Showing posts with label Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Show all posts

Thursday, March 25, 2010

Book Excerpt and Trailer: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

With many thanks to Anna at FSB Media, I'm happy to share with everyone an excerpt from Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreaduls by Steve Hockensmith. (Click here to see my review.) Make sure you get all the way to the bottom for the trailer. This one looks like a mini-movie worthy of A&E or BBC. Very well done!

Remember to let me know what you think. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did :-)

Chapter 1
by Steve Hockensmith,
Author of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls


Walking out in the middle of a funeral would be, of course, bad form. So attempting to walk out on one's own was beyond the pale.

When the service began, Mr. Ford was as well behaved as any corpse could be expected to be. In fact, he lay stretched out on the bier looking almost as stiff and expressionless in death as he had in life, and Oscar Bennet, gazing upon his not-so-dearly departed neighbor, could but think to himself, You lucky sod.

It was Mr. Bennet who longed to escape the church then, and the black oblivion of death seemed infinitely preferable to the torments he was suffering. At the pulpit, the Reverend Mr. Cummings was reading (and reading and reading and reading) from the Book of Common Prayer with all the verve and passion of a man mumbling in his sleep, while the pews were filled with statues -- the good people of Meryton, Hertfordshire, competing to see who could remain motionless the longest while wearing the most somber look of solemnity.

This contest had long since been forfeited by one party in particular: Mr. Bennet's. Mrs. Bennet couldn't resist sharing her (insufficiently) whispered appraisal of the casket's handles and plaque. ("Brass? For shame! Why, Mrs. Morrison had gold last week, and her people don't have two guineas to rub together.") Lydia and Kitty, the youngest of the Bennets' five daughters, were ever erupting into titters for reasons known only to themselves. Meanwhile, the middle daughter, fourteen-year-old Mary, insisted on loudly shushing her giggling sisters no matter how many times her reproaches were ignored, for she considered herself second only to the Reverend Mr. Cummings -- and perhaps Christ Himself -- as Meryton's foremost arbiter of virtue.

At least the Bennets' eldest, Jane, was as serene and sweet countenanced as ever, even if her dress was a trifle heavy on décolletage for a funeral. ("Display, my dear, display!" Mrs. Bennet had harped at her that morning. "Lord Lumpley might be there!") And, of course, Mr. Bennet knew he need fear no embarrassment from Elizabeth, second to Jane in age and beauty but first in spirit and wit. He leaned forward to look down the pew at her, his favorite -- and found her gaping at the front of the church, a look of horror on her face.

Mr. Bennet followed her line of sight. What he saw was a luxury, hard won and now so easily taken for granted: a man about to be buried with his head still on his shoulders.

That head, though -- wasn't there more of a loll to the left to it now? Weren't the lips drawn more taut, and the eyelids less so? In fact, weren't those eyes even now beginning to --

Yes. Yes, they were.

Mr. Bennet felt an icy cold inside him where there should have been fire, and his tingling fingers fumbled for the hilt of a sword that wasn't there.

Mr. Ford sat up and opened his eyes.

The first person to leap into action was Mrs. Bennet. Unfortunately, the action she leapt to was shrieking loud enough to wake the dead (presuming any in the vicinity were still sleeping) and wrapping herself around her husband with force sufficient to snap a man with less back-bone in two.

"Get a hold of yourself, woman!" Mr. Bennet said.

She merely maintained her hold on him, though, her redoubled howls sparking Kitty and Lydia to similar hysterics.

At the front of the church, Mrs. Ford staggered to her feet and started toward the bier.

"Martin!" she cried. "Martin, my beloved, you're alive!"

"I think not, Madam!" Mr. Bennet called out (while placing a firm hand over his wife's mouth)."If someone would restrain the lady, please!" Most of the congregation was busy screeching or fleeing or both at once, yet a few hardy souls managed to grab Mrs. Ford before she could shower her newly returned husband with kisses.

"Thank you!" Mr. Bennet said. He spent the next moments trying to disentangle himself from his wife's clutches. When he found he couldn't, he simply stepped sideways into the aisle, dragging her with him.

"I will be walking that way, Mrs. Bennet." He jerked his head at Mr. Ford, who was struggling to haul himself out of his casket. "If you choose to join me, so be it."

Mrs. Bennet let go and, after carefully checking to make sure Jane was still behind her, swooned backward into her eldest daughter's arms.

"Get her out of here," Mr. Bennet told Jane. "Lydia and Kitty, as well."

He turned his attention then to the next two girls down the pew: Elizabeth and Mary. The latter was deep in conversation with her younger sisters.
"The dreadfuls have returned!" Kitty screamed.

"Calm yourself, sister," Mary said, her voice dead. She was either keeping a cool head or had retreated into catatonia, it was hard to tell which. "We should not be hasty in our judgments."

"Hasty? Hasty?" Lydia pointed at the very undead Mr. Ford. "He's sitting up in his coffin!"

Mary stared back at her blankly. "We don't know he's a dreadful, though.
But Elizabeth did know. Mr. Bennet could see it in her eyes -- because now she was staring at him.

