Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dreadfully Ever After

Slipping into your favorite, aged T-shirt or worn-thin pair of jeans is always a welcome, comforting experience. As with wearing your most comfy clothes, returning to a familiar place can be an equally as pleasant. Third time’s the charm with Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dreadfully Ever After.

Steve Hockensmith returns to Hertfordshire, four years after events occurred in the original book, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy are happily married, although Elizabeth feels unsettled, yearning to hunt Zed in order awakened her wild side. Events are put into motion when Darcy is bitten by an unmentionable and Elizabeth (with Mary, Kitty and Mr. Bennet in tow) is sent to London on a wild adventure by Lady Catherine, seeking the ultra-secret anti-zombie serum held by King George III’s personal physician, Dr. Sir Angus MacFarquhar.

Elizabeth, Kitty and Mr. Bennet pose as a family of new money in England in order to seduce Sir MacFarquhar and/or his son, Bunny, in order to save Darcy with the serum.

The book gets moving into the right direction as soon as the Bennets pose as the Shevingtons. Having hardened, trained warriors posing as seducing temptresses was an entertaining fish-out-of-water experience. And of course, nothing ever goes quite as planned. But the book takes a misstep, trying to transcendently detail Darcy’s moving toward the “light,” as the crusaders hunt for the cure. The story gets back on track as the undead attack during King George III’s recoronation and all hell breaks loose.

Hockensmith redeems himself with Dreadfully Ever After. His previous book, Dawn of the Dreadfuls, seemed to take well-established characters and mold them into something they weren’t. In Dreadfully Ever After, these same characters seem to be back to normal, however possible that can be during the rise of zombies in the Regency Era. And as and added bonus, Hockensmith neatly ties up the trilogy with an important dangling loose end from his previous book. I’m back on track; still a fan of this series.

STRENGTH: Commoners, British Nobility and ninjas make a great combination.
WEAKNESS: Pulling the timeframe of zedding out into an entire novel seems a stretch.

WTF MOMENT: The Zombie Plague never spreads beyond Great Britian.

Noteworthy Quotes:
- “Although one couldn’t say the creatures had joie de vivre, both joie and vivre being long beyond them, they were undeniably enthusiastic in their quest for succulent flesh.”
- “The ghoul-child stumbled back still chewing furiously on a stringy chunk of flesh torn from Darcy’s neck.”
- “They were a motley assortment, fresh next to rancid, rag-shrouded beside fashionably clothed, all united in the democracy of death.”
- “Lady Catherine de Bourgh was a great warrior, a national hero, a living legend, and, by all accounts, a monumentally vindictive bitch.”
- “Most had blood and blobs of poorly masticated viscera ringing their gaping mouths.”
- “A great, gooey geyser of rotting brain squirted onto the floor, and Judith was at last not merely dead, but dead.
- “I used to fear the Bennets would end up infamous, but I had no idea we would manage it so spectacularly.”

REVIEW: 4/5

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

Zombies, zombies, everywhere!

As the leader in the newly created literary classics-monster genre, Quirk Books has created a mash-up niche to satisfy fans of all tastes. Following the success of its very first book, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Quirk has released its first original mash-up sequel, or in this case, a prequel.

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls returns the reader to zombie fighting in Regency England and the Bennet family, taking place four years before the original book. The town of Hertfordshire hasn’t had a zombie infestation for a number of years and the book opens with a zombie re-awakening… and with zombies come zombie hunters.

The book focuses again on Jane, Elizabeth, Mary, Lydia and Kitty, but at this time they are still “ladies” and not brutish thugs (just yet). They struggle with their initial training regimen to fight “the unmentionables,” with supervision from their father, Mr. Bennet. After years of being trained to be prim and proper, the ladies must now become lethal fighters and protect their town from being overrun by the undead. Along the way they find their true character and become battle-hardened warriors.

Several nagging thoughts after completing the book:

- It takes a bit of time to be reintroduced to familiar characters in a second book, but with all-new attitudes this time around. I did not like changing my perception of a few of them.

- The book was not written in proper English style similar to Jane Austen’s (and the original mash-up, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies), so it takes the reader out of the story, somewhat. This was my only true criticism of the book, but Steve Hockensmith did a remarkable job nonetheless.

- Mr. Bennet gets a nice little backstory — though incomplete — that I enjoyed unspooling, one that leads to more questions than answers.

- The author attempts to create an epic background for familiar locations and characters, similar to that of “The Lord of the Rings,” just not as detailed.

- The conclusion revolves around a grand event, bringing together all the main characters of the story (something I’d wished happen in the original mash-up book, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies).

- This will surely become a best seller. I’m expecting the sequel to travel forward in time when the girls travel to Japan and receive their official training by Master Liu and could be the best story yet.

Rating: 3/5

This is a re-post from my previous blog. Upcoming reviews: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, Android Karenina and Apocalypse of the Dead.