King of the Crows

King of the Crows

576 pages

Ratings1

Average rating5

15

This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.

... for me at least, the first week of the Lockdown was the worst.

Knowing it had happened to me. I hadn't escaped, I wasn't one of the lucky ones. Lucky to be safe or lucky to be dead. Take your pick. I was neither.





* Good luck with that. I'll get back to this in a bit.

I'm not going to try to list all the various ways that Day uses to tell this story: I'm certainly going to forget several. So here's a partial list: here's a third-person 2028 narrator describing a police investigation, a first-person perspective on the same investigation; a first-person account of that same detective's life during the Outbreak; selections from a screenplay made about a group of Londoners during the Outbreak; selections from the Outbreak-memoir of one of those Londoners; and third-person narration of the same (N.B.: these three will vary in telling ways); redacted 2028 prison correspondence about the Outbreak; excerpts from scholarly works on aspects of the Outbreak (including a very illuminating work on the slang of the time); graffiti from 2021; internet message boards. Day weaves these together to tell his story, build the world, and help you to understand it. Frequently, I read something from the 2028 timeline, and understood it—only to find a new depth to it several pages later after getting another piece of the puzzle from 2020/2021. It's hard to juggle that many narrative forms/voices/perspectives/calendars as a reader or a writer—Day pulled it off better than I did (any problems I had following things I attribute to myself, and it was pretty easy to clear out my misunderstanding with a minimum of backtracking



* This would be easier in hardcopy than on an e-reader in my opinion. But that's just a guess.



thought

M. O.


“They weren't zombies,” he says, softly. “Don't call them zombies.”

No one who was involved in the Outbreak for real uses the zee word.





Et voilà!










The biggest killer in those days wasn't the disease or the psychos, it was stupidity.

However, it has been pointed out by many historians, logic was one of the first casualties of the Outbreak.



Ocean's Eleven

28 Days Later

in




I can see why people cling to the idea that the Gonzos were trying to tell us something. Something's out there trying to get a message through: there's a plan. Compared to the idea that it was all just chance, it's a comfort of a type. Chance doesn't care and can't be appeased and can't be reasoned with. Chance means it could all happen again.