She didn't grasp the whole truth of it. How could she, when he'd been forced to keep it from her for so long? Yet this much would be obvious to a clear-thinking, level-headed girl like her: The dreadfuls had returned, and there was more to be done about it than scream. More her father intended to do.

What she couldn't have guessed -- couldn't have possibly dreamed -- was that she herself would be part of the doing.

"Elizabeth," Mr. Bennet said. "Mary. If you would come with me, please."
And he turned away and started toward the altar. Toward the zombie.

The above is an excerpt from the book Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls by Steve Hockensmith. The above excerpt is a digitally scanned reproduction of text from print. Although this excerpt has been proofread, occasional errors may appear due to the scanning process. Please refer to the finished book for accuracy.

Copyright © 2010 Steve Hockensmith, author of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

Author Bio
Steve Hockensmith
is an award-winning novelist and reporter. His debut mystery, Holmes on the Range, was a finalist for the Edgar, Shamus, and Anthony awards. Critics have hailed the novel and its sequels as "hilarious" (Entertainment Weekly), "dazzling" (The Boston Globe), "clever" (The New York Times), "uproarious" (Publisher's Weekly), "wonderfully entertaining" (Booklist), and "quirky and original" (The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). He lives in Alameda, California, with his wife and two children.

For more information, please visit http://www.quirkclassics.com/.


Tuesday, March 9, 2010

Review: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls


Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls
By Steve Hockensmith
Published by Quirk Books
Available for purchase on March 23, 2010
Paperback, $12.95, 288 pages
ISBN: 978-1-59474-454-9

Description from Amazon:

With more than one million copies in print, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies was the surprise publishing phenomenon of 2009. A best seller on three continents, PPZ has been translated into 21 languages and optioned to become a major motion picture. In this terrifying and hilarious prequel, we witness the genesis of the zombie plague in early-nineteenth-century England. We watch Elizabeth Bennet evolve from a naive young teenager into a savage slayer of the undead. We laugh as she begins her first clumsy training with nunchuks and katana swords and cry when her first blush with romance goes tragically awry. Written by acclaimed novelist (and Edgar Award nominee) Steve Hockensmith, Dawn of the Dreadfuls invites Austen fans to step back into Regency England, Land of the Undead!

I received Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls on Friday and haven't had the time yet to finish it but wanted to share some of it with my readers along with the contest being offered up by the publisher, Quirk Books. So, let me give my first impressions here:

From page one, the action starts immediately and Elizabeth Bennet learns of her father's prior experience with zombies and his intention that she, in turn, learn to deal with them. And only in a book such as this, with a setting in Regency England, will you find flesh devouring fiends being referred to as "dreadfuls", which I'd be more inclined to use to describe a bad cold. Definitely a fun playing down of the horror that's to follow, don't you think?

With this being the prequel to the massively popular Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (co-written by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith), the author of Dawn of the Dreadfuls, Steve Hockensmith, has some big shoes to fill. What he gains in this version is a freer range with the characters and storyline, having no Jane Austen mash up to contend with. The girls are younger here, so we actually get to see more of Mr and Mrs Bennet and to this end, I think Hockensmith does a fantastic job in staying true to the characters as Jane Austen originally imagined and created them. To me, the voices of these two characters will always be of those portrayed in the BBC version of Pride and Prejudice. I can clearly envision Mrs Bennet's every complaint of being set upon by the monsters or Mr Bennet's shooing of Mrs Bennet's distress, with the added zombie vernacular emphasizing the levity of the situation. (Levity for the readers, not so much for the Bennet clan.)

We also see that Jane is the only girl "out" in society, so far, but Mrs Bennet will have Lizzy out, too, in no time in order to secure their family's fate before being completely erased or eaten. It's too early for any appearance by Mr Darcy, so we see other suitors for the girls. But, as I race to the finish to see who survives, I can only hope that all of the gentlemen attempting to woo the girls are woefully eaten, dismembered or beheaded in hopes that Mr Darcy and Mr Bingley will have their opportunities in the future. (While I do own the first PPZ, I haven't read it yet, so I can't really predict either way but I'm sure Darcy and Bingley remain constant in it!)

With writing such as: "The unmentionable's unmentionables might have just been squashed flat, but the creature showed no signs of noticing. Instead, it merely took hold of the foot that had been planted in its mushy-rotten groin, pulled it up toward its mouth, and leaned in for a bite." - you know that Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls will be a properly grotesque story that will capture the hearts of maniacal, zombie-loving, English Lit. fans everywhere, lol.

For more information, please visit the publishers website at:
Dawn of the Dreadfuls at QuirkClassics.com

AND
Click here to enter for a chance to win one of 50 Quirk Classics Prize Packs. Each Prize Pack, with a retail value of more than $100, will include:



  • An advance copy of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls






  • Audio Books of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies and Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters






  • A password redeemable online for sample audio chapters of Dawn of the Dreadfuls






  • An awesome Dawn of the Dreadfuls Poster






  • A Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Journal






  • A box set of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies Postcards





  • You'll need to mention that you saw the review here at my blog :-)
    (I gain nothing from this mention but the joy of sharing fun books)
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