31 Days of Halloween { review } Feed by Mira Grant
Feed (Newsflesh, #1) by Mira Grant. © 2010 Orbit Books. ISBN 9780316081054. Mass Market Paperback. YA / Horror. 608 pages. $9.99 US. Source: purchased
Synopsis: The year was 2014. We had cured cancer. We had beaten the common cold. But in doing so we created something new, something terrible that no one could stop. The infection spread, virus blocks taking over bodies and minds with one, unstoppable command: FEED. Now, twenty years after the Rising, bloggers Georgia and Shaun Mason are on the trail of the biggest story of their lives – the dark conspiracy behind the infected. The truth will get out, even if it kills them.
Review: The Rising is in the past. George Romero was more helpful than he ever could have imagined. Life has changed, and it doesn’t seem to be for the better.
George (Georgia) and Shaun (note the spelling) Mason are bloggers. Blogging is how the world receives news these days. It was more trustworthy than “normal” media during the Rising and although there are those who still disdain blogging as a source of information, they tend to be holdovers from pre-Rising days. So when George, a die-hard Newsie, Shaun, an Irwin, and their friend Buffy, a Fictional, win the chance to follow presidential candidate Peter Ryman, the first bloggers ever asked to report from the campaign trail.
But someone doesn’t want Ryman to win. George is determined to report the truth, no matter the cost.
Feed is quite simply the best zombie novel I’ve ever read. Part horror, part political thriller, and impossible to put down.
There are oodles of little in-jokes for us zombie aficionados. Buffy’s name, while amusing, is explained in the book. As is George’s. Shaun’s name is spelled the right way (Shaun of the Dead). Tate’s is not, which makes me happy (see reviewer’s last name). Shaun’s blog is titled Hail to the King (Army of Darkness). Non-zombie related amusement is that the crazy, adventurous bloggers are called Irwins (amusement and a nice tribute I think). There is more scattered throughout, but I’m not going through the book to find them. Besides, they’re fun when you come upon them on your own.
I wish the bad guy was a little more three-dimensional, but compared to the jaw-dropping twists, that’s a very minor quibble.
Yes, I said jaw-dropping. There were points where I simply could not believe what I was reading. I could not believe an author would do that to me. Or her characters. But more important, to *me.* It took balls. Nuff said.
The best horror reflects the major issues of the times in which it was created, amplifies them, and turns them inside out. It’s sociology with blood and guts. And Feed is no different.
These days, we see new diseases emerging (SARS), new strains of old diseases (swine flu), and great divides over whether vaccinations are beneficial or harmful. In Feed, the zombies were created by a virus, the Kellis-Amberlee Virus. The virus is extremely well thought-out—it’s obvious the author did her research on epidemiology and that lends to the terror, as does the way the virus evolved and spreads.
Other social concerns we see rise to the fore in Feed are terrorism, identity, death, even the influence of blogging. Of course, concerns about identity, death, and what happens after we die always surface in zombie novels—are we the same people after we die? But Feed, though set in the (near) future, seems so close to now, so possible, that it’s horrifying in more ways than just trying not to become one of the walking dead.
So go forth. Buy. Read. Curse the author and wait anxiously for the next book in the trilogy.

Synopsis: The Phantom Queen, goddess of death, love and war, returns to strike fear into the hearts of mortals in the anthology, The Phantom Queen Awakes. Meet a washerwoman on the shores of the river; cleaning the clothes of the soon-to-be-dead; try to bargain with the capricious goddess of war; hear the songs of the dead as they cry for justice; walk with heroes of the past Revisit the world of the Celts; a land of mystical beauty, avarice, lust and war through stories told by Katharine Kerr, C.E. Murphy, Elaine Cunningham and Anya Bast, among many other talented authors.
Synopsis: The Fletchers’ beautiful new house is everything they dreamed it would be. Built between two churches in Heptonclough, a small village on the moors that time forgot, it ought to be paradise for this young family of five, but they barely have a chance to settle in before they find that they’re anything but welcome. Someone seems to be trying to drive them away–at first with silly pranks but then with threats that become increasingly dangerous, especially to the oldest child, ten-year-old Tom Fletcher, who begins to believe that someone is always watching him.
Hurrah! October is here! Leaves are falling, the air has a bite to it and we have just 31 days until the best night of the year arrives! I was born in October so Halloween is in my blood. Everyday of the year, for me, is full of the paranormal and macabre, but when October rolls around, the amount doubles. Scary books, films and television fill my every waking moment (when I’m not at work that is) and it’s only natural that I want to share that with you.











