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While I'm kind of at a loss for the popular fascination with zombies, I seem to have developed a sudden addiction for reading academic books about zombies in popular culture. The book I am currently reading was very obviously scanned from a paper version of the book and, frankly, I think zombies could have done a better job of it.
But that's not what I'm here to talk about. What I wanted to mention was that sometimes one comes across a scanno which opens up all sorts of new ideas.
The one which I am particularly fascinated by is one scholar's statement that, zombies, unlike other varieties of monster, do not have a long narrative history, unlike, say _Dracula_, written by *Brain Stoker.*
Let's see: _Dracula_ contains piles and piles of maundering prose, and Stoker *was* a theatrical agent...
I think that an argument could be made that Brain Stoker was some variety of evil zombie. Really, I want to read the book where Brain Stoker, the zombie theatrical agent, and Robbie Stevenson, the wimpy ailing guy with a split personality, team up to solve a mystery, possibly located in an alternate London where Holmes only accepts cases from those who are not life-impaired.
But that's not what I'm here to talk about. What I wanted to mention was that sometimes one comes across a scanno which opens up all sorts of new ideas.
The one which I am particularly fascinated by is one scholar's statement that, zombies, unlike other varieties of monster, do not have a long narrative history, unlike, say _Dracula_, written by *Brain Stoker.*
Let's see: _Dracula_ contains piles and piles of maundering prose, and Stoker *was* a theatrical agent...
I think that an argument could be made that Brain Stoker was some variety of evil zombie. Really, I want to read the book where Brain Stoker, the zombie theatrical agent, and Robbie Stevenson, the wimpy ailing guy with a split personality, team up to solve a mystery, possibly located in an alternate London where Holmes only accepts cases from those who are not life-impaired.
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Date: 2013-03-09 04:29 am (UTC)The Newsflesh Trilogy is Mira Grant's zombie-virus series. They're funny, and explore the details of life with zombies with more realism than any others.
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Date: 2013-03-09 06:01 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-09 12:23 pm (UTC)