Warm Bodies: A Novel (Warm Bodies Series, The)
Warm Bodies: A Novel (Warm Bodies Series, The) book cover

Warm Bodies: A Novel (Warm Bodies Series, The)

Paperback – Illustrated, November 1, 2011

Price
$9.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
256
Publisher
Emily Bestler Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1439192320
Dimensions
5.31 x 0.64 x 8.25 inches
Weight
7.5 ounces

Description

“Gruesome yet poetic . . . a paean to the power of storytelling.” ― The Seattle Times “A jubilant love story.” ― Kirkus “Ruefully humorous . . . cinematic in scope.” ― The Guardian (UK) “Marion’s characters are far from perfect. Their flaws give them a realness and depth that have the reader caring deeply.” ― Paste Magazine Isaac Marion grew up in the mossy depths of the Pacific Northwest, where he worked as a heating installer, a security guard, and a visitation supervisor for foster children before publishing his debutxa0novel in 2010. Warm Bodies became a #5 New York Times bestseller and inspired a major Hollywood film adaptation. It has been translated into twenty-five languages worldwide. Isaac lives in Seattle with his cat and a beloved cactus, writing fiction and music, and taking pictures of everything. Visit IsaacMarion.com for more on these endeavors. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. I AM DEAD, but it’s not so bad. I’ve learned to live with it. I’m sorry I can’t properly introduce myself, but I don’t have a name anymore. Hardly any of us do. We lose them like car keys, forget them like anniversaries. Mine might have started with an “R,” but that’s all I have now. It’s funny because back when I was alive, I was always forgetting other people’s names. My friend “M” says the irony of being a zombie is that everything is funny, but you can’t smile, because your lips have rotted off. None of us are particularly attractive, but death has been kinder to me than some. I’m still in the early stages of decay. Just the gray skin, the unpleasant smell, the dark circles under my eyes. I could almost pass for a Living man in need of a vacation. Before I became a zombie I must have been a businessman, a banker or broker or some young temp learning the ropes, because I’m wearing fairly nice clothes. Black slacks, gray shirt, red tie. M makes fun of me sometimes. He points at my tie and tries to laugh, a choked, gurgling rumble deep in his gut. His clothes are holey jeans and a plain white T-shirt. The shirt is looking pretty macabre by now. He should have picked a darker color. We like to joke and speculate about our clothes, since these final fashion choices are the only indication of who we were before we became no one. Some are less obvious than mine: shorts and a sweater, skirt and a blouse. So we make random guesses. You were a waitress. You were a student. Ring any bells? It never does. No one I know has any specific memories. Just a vague, vestigial knowledge of a world long gone. Faint impressions of past lives that linger like phantom limbs. We recognize civilization—buildings, cars, a general overview—but we have no personal role in it. No history. We are just here . We do what we do, time passes, and no one asks questions. But like I’ve said, it’s not so bad. We may appear mindless, but we aren’t. The rusty cogs of cogency still spin, just geared down and down till the outer motion is barely visible. We grunt and groan, we shrug and nod, and sometimes a few words slip out. It’s not that different from before. But it does make me sad that we’ve forgotten our names. Out of everything, this seems to me the most tragic. I miss my own and I mourn for everyone else’s, because I’d like to love them, but I don’t know who they are. • • • There are hundreds of us living in an abandoned airport outside some large city. We don’t need shelter or warmth, obviously, but we like having the walls and roofs over our heads. Otherwise we’d just be wandering in an open field of dust somewhere, and that would be horrifying. To have nothing at all around us, nothing to touch or look at, no hard lines whatsoever, just us and the gaping maw of the sky. I imagine that’s what being full-dead is like. An emptiness vast and absolute. I think we’ve been here a long time. I still have all my flesh, but there are elders who are little more than skeletons with clinging bits of muscle, dry as jerky. Somehow it still extends and contracts, and they keep moving. I have never seen any of us “die” of old age. Left alone with plenty of food, maybe we’d “live” forever, I don’t know. The future is as blurry to me as the past. I can’t seem to make myself care about anything to the right or left of the present, and the present isn’t exactly urgent. You might say death has relaxed me. • • • I am riding the escalators when M finds me. I ride the escalators several times a day, whenever they move. It’s become a ritual. The airport is derelict, but the power still flickers