Happy Saturday 3.5 Readers,
So many zombie authors, so little time.
Deirdre Gould brought a new twist to the zombie apocalypse genre. “After the Cure” takes place, you guessed it, in a time “after the cure” for zombification is discovered.
How would society rebuild? How would recovered zombies (i.e. humans who became zombies and are now humans again) come to terms with what they did when they were zombies? Should they be forgiven? Can they forgive themselves?
Deirdre talks about her series, life in Maine (where prepping is more necessary than you’d think) and Hobbits!
FIND THIS ZOMBIE AUTHOR ON:
My guest today is Deirdre Gould, who has strategically placed herself in Maine, where cold temperatures make the zombies run slower and remote isolation means zombifying viruses take longer to spread. Better yet, harsh storms make it so no one thinks Deirdre’s crazy for prepping.
In other words, she finds it to be a primo spot for writing the After the Cure series, which chronicles a world in which “the December Plague” has turned humans into violent, bloodthirsty, cannibalistic monsters.
I just hope they don’t eat me. I taste awful.
Let me see if I can Deirdre on the space phone.
Q. Hello Deirdre. Are you a prepper and if so, I’ll ask the question I’ve posed to other prepper authors this month. Why? Are we all doomed or is it just a better safe…
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