Showing posts with label Zombie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zombie. Show all posts

Winter Moon Summary

Winter Moon

Published: 1975 (as Invasion) - 1994 (as Winter Moon)
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as Aaron Wolfe)
Genre: Alien Invasion, Crime, Family Life, Fiction, Ghost, Horror, Literature, Paranormal, Rural, Small Town, Supernatural, Suspense, Thriller, Zombie

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The narrative opens with Jack McGarvey, a 32-year-old Los Angeles police officer. Jack is caught in the middle of a firefight at a petrol station. He kills the gunman but is severely injured and spends months in the hospital recuperating. 

When Jack comes home, the McGarveys receive word that he has inherited the Quartermass Ranch in Eagles Roost, Montana, from his late partner's father, Eduardo Fernandez.

Eduardo was having unusual happenings in Montana as Jack was healing from his injuries. He notices blazing lights in the trees and weird noises. He discovers a large black circle one night and assumes it is a doorway established by an extraterrestrial. 

Soon later, he finds wild raccoons spying on him and in his home. Eduardo visits the local veterinarian, Travis Potter when all of the raccoons mysteriously die. The veterinarian conducts an autopsy, which yields no definitive information on the cause of death. 

Squirrels and birds are now watching him. Despite his fear, Eduardo ultimately dares the visitor to come to him in its actual form rather than using animals. He hears a shambling on his doorstep one night. He opens the door, shotgun in hand, and discovers the traveler piggybacking on his late wife's corpse, taken from the family cemetery on the ranch. Travis Potter discovers Eduardo's body, and an examination reveals that he died of a heart attack.

With his wife, Heather, and kid, Toby, Jack moves onto Eduardo's property. They are looking forward to a calm life in Montana, away from big-city violence, and a secure school for Toby. Falstaff, the family's golden retriever, is smitten with Toby.

Strange things begin to happen to the McGarveys. Travis Potter and attorney Paul Youngblood both suggest that something peculiar happened soon before Eduardo died. 

All three McGarveys have repeated nightmares about an entity promising bliss if they let it into their thoughts, but each recognizes the promises are fake and violently rejects the offer. Heather refers to it as the Giver

The Giver uses technological equipment to mesmerize Toby and seeks to speak with Jack through Toby

The family gradually admits to each other the resemblance of their dreams and several perplexing happenings.

The Giver grows impatient and bolder, having never encountered opposition from any species before. It tries to trap the family during a blizzard by cutting off their cars and phone lines. 

Jack walks out of the house to urge a neighbor to take his wife and son away, while Heather and Toby stay armed with gasoline cans and pistols. 

Despite the fact that they have locked the home, the Giver is able to enter. It manifests itself in two distinct forms, each riding a body from the ranch's family plot. 

Heather realizes that gunshots do not harm the Giver riding Eduardo's body, so she sets fire to the home in the hopes that the fire would kill the thing. She fires at the second body, injuring it, and learns the Givers are unable to move without their hosts. 

The first Giver has walked its corpse through the flames, and as it continues to follow them, Heather notices that half of it has been devoured by the fire, giving her hope. 

Toby captures the Giver in his thoughts by convincing it that he accepts its offer, so immobilizing the Giver and allowing him, his mother, and Falstaff to flee the home. 

Harlan Moffit, a snowplow driver, picks up Jack and sees the home on fire as they come into the driveway. Heather and Toby are lugging gas cans up the back stairs when Harlan arrives and informs them of an extraterrestrial invasion. 

Toby claims that he can't keep the Giver hostage for much longer and that the Giver is actually at the caretaker's house. When they get to the caretaker's house, they witness a third creature riding another body, trapped immobile by Toby's mind. 

The Giver's primary body is located further back in the home and is a huge creature that spawned three lesser extensions of itself. Toby maintains the being's will as the grownups pour gasoline on the structure and set it on fire.

After the authorities had gathered everyone's statements, Toby informs his father that, towards the very end, the Giver produced a few little worms that tried to escape by digging into the wood. He's not sure if any of them survived, and Jack says they'll leave it up to the experts and authorities. A few weeks later, the family returns to Los Angeles.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Good Read, Half Of The Book, Jack McGarvey, Keeps You Turning, Koontz Books, Los Angeles, Page Turner, Police Officer, Years Ago


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Shadowfires Summary

Dean Koontz, Leigh Nichols, Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Horror, Literary, Literature, Suspense, Thriller, Zombie

Shadowfires

Published: 1987
Author: Dean Koontz (Written as Leigh Nichols)
Genre: Fiction, Genetic Engineering, Horror, Literary, Literature, Suspense, Thriller, Zombie

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

The story's protagonist is a lady who is about to divorce her violent husband Eric, an ardent scientist at a bio-research organization when he is killed in a traffic accident.