on sometimes, maybe flowing from emergency generators stuttering deep underground. Lights flash and screens blink, machines jolt into motion. I cherish these moments. The feeling of things coming to life. I stand on the steps and ascend like a soul into Heaven, that sugary dream of our childhoods, now a tasteless joke. After maybe thirty repetitions, I rise to find M waiting for me at the top. He is hundreds of pounds of muscle and fat draped on a six-foot-five frame. Bearded, bald, bruised and rotten, his grisly visage slides into view as I crest the staircase summit. Is he the angel that greets me at the gates? His ragged mouth is oozing black drool. He points in a vague direction and grunts, “City.” I nod and follow him. We are going out to find food. A hunting party forms around us as we shuffle toward town. It’s not hard to find recruits for these expeditions, even if no one is hungry. Focused thought is a rare occurrence here, and we all follow it when it manifests. Otherwise we’d just be standing around and groaning all day. We do a lot of standing around and groaning. Years pass this way. The flesh withers on our bones and we stand here, waiting for it to go. I often wonder how old I am. • • • The city where we do our hunting is conveniently close. We arrive around noon the next day and start looking for flesh. The new hunger is a strange feeling. We don’t feel it in our stomachs—some of us don’t even have those. We feel it everywhere equally, a sinking, sagging sensation, as if our cells are deflating. Last winter, when so many Living joined the Dead and our prey became scarce, I watched some of my friends become full-dead. The transition was undramatic. They just slowed down, then stopped, and after a while I realized they were corpses. It disquieted me at first, but it’s against etiquette to notice when one of us dies. I distracted myself with some groaning. I think the world has mostly ended, because the cities we wander through are as rotten as we are. Buildings have collapsed. Rusted cars clog the streets. Most glass is shattered, and the wind drifting through the hollow high-rises moans like an animal left to die. I don’t know what happened. Disease? War? Social collapse? Or was it just us? The Dead replacing the Living? I guess it’s not so important. Once you’ve arrived at the end of the world, it hardly matters which route you took. We start to smell the Living as we approach a dilapidated apartment building. The smell is not the musk of sweat and skin, it’s the effervescence of life energy, like the ionized tang of lightning and lavender. We don’t smell it in our noses. It hits us deeper inside, near our brains, like wasabi. We converge on the building and crash our way inside. We find them huddled in a small studio unit with the windows boarded up. They are dressed worse than we are, wrapped in filthy tatters and rags, all of them badly in need of a shave. M will be saddled with a short blond beard for the rest of his Fleshy existence, but everyone else in our party is cleanshaven. It’s one of the perks of being dead, another thing we don’t have to worry about anymore. Beards, hair, toenails… no more fighting biology. Our wild bodies have finally been tamed. Slow and clumsy but with unswerving commitment, we launch ourselves at the Living. Shotgun blasts fill the dusty air with gunpowder and gore. Black blood spatters the walls. The loss of an arm, a leg, a portion of torso, this is disregarded, shrugged off. A minor cosmetic issue. But some of us take shots to our brains, and we drop. Apparently there’s still something of value in that withered gray sponge because if we lose it, we are corpses. The zombies to my left and right hit the ground with moist thuds. But there are plenty of us. We are overwhelming. We set upon the Living, and we eat. Eating is not a pleasant business. I chew off a man’s arm, and I hate it. I hate his screams, because I don’t like pain, I don’t like hurting people, but this is the world now. This is what we do. Of course if I don’t eat all of him, if I spare his brain, he’ll rise up and follow me back to the airport, and that might make me feel better. I’ll introduce him to everyone, and maybe we’ll stand around and groan for a while. It’s hard to say what “friends” are anymore, but that might be close. If I restrain myself, if I leave enough… But I don’t. I can’t. As always I go straight for the good part, the part that makes my head light up like a picture tube. I eat the brain, and for about thirty seconds, I have memories. Flashes of parades, perfume, music… life . Then it fades, and I get up, and we all stumble out of the city, still cold and gray, but feeling a little better. Not “good,” exactly, not “happy,” certainly not “alive,” but… a little less dead. This is the best we can do. I trail behind the group as the city disappears behind us. My steps plod a little heavier than the others’. When I pause at a