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The Walking Dead and Your Zombie Collection

In case you might have missed it, zombies have been the monster du jour for the past several years. They have been shambling their way through horror movies, video games, books, and graphic novels. They have even can be found in other genres such as paranormal romance (who knew!). The TV station American Movie Classics (AMC) has brought the graphic novel The Walking Dead by Robert Kirkman to the little screen. With high production values, the show has become popular. What does this mean for libraries? We here at Monster Librarian feel that the different media that horror that the genre is found in provides an excellent opportunity to promote leisure reading by tying books to other media, like tv shows, movies, and video games, being promoted in mass media. There have been a plethora of zombie titles that have come out in the past few years, and this is a great time to put some on display!

Some notable titles we suggest for library collections:

Zombies: Encounters with the Hungry Dead edited by John Skipp

Dying to Live and Dying to Live: Life Sentence by Kim Paffenroth

Dead Sea by Brian Keene

Day by Day Armageddon by J.L. Bourne

World War Z; An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brook

Bits of the Dead by Keith Gouveia

History is Dead by Kim Paffenroth

The World is Dead edited by Kim Paffernoth

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance – Now With Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem! by Seth Grahame-Smith and Jane Austen

The Zombie Survival Guide by Max Brooks

Happy reading!

Happy Thanksgiving!

Today is Thanksgiving, at least here in the United States, and we at MonsterLibrarian want you to know how thankful we are for you. Thank you to all the readers who come here to find a good book, the educators who visit us to find resources, the school library media centers and public libraries who told their patrons about us, the librarians who use us for readers advisory and collection development,  and all the members of the horror community who have contributed to the success of the site and our projects.  We do it for you, and we couldn’t do it without you. And, of course, we are deeply grateful for all the contributions of our reviewers and editors, who have put phenomenal effort into making everything come together.

We’re thankful that we live in a time and a place where we can read what we want, write what we want about it, and share it with all of you. We are thankful that our local public and school libraries survived this year- other communities in our area haven’t been so lucky. It’s a hard time for libraries and librarians, and they make such a difference in our lives and in our access to books.   This year has been filled with great books, and I am certainly glad for the ones that have come my way!  What books have you read this year that you’re thankful for?

Interacting with Stoker’s Dracula

This afternoon I had an opportunity to have a live preview of PadWorx Digital Media’s upcoming iPad app Dracula: The Official Stoker Family Edition.  Based on what I saw, I think the iPad will be a game changer in the ebook industry, with its multimedia capabilities that are absent from traditional e-readers such as the Kindle or Nook.   One of the first ebook applications that took advantage of that was Alice, based on Alice in Wonderland, where there were interactive elements to the story, such as a bottle you could move around the screen.  It was more of an element to play with as you were reading the story.   PadWorx Digital Media will be soon releasing their version of Dracula for the iPad which brings it to an entirely new level.   I had a live demo from Jeff Schechter, director and producer at PadWorx Digital Media, who showed me some of the features of the book.

Dracula is truly an interactive multimedia experience. The reader HAS to interact with the book in order to continue with the story.    An example is on a page where there is talk about the need for a blood transfusion. There is a clear tube running across the text and white space below,  with the tube and needle at the end of it.  The user needs to touch the needle image and hold a finger down, which causes blood to travel slowly through the tube, revealing additional text.   Hold the finger there too long, and the text gets blurry as if the reader has lost too much blood.   In Jeff’s words, “the story needs the reader as much as the reader needs the story”.   The interactivity uses all the iPad’s functionality, which allows for a more powerful experience.   Dracula also contains a number of impressive easter eggs that rivals any DVD, enriching and extending the reader’s involvement with the book.

In an age where television and spending time on the computer often reduces the desire to read a book Dracula will draw users expecting interactive multimedia into the reading experience .   This app is more designed for entertainment versus academic use (there is no place to take notes) or a straight reading of the book(text size and font can’t be changed, and you must go through the interactive elements). As an experience, though, it is gorgeous, cinematic, well-designed and engaging.  Once released, I hope to get my hands on the application to provide a full review.