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Anthony Giangregorio

Autore di The Rage Plague

79+ opere 206 membri 7 recensioni 1 preferito

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: Anthony Giangregorio

Opere di Anthony Giangregorio

The Rage Plague (2009) 22 copie
Dead End (2007) 16 copie
Dead Wave (2007) 7 copie
Deadfall (2007) 6 copie
Dead City (2007) 5 copie
Road Kill: A Zombie Tale (2009) 5 copie
Rise of the Dead (2009) 4 copie
Superheroes vs. Zombies (2011) 3 copie
Dead Offerings (2011) 3 copie
Deadfreeze (2007) 3 copie
Blood Rage (2010) 2 copie
Children of the Dead: A Zombie Anthology (2011) — A cura di — 2 copie
Monster Party (2010) 2 copie
Book of Cannibals (2010) — A cura di — 2 copie
Dead Rage (2007) 2 copie
The Dark (2008) 2 copie
Revolution of the Dead (2009) 2 copie
Rats (2011) 1 copia
Ghostly Tales of Terror (2010) — A cura di — 1 copia
The Book of Horror (2010) 1 copia
Zombies Are People Too! (2013) 1 copia
Christmas Of the Dead (2015) 1 copia
The Bottom of the 9th (2014) 1 copia
Bigfoot Tales (2011) 1 copia
Clan of the Bigfoot (2011) 1 copia
Last Stop (2012) 1 copia
Dark Places (2009) 1 copia
Souleater (2009) 1 copia
Kingdom of the Dead (2009) 1 copia
Dead History 2 (2010) 1 copia
Dead Things (2010) 1 copia
Children of the Void (2010) 1 copia
The Junkyard (2010) 1 copia

Opere correlate

Dead Science: A Zombie Anthology (2009) — Collaboratore — 9 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Sesso
male

Utenti

Recensioni

Anthology of monster stories and for the most part it shows them as being people too. There's a trio of stories that have monster detectives. Another with a town surrounded by a mysterious fog. One where people trying to escape the after math of the apocalypse must fight there way to the top of a skyscraper filled with various monsters.
 
Segnalato
ChrisWeir | Mar 22, 2020 |
Nice little collection of "scary" stories most set on Halloween night or very close to it. Stories of a ghost who mopes around his crypt all night and dislikes the revelries of others in the cemetery. A set of dice that belonged to twin sister witches. A boy who eats to much candy before bedtime and visits a twisted candyland. A witch who may not be who she really seems. A creepy carnival and a haunted house attraction that's a lot more than it appears to be at first. Is written for tween/teen readers. Would be good for Halloween party or scary campfire stories… (altro)
 
Segnalato
ChrisWeir | Apr 28, 2019 |
http://alookatabook.blogspot.com/2009/12/27-of-2009-rage-plague-by-anthony.html

I picked up my copy of The Rage Plague at Permuted Press’ table a few months ago during the Horror Realm convention here in Pittsburgh. I had some extra money to burn and was about to take off for the day, and I was a bit indiscriminate in my choices. I wanted new books to read and didn’t take much time choosing them, picking titles willy-nilly and hoping my usual luck with finding good reads would hold out.

To be perfectly honest, one of the reasons why I picked The Rage Plague was its cover. I’m a sucker for well-done, minimalist covers, especially when the fonts catch my eye. I’ve been deceived by attractive covers before (by a whole series, once, whose red and white stylings in no way held up to my expectations of its actual contents), but The Rage Plague’s simplistic bloody hammer against a white background called out to me in a way I couldn’t ignore.

What I found, after cracking the book open, didn’t exactly delight me but it certainly wasn’t a bad choice on my part.

The Rage Plague is a story most horror aficionados have witnessed before. A group of survivors find themselves stranded in a city that’s been reduced to rubble and uninhabitable structures, overrun with creatures that attack and devour the living. There are many places a fanatic can go on the Internet to argue whether or not fast-moving, psychotic people who’ve mindlessly abandoned their former lives truly are zombies, but this is not one of them. For the sake of simplicity, I’m just going to refer to them as Infected.

The Infected are incredibly violent, swift-footed and ravenous, suffering from a tunnel vision that prevents them from doing much besides assaulting, murdering and devouring the living. At the start of the novel, hero and main focal point Bill is stuck on the roof of a local school with a handful of other uninfected survivors. They’re trapped there, with the sun beating down and the mad Infected surrounding the building. Among the other survivors are a kindly woman a few years Bill’s senior, some random women, a man who’s barely able to hold it together after the death of his wife and a young hothead ready to take Bill on for control of the group.

Elsewhere, one Infected, who has managed to retain most of his sanity despite the virus’ effects, rises to control the horde, while the military fortifies Chicago’s now-abandoned airport as their new de facto base.

It’s an interesting premise, though as has been stated before it is by no means fresh or unique. The characters feel like cliches that have been fleshed out a bit more in an attempt to appear original, but they still resemble their former selves. You have Middle Aged Man Who Rises to the Challenge, Young Tough Who Challenges Our Hero, Cigar-Chomping Army Man Who Yells At Everyone, Kindly Older Woman Who Teaches Patience, Moron Who Does the Wrong Thing For Love and, of course, Evil Villain Who Was Invisible in His Former Life and Now Wants the World to Pay.

Just because the characters are familiar doesn’t mean they don’t work. They do, for the most part. The story’s enjoyable, and the plot moves at a decent pace. It’s just that the novel doesn’t do anything anyone hasn’t seen before. Sometimes we pick up books to be exposed to new ideas or ways of thinking, and sometimes we pick up books to be entertained. The Rage Plague has loads of entertainment value. It’s packed with action, snappy dialogue and tense situations. However, most readers will have an idea of where the story is headed, and how it will end, after reading the first chapter or two.

The Rage Plague is, at its core, the zombie equivalent of the Summer Beach Read, a piece of exciting, entertaining fluff that feels as familiar as it does thrilling, and there’s nothing wrong with that.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
JackFrost | 2 altre recensioni | Dec 19, 2009 |
I ordered the expanded and re-written edition of this novel and I cannot recommend it enough. Definitely a fast-paced action packed book that will not for an instant leave you bored or even remotely consider skimming through.

I have stacks and stacks of zombie books I've accumulated over the years and this is one of the best ones I have ever read and now I am extremely excited to read the rest in this series. I've never in my life been the "I have to go read every book in this series" type but I will be making an exception for this one.

If you are a zombie fan in the least than you will LOVE this book. Lately a lot of zombie novels I've read have started to change the rules and I'm not a fan. Zombies than can run, talk, drive, shoot, etc are not going to do it for me. Thankfully there is nothing but traditional zombie goodness without any kind gimmick that others have relied on.
… (altro)
1 vota
Segnalato
insidejob | Jun 23, 2009 |

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Statistiche

Opere
79
Opere correlate
1
Utenti
206
Popolarità
#107,332
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
7
ISBN
95
Preferito da
1

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