rain-filled pothole to scrub gore off my face and clothes, M drops back and slaps a hand on my shoulder. He knows my distaste for some of our routines. He knows I’m a little more sensitive than most. Sometimes he teases me, twirls my messy black hair into pigtails and says, “Girl. Such… girl.” But he knows when to take my gloom seriously. He pats my shoulder and just looks at me. His face isn’t capable of much expressive nuance anymore, but I know what he wants to say. I nod, and we keep walking. I don’t know why we have to kill people. I don’t know what chewing through a man’s neck accomplishes. I steal what he has to replace what I lack. He disappears, and I stay. It’s simple but senseless, arbitrary laws from some lunatic legislator in the sky. But following those laws keeps me walking, so I follow them to the letter. I eat until I stop eating, then I eat again. How did this start? How did we become what we are? Was it some mysterious virus? Gamma rays? An ancient curse? Or something even more absurd? No one talks about it much. We are here, and this is the way it is. We don’t complain. We don’t ask questions. We go about our business. There is a chasm between me and the world outside of me. A gap so wide my feelings can’t cross it. By the time my screams reach the other side, they have dwindled into groans. • • • At the Arrivals gate, we are greeted by a small crowd, watching us with hungry eyes or eyesockets. We drop our cargo on the floor: two mostly intact men, a few meaty legs, and a dismembered torso, all still warm. Call it leftovers. Call it takeout. Our fellow Dead fall on them and feast right there on the floor like animals. The life remaining in those cells will keep them from full-dying, but the Dead who don’t hunt will never quite be satisfied. Like men at sea deprived of fresh fruit, they will wither in their deficiencies, weak and perpetually empty, because the new hunger is a lonely monster. It grudgingly accepts the brown meat and lukewarm blood, but what it craves is closeness, that grim sense of connection that courses between their eyes and ours in those final moments, like some dark negative of love. I wave to M and then break free from the crowd. I have long since acclimated to the Dead’s pervasive stench, but the reek rising off them today feels especially fetid. Breathing is optional, but I need some air. I wander out into the connecting hallways and ride the conveyors. I stand on the belt and watch the scenery scroll by through the window wall. Not much to see. The runways are turning green, overrun with grass and brush. Jets lie motionless on the concrete like beached whales, white and monumental. Moby Dick, conquered at last. Before, when I was alive, I could never have done this. Standing still, watching the world pass by me, thinking about nearly nothing. I remember effort. I remember targets and deadlines, goals and ambitions. I remember being purposeful , always everywhere all the time. Now I’m just standing here on the conveyor, along for the ride. I reach the end, turn around, and go back the other way. The world has been distilled. Being dead is easy. After a few hours of this, I notice a female on the opposite conveyor. She doesn’t lurch or groan like most of us; her head just lolls from side to side. I like that about her, that she doesn’t lurch or groan. I catch her eye and stare at her as we approach. For a brief moment we are side by side, only a few feet away. We pass, then travel on to opposite ends of the hall. We turn around and look at each other. We get back on the conveyors. We pass each other again. I grimace and she grimaces back. On our third pass, the airport power dies, and we come to a halt perfectly aligned. I wheeze hello, and she responds with a hunch of her shoulder. I like her. I reach out and touch her hair. Like me, her decomposition is at an early stage. Her skin is pale and her eyes are sunken, but she has no exposed bones or organs. Her irises are an especially light shade of that strange pewter gray all the Dead share. Her graveclothes are a black skirt and a snug white buttonup. I suspect she used to be a receptionist. Pinned to her chest is a silver nametag. She has a name. I stare hard at the tag; I lean in close, putting my face inches from her breasts, but it doesn’t help. The letters spin and reverse in my vision; I can’t hold them down. As always, they elude me, just a series of meaningless lines and blots. Another of M’s undead ironies—from nametags to newspapers, the answers to our questions are written all around us, and we don’t know how to read. I point at the tag and look her in the eyes. “Your… name?” She looks at me blankly. I point at myself and pronounce the remaining fragment of my own name. “Rrr.” Then I point at her again. Her eyes drop to the floor. She shakes her head. She doesn’t remember. She doesn’t even have syllable one, like M and I do. She is no one. But don’t I always