet ANOTHER zombie story.' and prepared myself for a decent but not incredible listen. The depth of character from both before our protagonist transitions into a zombie is absolutely amazing. (At that point having changed in to a being with two consciousnesses simultaneously existing as both the woman she was and the monster she has become.) The book is written so beautifully as to be almost poetic and the narration is so emotional that I don't think I could give the narrator justice in mere words.
I will be looking forward to any future works by this author as well as the narrator. This book has all the makings of a classic. Think along the lines of Thomas Hardy, Mary Shelley and Emily Bronte.
Finally- an intelligent AND eloquent zombie story!
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Would you try another book from Adam M. Booth and/or Shiromi Arserio?
yes I wouldWould you be willing to try another book from Adam M. Booth? Why or why not?
Yes I would. This book really wasn't my cup of tea, however it was an unique well done story.What does Shiromi Arserio bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
The drama of the Zombie telling her tale.Was The End worth the listening time?
I was anxious for it to be over simply because it just wasn't my type of book.Any additional comments?
As I said this wasn't my type of book. That being said this book is very original. It is told first person from the zombie's point of view. It is a gruesome horror tale and it is thought provoking.The story starts with a single, overworked single mom going to pick up her daughter at the train station. We hear her thoughts before she becomes a zombie and after she is bitten and becomes infected and has only one drive and desire; to consume human flesh,
We hear her guilt when she feeds, as she can not control her compulsion.
“I was provided this audiobook at no charge by the author, publisher and/or narrator in exchange for an unbiased review via AudiobookBlast dot come”
Unique First Person Zombie Tale
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