As it turns out, the husband was researching immortality because he was obsessed with avoiding death as a result of sexual assault as a youngster and the worry that his abuser is waiting for him in Hell. 

In truth, he tested an experimental serum meant to confer amazing regeneration abilities on himself. 

The spouse awakens in the morgue, but his "immortality" is defective; it cannot repair brain injury correctly since the "mind" is formed of electrical signals, not simply flesh and protein. The stress of the traffic accident has left him in chronic agony and with a loss of mental clarity. 

The husband, now an unstoppable murdering machine, stalks his wife throughout the nation while gradually sliding into madness and the return from death, leading him to mutate at an alarming rate.

Rachael and her lover Ben Shadway chase the reanimated Eric to his hidden country hideout in the hopes of murdering him before he regenerates to the point where he can discover and kill Rachael

Eric, on the other hand, outwits them and gets to hide in the trunk of Rachael's car after overhearing her and Ben discussing their plan to split up and meet in Las Vegas.

Rachael Leben accidentally brings Eric to Las Vegas and observes Eric emerge from the trunk of her car, now brutally altered into some type of unimaginable mutant and fast-evolving. 

A pursuit continues into the desert, but Rachael manages to escape Eric's grasp when he's munching on a den of rattlesnakes and returns to her car before continuing on her route to Vegas. 

Later, Eric murders and consumes the driver of the automobile, then rapes, kills and devours the female passenger before heading to Vegas. 

Ben Shadway is also being pursued by federal agent Anson Sharp, who has a 20-year-old grudge against Shadway when the two served together in Vietnam and Shadway revealed Sharp's dishonesty and illicit smuggling operations, resulting in Sharp being dishonorably dismissed from the US army. 

Partners in Eric Leben's bio-research business are also on the trail of Shadway and Rachael Leben, attempting to prevent them from leaking the company's top-secret project to the media but are stopped by Sharp's soldiers. 

Sharp intends to murder them both in order to keep Project Wildcard a secret and get revenge on Ben

After a long chase across Nevada to Las Vegas, the pair finally confronts Eric at Ben's hotel. 

Eric's mutation eventually stabilizes into an unstoppable and unidentifiable insectoid form that cannot be killed by the weaponry they have. 

They hurriedly pour gasoline on Eric and light him ablaze. Consumed by fire, Eric's mutant body's accelerated metabolism devours itself in an attempt to repair and mutate further, reducing his body to slime and eventually killing the genetic monster but not before Eric's shattered awareness finally embraces death.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

Edge Of Your Seat, Eric Leben, Garbage Truck, Hard To Put, Koontz Books, Leigh Nichols, Love Dean, Main Characters, Odd Thomas, Recommend This Book


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Cell Summary

Stephen King, Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Cell

Published: 24, January 2006
Author: Stephen King
Genre: Action, Adventure, Apocalyptic, Classic, Fiction, Horror, Literature, Media Tie-In, Murder, Psychic, Suspense, Technothriller, Thriller, Zombie

Check out the review of this book here:


Summary

Clayton Riddell, a struggling Maine artist, has just landed a graphic novel deal in Boston when "The Pulse," a signal broadcast over the global cell phone network, transforms all cell phone users into mindless zombie-like killers. 

Clay is standing in Boston Common when the Pulse goes off, sparking havoc all around him. As the "phoners" attack each other and anybody in sight, civilization falls.

Clay is forced together with middle-aged Thomas McCourt and youngster Alice Maxwell during the mayhem; the three runs to Tom's suburban house while Boston burns. 

The next day, they discover that the "phoners" have begun scavenging for food and joining together. 

Clay remains adamant about returning to Maine and reuniting with his son, Johnny. Tom and Alice accompany him since they have no other options. 

They travel north by night over destroyed New England, encountering other survivors and gaining frightening information about the operations of the phoners, who continue to attack non-phoners on sight.

They arrive at the Gaiten Academy, a prep school with one remaining teacher, Charles Ardai, and one surviving student, Jordan, after crossing into New Hampshire. 

The couple shows the newcomers where the local phoners congregate at night: they crowd into the Academy's soccer field and "turn off" till dawn. 