expect too much? I reach out and take her hand. We walk off the conveyers with our arms stretched across the divider. This female and I have fallen in love. Or what’s left of it. I think I remember what love was like before. There were complex emotional and biological factors. We had elaborate tests to pass, connections to forge, ups and downs and tears and whirlwinds. It was an ordeal, an exercise in agony, but it was alive. The new love is simpler. Easier. But small. My girlfriend doesn’t talk much. We walk through the echoing corridors of the airport, occasionally passing someone staring out a window or at a wall. I try to think of things to say but nothing comes, and if something did come I probably couldn’t say it. This is my great obstacle, the biggest of all the boulders littering my path. In my mind I am eloquent; I can climb intricate scaffolds of words to reach the highest cathedral ceilings and paint my thoughts. But when I open my mouth, it all collapses. So far my personal record is four rolling syllables before some… thing… jams. And I may be the most loquacious zombie in this airport. I don’t know why we don’t speak. I can’t explain the suffocating silence that hangs over our world, cutting us off from each other like prison-visit Plexiglas. Prepositions are painful, articles are arduous, adjectives are wild overachievements. Is this muteness a real physical handicap? One of the many symptoms of being Dead? Or do we just have nothing left to say? I attempt conversation with my girlfriend, testing out a few awkward phrases and shallow questions, trying to get a reaction out of her, any twitch of wit. But she just looks at me like I’m weird. We wander for a few hours, directionless, then she grips my hand and starts leading me somewhere. We stumble our way down the halted escalators and out onto the tarmac. I sigh wearily. She is taking me to church. The Dead have built a sanctuary on the runway. At some point in the distant past, someone pushed all the stair trucks together into a circle, forming a kind of amphitheater. We gather here, we stand here, we lift our arms and moan. The ancient Boneys wave their skeletal limbs in the center circle, rasping out dry, wordless sermons through toothy grins. I don’t understand what this is. I don’t think any of us do. But it’s the only time we willingly gather under the open sky. That vast cosmic mouth, distant mountains like teeth in the skull of God, yawning wide to devour us. To swallow us down to where we probably belong. My girlfriend appears to be more devout than I am. She closes her eyes and waves her arms in a way that looks almost heartfelt. I stand next to her and hold my hands in the air stiffly. At some unknown cue, maybe drawn by her fervor, the Boneys stop their preaching and stare at us. One of them comes forward, climbs our stairs, and takes us both by the wrists. It leads us down into the circle and raises our hands in its clawed grip. It lets out a kind of roar, an unearthly sound like a blast of air through a broken hunting horn, shockingly loud, frightening birds out of trees. The congregation murmurs in response, and it’s done. We are married. We step back onto the stair seats. The service resumes. My new wife closes her eyes and waves her arms. The day after our wedding, we have children. A small group of Boneys stops us in the hall and presents them to us. A boy and a girl, both around six years old. The boy is curly blond, with gray skin and gray eyes, perhaps once Caucasian. The girl is darker, with black hair and ashy brown skin, deeply shadowed around her steely eyes. She may have been Arab. The Boneys nudge them forward and they give us tentative smiles, hug our legs. I pat them on their heads and ask their names, but they don’t have any. I sigh, and my wife and I keep walking, hand in hand with our new children. I wasn’t exactly expecting this. This is a big responsibility. The young Dead don’t have the natural feeding instincts the adults do. They have to be tended and trained, and they will never grow up. Stunted by our curse, they will stay small and rot, then become little skeletons, animate but empty, their brains rattling stiff in their skulls, repeating their routines and rituals until one day, I can only assume, the bones themselves will disintegrate, and they’ll just be gone. Look at them. Watch them as my wife and I release their hands and they wander outside to play. They tease each other and grin. They play with things that aren’t even toys: staplers and mugs and calculators. They giggle and laugh, though it sounds choked through their dry throats. We’ve bleached their brains, robbed them of breath, but they still cling to the cliff edge. They resist our curse for as long as they possibly can. I watch them disappear into the pale daylight at the end of the hall. Deep inside me, in some dark and cobwebbed chamber, I feel something twitch. © 2011 Isaac Marion Read more

