
World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War is a fictional account of a zombie apocalypse. The outbreak starts off small, but eventually due to air travel encompasses the entire world. It told through the use of interviews with survivors. As countries and governments become overrun it is decided that in order to save the human population, a large number of them will have to be sacrificed for the greater good. So, in the US, the government and military forces pull back west of the Rocky Mountains, set up a defensive perimeter for several years and eventually begin the slow march east to liberate the few pockets of humanity left and destroy the millions of zombies roaming what is left of the United States. Similar strategies are used all around the world.
The book is written by Max Brooks, a writer for Saturday Night Live and the son of Mel Brooks. While there are a few parts that are genuinely laugh out loud funny, the book mostly serves as a piece of social commentary disguised as a bloody zombie novel. For example, one of the survivors interviewed was a teenager in Kuwait at the time of the outbreak. He describes how at the beginning of the outbreak most of his countrymen did not believe there was an epidemic; they believed it was a scare tactic used by Israel and the United States to steal their oil and their culture. Pakistan and India used the outbreak as an excuse to launch nuclear weapons at each other. Then there is the case with the South Korean border guards who watched through the DMZ as the entire population of North Korea was forced into underground bunkers by the N. Korean government and never seen again. Ten years later when the world was finally recovering from the outbreak, the world’s military forces were afraid to open the North Korean bunkers due to the fear that one infected person had been taken underground and that they would find nothing but an entire population of zombies.
The interesting thing about the book is the way that each of the interviewees has their own voice. Each character feels like a product of their culture. I recently finished this book in about two days and have to say it is one of the best books I have read in years. I highly recommend it.