The phoners have clearly formed a hive mind and are acquiring psychic skills. The five survivors resolve to kill the flock, which they achieve with the help of two propane tanks.

Clay attempts to persuade everyone to go, but the others hesitate to forsake the elderly Ardai

That night, all of the survivors have the same terrifying dream: they are in a stadium, surrounded by phoners when a disheveled man wearing a Harvard University hooded sweatshirt approaches and kills them. 

When the heroes awaken, they recount their terrifying dream experiences and refer to him as "the Raggedy Man." 

A new flock has encircled their home, and the "normies" are confronted by the flock's symbolic spokesman: the man in the Harvard sweatshirt. 

In retaliation, the flock murders other normals and tells the heroes to travel north to a location in Maine known as "Kashwak." 

The flock psychically drives Ardai to commit suicide in order to silence their biggest complaint. 

Clay and his friends bury him and head north, as Clay is still desperate to get home.

On the way, they discover that as "flock-killers," they have been psychically designated as untouchables, to be avoided by other normies. 

Alice is slain by a loutish couple of normies after a trifling argument on the road. The party buries her and travels to Clay's hometown of Kent Pond, where they find notes from Johnny revealing that Clay's estranged wife Sharon was transformed into a phoner, but their son lived for several days until being pushed by the phoners to travel to the ostensible cell phone-free Kashwak. 

Clay has another nightmare in which he discovers that the normie refugees were all exposed to the Pulse once they arrived. 

He is still determined to find his kid, but after encountering another group of flock-killers, Tom and Jordan decide to forego the phoners' planned ceremonial killings. 

Before splitting off, the party finds that Alice's killers were psychically driven to do a heinous suicide act in exchange for touching an untouchable.

Clay sets out on his own, but the others soon reappear, driving a small school bus; the phoners have used their ever-increasing psychic powers to force them to rejoin him. 

Ray Huizenga, a construction worker, is one of the flock-killers who secretly provides Clay a cell phone and a phone number, advising him to use them when the time is appropriate; Ray then kills himself. 

The group arrives at Kashwak, the site of a half-assembled county fair, where an increasing number of phoners are behaving erratically and breaking away from the flock. 

Jordan believes that the Pulse was produced by a computer program and that, while it is still transmitting into the battery-powered cell phone network, it has become contaminated by a computer worm, infecting newer phone users with a mutated Pulse. 

Nonetheless, an army of phoners is waiting for them, and Clay recognizes Sharon among them. 

The phoners confine the group to the fair's exhibition hall for the night; tomorrow is the ceremonial execution, which will be psychically broadcast to all phoners and remaining normies worldwide.

Clay notices Ray's unsaid plan as he awaits their morning execution: Ray had packed the back of the bus with explosives, connected a phone-triggered detonator to them, and then executed himself to prevent the phoners from telepathically detecting the explosives. 

Jordan drives the vehicle into the midst of the inert phoners after the group breaks a window for him to squeeze through. 

Clay is able to detonate the bomb and wipe out the Raggedy Man and his flock thanks to a jury-rigged cell phone patch set up by pre-Pulse fair workers.

The majority of the party travels to Canada, where the coming winter will annihilate the region's defenseless and leaderless phoners. 

Clay travels south in search of his son. He comes across Johnny, who has a "corrupted" Pulse; he has walked away from Kashwak and appears to know his father. 

However, Johnny is an unstable shell of his former self, so Clay decides to give Johnny another Pulse blast, hoping that the progressively garbled signal will balance itself out and reset his son's brain. 

Clay dials and places the mobile phone to Johnny's ear towards the end of the book.


Useful Search Related Words & Keywords

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The Girl With All the Gifts Summary

The Girl With All the Gifts

Published: June 2014

Author: M. R. Carey (Mike Carey)

Part of: Girl With All The Gifts (2 books)

Genres: Action, Dystopian, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Movie Tie-In, Post-Apocalyptic, Science Fiction, Supernatural, Survival, Suspense, Thriller, Zombies



Check out the review of this book here:



Summary:

A variety of the fungus Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, endemic to South America, infected humanity twenty years ago, causing the Breakdown - the end of society as we knew it. The afflicted, dubbed "hungries," lose their mental abilities fast and feast on the flesh of healthy individuals. The illness is transferred by blood and saliva, but it may also be carried through the air via fungal spores. The few uninfected people left in England either dwell in tightly guarded locations like Beacon or roam in gangs of hostile, scavenging "Junkers."