Features & Highlights

  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • BESTSELLER, NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE
  • “Gruesome yet poetic…highly original.” —
  • The Seattle Times
  • “Dark and funny.” —
  • Wired
  • “A mesmerizing evolution of a classic contemporary myth.” —Simon Pegg
  • “A strange and unexpected treat…elegantly written, touching, and fun.” —Audrey Niffenegger, author of
  • The Time Traveler’s Wife
  • “Has there been a more sympathetic monster since Frankenstein’s?” —
  • Financial Times
  • In
  • Warm Bodies
  • , Isaac Marion’s
  • New York Times
  • bestselling novel that inspired a major film, a zombie returns to humanity through an unlikely encounter with love.
  • “R” is having a no-life crisis—he is a zombie. He has no memories, no identity, and no pulse, but he is a little different from his fellow Dead. He may occasionally eat people, but he’d rather be riding abandoned airport escalators, listening to Sinatra in the cozy 747 he calls home, or collecting souvenirs from the ruins of civilization. And then he meets a girl. First as his captive, then his reluctant house guest, Julie is a blast of living color in R’s gray landscape, and something inside him begins to bloom. He doesn’t want to eat this girl—although she looks delicious—he wants to protect her. But their unlikely bond will cause ripples they can’t imagine, and their hopeless world won’t change without a fight.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(2.6K)
★★★★
25%
(1.1K)
★★★
15%
(654)
★★
7%
(305)
-7%
(-305)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Warm Bodies Leaves Me Cold

My into-it-ness of Warm Bodies started off high, then plummeted faster than the value of the U.S. dollar.

Here's what got me into it:

Instead of titles, the chapters are headed with black-and-white anatomy illustrations. That's neat.

The world building in the first half of the book is intriguing. These aren't your normal, everyday zombies. These are zombies with FEELINGS and a conscience.

Early on, R, the narrator (R is the only part of his name he can remember) starts exploring various themes, like memory and identity, the value of words and names, mortality. Stuff I find engaging.

The epigraph is from Epic of Gilgamesh. Love me some Gilgamesh. Not only the world's first novel, but the first gay romance. Yes, please, I'll take two.

Then, problems happen. They start with Julie. They end with Julie. Practically all of them have to do with Julie.

When R dines on Julie's boyfriend's brain, and sees his memories (this is normal), something abnormal happens: he falls in love with Julie. I feel like I've read this before, but I can get past it. Everything else is so imaginative.

R keeps the other zombies from eating her and takes her back to the airplane he lives in.

He should have let them eat her. She's imbued with all sorts of "quirky" "charm"--she likes pad thai! her room is painted, like, five different colors, her last name is Grigio but she calls herself Cabernet, because a cab is, like, so much better than Pinot (what is this, Sideways for preteens?)--but it doesn't stick. She's an angry, rebellious, immature teenager, and that's where all maturity leaks out of the novel like squished brains all over the pavement. She whines about /everything/, thinks she's really effing cool because she drops f-bombs every two sentences (the only reason I can think that this book isn't marketed toward a YA audience, at least not at my B&N, is the "mature" language). When she and R stay in an abandoned house, Julie make fun of the dead owners. Why? Because they were fat. She makes three fat jokes in the span of three pages. I wanted to bite into her skull myself.

With Julie now in the Polaroid picture, the story devolves into a trite, predictable, heterosexual romance. All the interesting themes about the value of literature, collective consciousness, and apathy are paid lip service under the pretense of being literary but are completely ignored in favor of building up to their world-changing kiss. Necrophilia has never been less sexy.

I can pinpoint the exact moment I lost all interest: page 126. Julie(t) is up on her balcony and R(omeo) is down below. She literally says "What's in a name?" and practically says "Wherefore art thou zombie?" I've read Romeo & Juliet, thanks, and I don't need those two stupid, impulsive twits rising from their graves and invading my life any more than they already have.
23 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Well written, excellent characterization, but fell flat for me

There's a part of me that can't believe I actually purchased this book. Someone must have HIGHLY recommended it to me as it's a bit out of my usual reading tastes. It's a post- apocalyptic story. The world has been destroyed by floods, wars, corruption, and disease. The last of humanity lives huddled in old sports stadiums to stay safe from the wandering, flesh-eating, brain-sucking zombies.
The protagonist is one of the zombies. And it's written in first-person.

