The Day Zombies Ruined My Perfectly Boring Life by Jen Naumann
Synopsis:
Seventeen-year-old Emma Ferdig has spent her entire life stuck in an itty-bitty town that is basically smack-dab in the middle of nowhere. She’s not bored because there are always the same mundane things to do with her best friend Finn every single weekend, but bored as in there is literally nothing for a teenage girl to do that doesn't involve farm animals and the threat of law enforcement.
But now she would do pretty much anything to go back to that boring life.
Emma's life is turned upside down after a night of senior pranks by the discovery of a real, live (better make that dead) zombie in her own backyard. In a breakneck journey across the rural Midwest, Emma will recruit a minivan full of teenage misfits while trying to survive, and uncover the secrets behind this zombie invasion. She’ll discover the true identity of Finn’s mother, the dark conspiracy that has infiltrated the U.S. Army, and maybe even realize the person she has been waiting to save her was right by her side the whole time.
As it turns out, life in a boring little town hadn’t been such a bad thing, after all.
Page Count:
Paperback, 338 pages
Published:
June 2012
by At or With Me Publishing
Rating:
3.5 / 5 Paw Prints
Review:
Jen Naumann's The Day Zombies Ruined
My Perfectly Boring Life is an apocalyptic zombie novel about
seventeen-year-old Emma and her band of oddballs and misfits.
Together, they strive to uncover the truth behind a virus outbreak
that claims the lives of loved ones and changes the landscape of the
United States forever. The action propels the novel forward at light
speed, but the characters slow down the reading for all the wrong
reasons.
It took me a third of the novel to
accept that the characters were all pretty cheeky, and that if enough
jokes were made, one or two might actually make me laugh. I wasn't
really a fan of the protagonist, Emma, mainly due to her strange bout
of self-hatred for all things "womanly." There's nothing I
can't stand more than a female protagonist who's all, "I don't
really like other women. I'm a tomboy! I get along with guys sooooo
much better!" However, Emma
does eventually somewhat redeem herself when she finds an ally in
Marley.
Anyway, so her character was a huge
annoyance in the beginning, but after accepting that that was just
her voice, etc., she became less distracting, and I was able to enjoy
her point of view and all the comedic bits it had to offer. I found
myself rooting for her, and felt sympathetic for her inability to
emotionally process the horrors that she had experienced.
But it was the pacing of the novel that
really stole the show--the plot that races along with the characters
in souped-up cars, the seamless transitions from one fight to the
next, and the mounting horrors looming around every corner.
The Day Zombies Ruined My Perfectly
Boring Life certainly has its share of surprises. At times, I
really did feel like I was kicking back and enjoying an X-Files
episode. The plot keeps getting new layers added to it, and I was
eager to watch the band of misfits survive or at least experience
some degree of closure. I was disappointed with the ending, which
seemed abrupt, but it was the kind of disappointment that accompanies
a strong desire to keep reading. I'll definitely be checking out Jen
Naumann's other books and recommend this gem for YA fiction lovers,
especially those with a hankerin' for action/adventure, humor, and
zombie/apocalyptic genres.
No comments:
Post a Comment