Greetings my shambling, shuffling friends.
Sorry I have not posted for a while, but I took a trip
Down The Road with Bowie Ibarra, its not like we had a choice though, the city was being over run by zombies and it was time to get out of dodge.
Alright, I admit I didnt actually go anywhere, but this book sure took me places.
As an author of one of the coolest zombie novels on store shelves,
Bowie Ibarra
was able to hit on some important aspects that other novels never even
consider, because they are too busy just being a horror story.
As soon as the novel began,
Ibarra made the story
personal by having the main character, George Zarragosa, look around his
apartment and take into account the things he did not need to help him
survive escaping the city, and yet days before could not live without,
like his The Big Lebowski dvd, or his music c.d. collection. This forced
me to look around and consider all the things I own and consider
important right now, but would happily do without for my own survival.
George as the main character has a healthy distrust of intrusive big
goverment, and this theme continues to resurface constantly through out
the novel, and even takes open jabs at Fema doing more harm then good
for protecting citizen in fema camps, and how those in control will
always end up abusing their power. It doesnt matter if your a gang
leader surviving in a city, or a fema camp guard who rejoices in
stirring up racial conflict for personal enjoyment over the people who
depend on you for protection. This Libertarian theme reappears
throughout
Down The Road, making a good point that
individuals who are responsible can do better than organized groups who
rule through the threat of force, like our own goverment, and the images
Bowie Ibarra was able to paint in my mind showed
that without freedom and free will, there really is no difference
between armed gangs and goverment.
This reminds me of one of my favorite Libertarian quotes:
"A society that robs people of the fruits of their hard labor with
the threat of violence and calls it income and property taxes, is not
really a society.....it is a mob that is held together by institutional
gang violence."
Time for the
G.R.E.A.T. score!
G
ore: the descriptions of shambling corpses was spot on and and well written, as was the attacks on living people. 8.0
R
ealism: very realistic, Bowie Ibarra was
able to show the break down of society and the abuse of power and more
than once made me think to the fema disaster we all remember as
Hurricane Katrina. 8.5
E
ntertainment: Once I started reading, I had no choice
but to finish the story, and I am looking forward to reading the
sequels. 8.75
A
ction: The pace of the story was great and kept me in
suspence, like the scene where he broke into the local school, I could
not put the novel down. 8.0
T
hrills: the zombies were always a constant threat,
even when they thought they were safe, the zombies remained a background
antagonist adding a sense of dread the entire time. 8.0
The total
G.R.E.A.T. score is: 8.25 out of 10 !
I definatley recommend adding this to your growing zombie library. Those
of you who are survivalist minded, will get plenty of ideas to help you
navigate a societal collapse scenario.
Well, it is time for me to sling my pack over my back and head on
Down The Road, but before I go let me ask you this:
Will George make it to his final destination safe and sound, or is there
a final surprise waiting on his door step. You will have to read
Down the Road by Bowie Ibarra to find out.
Thanks for reading and until my next post,
I will be shuffling along with the lost.
Jimmy Blue Eyes
www.jimmyszombieblog.com
www.thewalkingdeadfanclub.com
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