Weird, right?

But right from the opening words ("I am dead, but it's not so bad.") his voice works. I LIKE this zombie. He's interesting and charismatic - even as his actual life if boring mixed with extreme violence.

I like the world (the zombies live at an abandoned airport, wander aimlessly (shambling really), and spend large quantities of time staring at walls). I like the zombie's dialogue (they speak in grunts and pauses with an occasional word thrown in (for those that can remember words)). I thoroughly enjoyed getting to know our zombie hero and his world and his early changes. Because this Zombie isn't like the others, he's got the barest flicker of emotions.

And he is a `deep' zombie. He can't articulate his thoughts, but there is tons going on in his brain. He philosophizes internally about just about everything. Then he meets a human girl (after eating her boyfriend's brains) and begins to change.

The writing was lovely and precise. I highlighted a couple places just because the sentences were so wonderful.

And yet I found myself somewhat disappointed by the second half of the story.

The book felt like it was trying to be a hugely meaningful, deep exploration of the human condition. But this fell flat for me. If I take away the zombie's internal musings and just look at the movement of the story, there is no meaningful, deep plot. And really, I'd rather have a message be imbedded in the story than just to be `told' to me through the protags thoughts. I like an emotional punch to the gut that I feel first and then have to think through to understand the genesis.

Second, I don't agree with the premise trying to be proved by the meaningful, deep exploration. I found the world as presented as rather depressing (war, greed, etc. led to the current mess). And the conclusions drawn from this blame reliance on conventional wisdom for the decline (We should have been more progressive!). And that to me has political overtones (of conservative vs. liberal). I hate being preached politics in novels. Yuck.

It's also just wrong. I don't believe the problems in our society are because we aren't progressive enough. I think it's because we don't bother to learn from our mistakes (aka History, those with experience - the opposite of what the author was saying).

Also, the story's foreshadowing all pointed to a specific ending. It was really clear to me, and I was looking forward to it as the Zombie's ultimate trial (his cross - as the cross is used symbolically (and the cross line is one of my favorites - so cleverly done)). But the story unfolded a totally different direction and the ending was disappointing - too perfect and kind of silly.

So at the end of the day, I don't know what to make of this book. It was close to being utterly fantastic, but so far from being close that I am left wanting.

Content warning for language, etc.
23 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Zombie Purists, This is Not For You

If you are at all annoyed with how Stephenie Meyers ruined the vampire myth, you will want to throw this book. I couldn't get passed the fact that the main character was dead and he smelled dead and he had rotting flesh and the author tried to pass it off as a romance. Leave the zombies alone! Can't we have one evil villain left in fiction?
18 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

My new favourite book

Warm Bodies is my new favourite book:-)
I cannot praise it highly enough.
It's beautifully written with an amazingly original plot.
The hero is the kind of guy you wish would fall in love with you (yes, even though he's a zombie) and the heroine is tough and feisty and wonderfully real.
Don't make the mistake of thinking this is just another YA romance substituting zombies for vampires. Warm Bodies is in a class of it's own.
13 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Audiobook - "Cute" Book 4 Kids

I should have known this wasn't the book for me when I saw all of the reviews stating "Stephanie Meyer likes this book."

I didn't down right hate the book.....it just wasn't my cup of tea. He seems like a great writer with a world of potential. What an imagination to come up with this zombie point of view! But this book falls into the "cute" category. Take out the few mentions of sex, and this would be perfect for a 13 year old.

Another downside that I didn't like, the book was too herky-jerky.....meaning, it jumped around too much. We'd be in one place at a specific time, then suddenly we're in another place at a different time, sometimes a day or so later.

I won't go any further as to why I didn't like it. It is what it is......a cute unusual love story for teenagers. Me being in my 30s and a die hard blood & gutts zombie fan, it's just not my thing.