Authorities in Beacon established a secluded military outpost to research a specific group of kid hungries. Unlike others, they can keep their mental abilities and only lose control when they get too close to human scent. The only method to mask the odor is to employ an e-blocker chemical, which is in short supply.

Soldiers, commanded by Sergeant Eddie Parks, track down hungry children and transport them to Hotel Echo, a location 30 miles outside of London and 74 miles from Beacon. The youngsters are schooled by instructors at the base and tested by Dr. Caroline Caldwell, the chief scientist. Helen Justineau, a behavioral psychologist and instructor at the facility, dislikes it when she has to vivisect the kids.

Melanie, a 10-year-old with a genius-level IQ who is enthralled with Greek mythology, namely the story of Pandora, is one of Justineau's favorite children. As a surrogate mother, Melanie adores Justineau. Melanie, like the other kids, has no idea that she is different from the grownups.

Melanie is chosen to be dissected by Dr. Caldwell, who believes she is close to finding a treatment for the fungus. The base is besieged by a gang of Junkers and hungries as Justineau interrupts and attempts to save her; Caldwell is seriously injured, and Melanie consumes flesh for the first time in rescuing Justineau, reawakening the fungus' "hunger." Parks and Private Kieran Gallagher are found and the three escape the base together.

The party chooses to drive to Beacon, which is 74 miles distant, but the grownups disagree over whether Melanie should accompany them. Parks agrees only after the youngster is muzzled, handcuffed, and forced to ride on the tank's roof. Melanie cooperates now that she realizes how dangerous she is to the others.

Melanie is valuable to the grownups since she is not attacked by hungry and can guide them away from humans. While Caldwell continues to regard Melanie as a specimen, the others begin to have faith in her. After many encounters with hungry creatures, including a few adults that exhibit human-like behavior, the party discovers Rosalind Franklin's mobile laboratory. It was created with cutting-edge facilities for testing and attack shortly after the pandemic began, but it vanished while on its research mission. Caldwell, who is dying of sepsis, uses the facility's technology to expedite her study.

Melanie discovers a group of hungry children while she satisfies her hunger apart from the others by eating wild animals. Melanie notices that they keep their mental processes as well, even though they lack a language of their own due to their lack of education. Melanie tells the grownups she spotted a huge bunch of Junkers instead of revealing the truth to Justineau because she is afraid of being experimented on. Gallagher flees the lab because he is afraid of junkies. The clever hungries find him, kill him, and devour him.

Caldwell, concerned with completing her studies before dying, catches one of the intelligent hungries and experiments on him as Parks and Justineau seek for Gallagher. She makes amazing discoveries, but she won't let anybody else in because she's afraid they'll interfere. Melanie discovers a massive clump of fungal fruiting bodies that have increased in size over the years since the infection began; while there are enough spores to infect the whole planet via air currents, the sporangia pods do not open on their own.

Caldwell is duped by Melanie into allowing her in. Caldwell tells Melanie about her findings before she dies: The fungus has neither a cure nor a vaccination. Intelligent hungries are the offspring of hungries who maintained certain human characteristics. People who are born this way keep their mental talents.

Parks and Justineau are surrounded outside the lab by hungry people. Melanie manages to scare them away, but Justineau is knocked down and Parks is bitten and sick as a result. Parks requests that Melanie shoot him before the infection cycle is completed so that he does not develop into a ravenous creature; she complies. She instructs him to blast the spores with a flamethrower, correctly assuming that fire is the environmental trigger that causes the spores to open.

Before Melanie agrees to Parks' request to murder him, she reveals that the conflict between healthy humans and the hungries will continue as long as there are healthy people. Every human must be infected before second-generation hungries may be born and restore the world.

In the Rosalind Franklin, Justineau wakes. Melanie takes her to a group of clever scavengers, to whom Justineau, dressed in an environmental suit, begins teaching the alphabet.


Rating: 95/100
Recommended: 100/100 Yes.

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The Girl With All the Gifts (Rated R)
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Pet Sematary Summary

Pet Sematary

Published: 14, November 1983

Author: Stephen King

Genres: Occult, Suspense, Ghost, Horror, Supernatural, Thrillers, Fiction, Animals, Zombie


Check out the review of this book here:



Useful Search Related Words & Keywords:

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Summary:

A Chicago doctor, Louis Creed, has been named head of the University of Maine's campus health department. With his wife Rachel, his two young children, Ellie and Gage, and Ellie's cat, Winston Churchill "Church," he moves to a huge house in the little town of Ludlow. The family is in danger from the minute they arrive: Ellie injures her knee, and Gage gets stung by a bee. An old man called Jud Crandall, their new neighbor, arrives to assist them. He cautions Louis and Rachel of the fast vehicles that frequent the highway that passes by their house.

