Feed by Mira Grant

I've jumped onto the zombie bandwagon. This book marks my initial foray into the zombie-infested publishing industry. So, have I been turned? Well, let's just say that I've learned that zombie literature doesn't really have to be about the zombies, which is a redeeming thing.


Feed is the first novel in Mira Grant’s Newsflesh trilogy. I first learned about it through Tina at One More Page, and I actually won it during her raffle. (So, thanks again, Tina!). It is zombie novel, yes. But it's not so much about the zombies as a discussion of the role of new media. At least, that's how I choose to look at it. Let me illustrate...

The story is set 26 years after the supposed cure for the common cold becomes a virus that turns humans into—you guessed it—zombies. This plot device is hardly new, and has been used by many zombie novels and movies. There are, however, things I found new. For instance, in Feed, society goes on mostly as usual after the zombie apocalypse. Except that people take more precaution in where they live and whenever they go out in public.

You see, the virus, cutely named Kellis-Amberlee, has infected everyone, but it lies dormant until the person is exposed to greater concentrations of the virus, or until one dies. If you get more than your fair share of the virus, you begin to turn. Which means that the ordinary guy sitting next to you in the cinema may turn into a flesh-eating monster by the end of the movie. This is why people tend not to go out in public anymore, and when they do, they subject themselves to numerous blood tests before entering any establishment and before eventually entering back into their own homes.

Enter Georgia and Shaun, adopted children of former academics-turned-media-whores. Except we’re talking about the new media here. ‘Cause, really, what other form of media will flourish if most everyone wants to stay indoors? I mean, if the internet was designed so that it could survive a nuclear war (along with the roaches), it’d be most likely to survive a zombie apocalypse, don’t you think?

Anyway, to cut a long story short, Georgia and Shaun are, like their parents, part of the new media. They are bloggers, yet unlike their parents, they blog for the love of the news, and not for the ratings or clickthroughs. Not counterintuitively, this actually gives them greater credibility among their peers, so much so that they’ve been invited by the Democrat’s presidential candidate to join his campaign. And, as these stories go, in the process of covering the campaign trail, Georgia and Shaun begin to uncover a greater conspiracy. Oh, and let’s not forget the zombie attacks, cause there are several.

I just looked at my summary up above, and I guess it reiterates how I think about this book. I liked the zombie action, I did. Perhaps because it wasn’t overdone. But, mostly, I keep thinking about the use of the new media when I think about this book. Maybe it’s because I blog. Maybe it’s because I’m currently taking up a Media course. Maybe it’s because I saw some parallels in the world today.

First, in Feed’s world, bloggers are classified into Newsies, those who report straight news, Stewarts, those who mix opinion with the news, Irwins, those who video themselves doing something dangerous, like go head to head with the zombies, Fictionals, the creative writers, and Aunties, the ones who talk about their lives, recipes, and other leisure activities, I guess. I would probably belong to the Aunties, which means I wouldn’t be in this book, because, in Feed, you tend to equate the term “blogger” with “news blogger.” Strangely, in one of our textbooks, 2010 edition, for the Media Comm course, a “blogger” is limited to someone who blogs about the news. I was a bit thrown off because I stumbled into this world where I seem to be marginalized because I’m not a news blogger. Nevertheless, it seems news bloggers aren’t also exempted from checking their stats once in a while. At least, in Feed, it seems it’s one of the major preoccupations of the bloggers. Again, strangely, they don’t rely on SEO. Just content. Pretty refreshing, if you ask me.

The other thing that got me thinking as I was reading Feed was the similarity to many of the things happening today. In fact, while reading this zombie book, I wasn’t thinking, “Hey, what if this did happen?” Instead, I found myself thinking, “Hey, isn’t this how it’s happening now?” Not the zombies, obviously, but the sudden reliance on new media versus traditional media, usually brought about by a great crisis. In Feed, the virus outbreak that resulted in the death of 3/4s of the world’s population led to people’s mistrust of traditional media because they felt it didn’t respond quickly enough to what was happening, didn’t report the deaths, didn’t do their jobs to inform the public. Hence, people turned to new media. This sort of reflects what happened after 9/11. I’m not an American, but like most of the world, I was glued to the television, watching in horror, while trying to get a hold of my brother in New York, just to make sure he was ok. He was and is, thankfully.

Anyway, after 9/11, it seemed that a lot of people felt that traditional media and mainstream press left them ill-prepared. People asked where the hate was coming from, because there didn’t seem to be much coverage of international events or how the other parts of the world felt about the US. So, because a lot of people were disappointed with mainstream media, they turned to blogs, which told the truth and provided commentary and evidence. And, apparently, during the war on Iraq, lots of blogs showed firsthand accounts of the battle, like this one. Sort of like what an Irwin does.

And then I think about now, when presidential candidates do include a few bloggers in their campaign trail, even in our country. Most recently, I know of two official bloggers for our president’s State of the Nation Address last month. And I think, “Yay for new media!”

So, yes, Feed made me think. For that, I found it a good book. It made me cringe during the zombie attacks. That makes it good, too. And though I would’ve wanted the sample blog posts from Georgia and Shaun to have more meat, the writing of the main narrative didn’t get in the way of the story. It made me want to keep turning pages to find out what happened next. That’s always good. And, in the end, it shocked me because it did something rarely done by writers in the first book of a trilogy. For that, it earned my respect.

You can read it as a zombie book or a commentary on new media. Either way, Feed is a powerful book, and anyone who's read through till the end will understand why.

Comments

Simcha said…
I just read your interview over at Wordsmithonia and came over to check out your blog. I've heard good things about this book but I just find the ideas of zombies so repulsive that I've been reluctant to try it. Perhaps I should push myself to do so since it does sound like a book I might enjoy.
fantaghiro23 said…
Hi, Simcha! Welcome! Actually, that's why this is only my first zombie book--don't like the idea of them either. But I won this, so I read it, and I discovered that it was actually good. Anyway, you could try it out. If you like it, great! If not, then at least your preference is confirmed.:)

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