2 thumbs up to the narrator! He did a fantastic job!
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Complete disappointment

Zombies that can talk and think and feel? I tried to keep an open mind, but the more I read, the more I was disappointed because it doesn't fit the criteria of zombies.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Just not for me

I'll admit it - the only reason I decided to read WARM BODIES was because I kind of have a thing for Nicolas Hoult and he's playing the lead R in the movie adaptation. I wanted to read this book to know more about it before I fork over $10 to see Twilight 2.0, since Stephenie Meyer did blurb this one. I was skeptical about WARM BODIES going in - the plot confused me, weirded me out a bit, and just sounded plain strange. The writing was a bit florid and literary. The characters... Well, let's face it. The main character is a zombie.

R is a zombie living a typical zombie existence. He lives in a hive in the remains of an airport, occasionally wandering into the city to feed on humans. Then one day, while eating some tasty human brain, he starts having flashbacks to the life of one Perry Kelvin, including flashbacks that make him fall in love with Perry's girlfriend, Julie.

So, why only two stars, you ask? I think it's because I had trouble connecting with this plot, the characters, and the world. R is mysteriously eloquent and self-conscious about his life, but it goes to the extreme of sounding like he's composing a literary novel in the vein of Tolstoy. At times, it ranges into the realm of SHATTER ME - over reliance on metaphors to make up for a lack of real narrative. R comes off as a zombie who loves poetry, which in itself ruins the real intrigue of him being a zombie. Besides munching a lot on flesh, he doesn't SEEM to be a zombie. A pale guy with some Hannibal Lecter-like tendencies? Sure. But a zombie? Not so much.

One plus to this novel is a fascinating setting and zombie lore. Although we don't learn much (anything) about the origins to this post-apocalyptic world, the last vestiges of society, and the zombie hives, we do get a glimpse into something different and intriguing. Boneys, fleshies, zombies...getting married? I think the strength of this novel is on a very different take on zombies, but at the same time, zombies being eloquent and able to converse with humans and appear to be human with just a bit of makeup?

We have a whole host of other characters, from Julie, the designated love interest and all around unbelievable human falling for a zombie, to Perry (seen mostly in flashbacks), to M, another zombie who is growing in consciousness himself, to Nora, Julie's best friend back at the stadium. I didn't connect with any of them, and in fact, Julie and Nora just annoyed me more often than not. They came off as stereotypical high school airheads instead of relatable characters that I wanted to root for. I quite liked M, though. I don't know why, so don't ask, LOL.

I think I am just in the mindset that zombies should be gone and brainless and all about the eating and not the ruminating on someone else's life and the intricacies of groaning. To have a zombie so aware of his life, loving music and collecting knick knacks, living happily in a 747 at the airport, and kidnapping a human girl to save and coddle just wasn't my thing. Paired with a narrative that is at times slow, and I found myself having trouble to push through this one. I wanted something more.

The UK edition of this one features two blurbs - one from Stephenie Meyer that seems utterly neutral, and one from Simon Pegg. Simon Pegg and that awesome UK cover seduced me when I was at Heathrow Airport one day last year. But it took me awhile to read this, maybe because I was worried that I wouldn't like it. Turns out, I didn't.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Zombie Love leaves me cold....

R is in love with Julie. However R is also a zombie. And the zombie thing is a pretty serious impediment relationship-wise.

I have a hard time mustering the enthusiasm to write much of a summary. R saves Julie. R loves Julie. R plays some dope records for Julie. R takes Julie home. Implausible things happen. The End.

This book has strong reviews and I bought it on the advice of respected friends who thought it was gorgeously wrought. But I found it dull and a bit ridiculous (particularly the ending).