Louis and Jud immediately become friends. Louis considers Jud to be his adoptive father because his father died when he was three years old. Jud takes the Creeds for a stroll in the woods behind their house a few weeks after they move in. A well-kept road leads to a pet cemetery (on the sign, "sematary" is misspelled), where the town's youngsters bury their departed pets.

The next day, Louis and Rachel had a violent disagreement over the outing. Rachel is against addressing death, and she is concerned about Ellie's reaction to what she has seen at the "sematary." Rachel was devastated by the early loss of her sister, Zelda, from spinal meningitis, as it is revealed later—a subject that is brought up numerous times in flashbacks. Louis sympathizes with his wife and holds her parents responsible for her suffering by leaving Rachel alone with her sister when she died.

During the first week of school, Louis experiences a horrific encounter. Even though the two men are strangers, Victor Pascow, a student who died in an automobile accident, addresses his final words to Louis personally. Louis has a very vivid dream the night after Pascow died in which he sees Pascow, who brings him to the deadfall at the rear of the "sematary" and cautions him not to go any farther.

The next morning, Louis wakes up in bed, sure it was all a dream—until he discovers dried mud and pine needles on his feet and bedsheets. Nonetheless, Louis dismisses the dream as the result of his stress following Pascow's death, as well as his wife's remaining fears about death.

Jud's wife Norma had a near-fatal heart attack on Halloween, but owing to Louis's aid, she recovers quickly. After Church gets run over outside his home around Thanksgiving, Jud is grateful and decides to repay Louis. Rachel and the kids are in Chicago visiting Rachel's parents, but Louis is worried about telling Ellie the terrible news. Jud sympathizes with Louis and brings him to the "sematary," where Church is believed to be buried. Rather than staying there, Jud takes Louis on a journey to "the actual graveyard," an old burial site previously frequented by the Mikmaq Tribe.

On Jud's orders, Louis buries the cat there. Church returns home the next day; the usually vivacious and active cat has become ornery and, in Louis' words, "a bit dead." Church goes on a mouse and bird hunt, tearing them up but not eating them. Ellie also doesn't want him in her room at night since he stinks so terribly. Church has been revived, according to Jud, who once buried his dog there when he was younger. Louis, who is greatly troubled, begins to regret burying Church there.

Gage, two years old, is killed by a speeding vehicle a few months later. Louis, overcome with grief, considers using the burial place to bring his son back to life. Jud, sensing Louis' intention, tries to persuade him by telling him about Timmy Baterman, the last person to be revived by the burial place. During World War II, Timmy Baterman was killed in action. Timmy's remains were returned to the United States and his father Bill laid him to rest at the cemetery. Timmy reappeared; wreaking havoc on the residents of the community with information Jud claims he had no way of knowing.

Timmy was stopped by his father, Bill, who shot himself after killing Timmy and setting their house on fire. Jud claims that whatever returned was not Timmy, but a "devil" who had taken possession of his body. "Sometimes, dead is preferable," he says, adding that "the place has a power... its own wicked purpose," and that it may have been the cause of Gage's death because Jud exposed Louis to it.

Louis' sadness and remorse drive him to carry out his plan, despite Jud's warning and his own doubts. Gage's body is exhumed from his tomb and interred in the cemetery by Louis. Gage is revived, but he is not the same person he was before. He finds one of Louis' scalpels and murders both Jud and Rachel, now malevolent in both his words and deeds. Louis uses morphine injections from his medical supplies store to kill both Church and Gage.

Louis returns to the burial plot with his wife's body after burning down the Crandall house, believing that if he buries it faster than Gage's, the outcome would be different. Louis has aged physically as a result of all of these sad occurrences, having white hair and wrinkles. Steve Masterton, one of his coworkers, observes him heading into the woods with Rachel's body.

While terrified and concerned, Steve is also swayed by the burial ground's power and even contemplates assisting Louis in burying Rachel, but he leaves in horror and later relocates to St. Louis. Later, Louis is sitting alone inside, playing solitaire, when Rachel's reanimated body comes up behind him and places a chilly hand on his shoulder, rasping, “Darling."


Rating: 100/100
Recommended: 100/100 Yes.

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Pet Sematary
Watch with AMC + Start your 7-day free trial:


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