(Max Brooks, author of zombie books, World War Z and The Zombie Survival Guide. C. Verstraete photo)
(Note: this is a two-part story. See part 2 at Zombie Pop)
Max Brooks Still Talks - and Fears - Zombies
There is the serious Brooks, the man who talks about zombies
and links them with real life issues. Then there is the entertainer who gets
his point across with wry and often hysterical humor.
"It's fear," he said in a phone interview Friday prior
to his lecture appearance at Harper College in Palatine, Ill. "For me,
they're a global threat."
Global meaning real life disasters - the floods, the
earthquakes, the Katrinas, that can turn life into an apocalypse at any moment.
That is the underlying message of his books, Brooks says: "I like writing
about stuff from a real perspective. The only part of a zombie story that
should be unreal should be the zombies."
That message is what he tries to share in the countless
lectures he's done across the country since his first book, The Zombie Survival Guide, was published
in 2003. He does not take ideas of an apocalypse or natural disaster lightly
and says neither should we. Those zombie preppers you read about? Extreme,
maybe, but not as crazy as you might think. Being prepared is the one thing
they do have right, Brooks says. He can relate.
"The nice thing is zombie peppers have a kit ready for
natural disasters," he says. "...I had an earthquake prep kit as a
kid. A student journalist asked me, 'what if you have it wrong?' What's wrong
about if you don't know how to purify water, you will die...? Zombies are
Katrina. It's all how you look at it."

How
Brooks
looks at it is with humor, natural for a guy who was a writer with Saturday
Night Live (SNL) from 2001 to 2003. And being the son of legendary actor Mel
Brooks must have rubbed off, too. Such credentials certainly helped him make
the jump to author, right?
Wrong.
Brooks wrote the first book, The Zombie Survival Guide, thinking it would fail - and it almost
did. "I thought it was a book that would get stuck in a drawer," he
says. "Who would want to buy a real survival guide on something that
wasn't real?"
Being linked to SNL actually made it worse, he adds:
"That hurt me. It haunted me the first years of publication. I was at a
big disadvantage. (Bookstores) put it (the book) in the humor section. The
hardcore (zombie) fans thought I was pissing on them. The humor fans expected a
joke book and didn't get it."
The solution? Brooks began his lectures as a way to promote the
book and thanks to a genius suggestion by wife Michelle Kholos, things turned
around.
"I started the lectures to hand-sell the books,"
he says. "She suggested I go directly to the Better Homes and Gardens of
Horror, Fangoria, and ask to plead my case. They did an interview."
These days he's been doing so many lectures, "I don't
know how many," that he says he and his wife had a serious talk. "It
was getting to the point, I was afraid to be away from my family (for too
long). My son is eight-years-old. He needs a dad more than we need a zombie
author."
So, he may begin cutting down on the lectures, but he hasn't
stopped writing or working on other projects. Nor has he left the zombies
behind. Just out is a new comic based on his short story,
The Extinction Parade.
The first of a 12-part series tells the story of a zombie
plague through the eyes of vampires. Or as he says, again relating back to his
preparedness theme, "vampires have always been at the top of the food
chain so they never developed survival skills. With zombies, they realize, what
are they going to eat? It's an exploration of the downside of privilege, people
who don't know how to work, don't know how to struggle, don't know how to
(survive). You can apply this to an actual disaster. There is nothing cool or
sexy about it. Zombies are just the catalyst."
* Read more about Max
Brooks' Lecture: Zombie Facts, but Funny:
Zombies and preparing for that zombie apocalypse were never
so funny, not unless you are
Max Brooks,
former Saturday Night Live (SNL) writer and author of the popular zombie books,
World War Z: An Oral History of the
Zombie War and
The Zombie Survival
Guide.
** Read the rest at
ZombiePop.
Student "zombies" added some "reality" to the lecture event. (Photos: C.Verstraete)