Warm Bodies will appeal neither to lovers of zombie books or romance books. World War Z or Day by Day Armageddon are both fun zombie books (romance-free). Outlander and The Grand Sophie are both great romance books. If you've found yourself wondering how zombies spend their time when not eating brains then perhaps this will interest you.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Darkly beautiful and funny as heck

Read more: [...]

the basics
Warm Bodies is by far one of the best books I've ever read. I mean, come on. It's like Tim Burton and Chuck Palahniuk wrote a love story. Only don't get me wrong, Isaac Marion is no derivative. (Also I may have a little crush on him. What? Hiding.) Okay, so this book is not your average romance. Zombie R, meet Julie. And yes, I didn't notice the Romeo-Juliet parallel til the book. Saw the movie? It was great, but the book has layers and layers of depth that the movie misses. Grappling with themes of progress and decay, cynicism and hope, despair and redemption, it pulls you into a world terrifyingly easy to imagine, where humanity's inward decay has become manifest. Zombies. But love saves all, and somehow, Julie and R forge a bond that overcomes the darkness around them. It's sweet but not saccharine and bursting with writing as pretty as poetry, but still perfectly accessible to the average reader. Don't worry; the plot kicks ass too, tearing you from one confrontation to another. It's the book that every author wishes they could write. So read it, yeah?

plot . 5/5
You don't get bored, even though much of the beginning describes a vapid, listless zombie existence. Marion has created a rich world inside of R's head. Don't expect the movie. You won't find a blow-by-blow. What you will find is a lot of the same scenes fixed into a much richer narrative. Perry's inner existence in R's head becomes much more important, and we find much of the plot centered around Perry's despair and R's hope, mixed together in one mind. But there's plenty of fun too, and adventure; the change-hating Boneys; moments of acid humor and sweetness. The end starts with a shock and leaves you feeling wistful and thoughtful and very much in love with love.

concept . 5/5
I'm not sure I could have come up with a more original concept if I were trying for a parody. I'd always joked about zombie romance in the past. "Love at First Bite" and all that (though that might have been for a cannibal...). But Marion takes it and makes it plausible, lovable, and meaningful. R's condition is a foil for humanity. Julie is the savior and young idealist. Perry is the victim of the system. And the world is something all too familiar--run by fear-mongerers who see isolation as the only survival. Famous art is a useless bauble. Nations are obsolete. Marion uses a very compelling story to explore deep issues of societal corruption and the power of fear. But if you don't want to dig that deep, the surface story is amazing in itself.

characters . 5/5
Totally in love with R. Especially the Nicholas Hoult version. I mean...come on. Anyway, book-R is a silent philosopher with a poetic view of the world. He can't talk much, so he listens. Observes. Sees things that others can't see in a rich and surprising way. Julie is a little annoying at times, but you grow to love her. You can't help but get behind her fragile idealism. And she's deeper than in the movie, with a darker past and uglier wounds. Nora, Perry, M, and Grigio too are all explored on a deep level. Even though we don't see them as much, we come to know them as clearly as if we were in their heads. Marion has himself a real world here.

style . 5/5
I could quote every other line, but I won't, because that's plagiarism. Suffice to say, it's gorgeous. Like what a painting would be in book form. I'll borrow from Maggie Stiefvater's review: "I dream my necrotic cells shrugging off their lethargy, inflating and lighting up like Christmas deep in my dark core. Am I inventing all this like the beer buzz? A placebo? An optimistic illusion? Either way, I feel the flatline of my existence disrupting, forming heartbeat hills and valleys." Don't be afraid of getting the story lost because of the poetry. The beautiful, intricate lines are well mingled with less esoteric stuff, so the prettiness feels natural instead of overwhelming.

mechanics . 5/5
Zombie narrator. OMG.

take home message
A love story between the most unlikely pair, with striking prose, a thrilling plot, and many thoughts to take away and keep forever.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Flatlined ...

I must say I was looking forward to this read seeing as it was my first zombie book. I like zombie flicks as I find them somewhat funny, but this was not what I was expecting. It was strange, to say the least, and not at all convincing for the most part. It started off well with the introduction to R and his life. It was quite nostalgic at first, but as it went along, I found it fell flat. I had to force myself to finish it as I don't like to start a book and not get to the end. I didn't mind the fact that the zombies weren't your ordinary brain dead corpse with no concious awareness, but the relationship between R and Julie was of no interest to me. R has digested many brains but why Perry's had such an effect on him beats me.

The other problem I had was the feeling that for a long time nothing seemed to be happening. Once you get past Part 1, everything seems to be on standstill. There weren't really any climatic moments. It just seems to flatline right to the end - no pun intended. I was so hoping I would like this, but I think this might be my first and last zombie book.
2 people found this helpful