Genre: Horror / Noir / Zombies / Fantasy
Publisher: Red Adept Publishing, LLC
Publication Date: 14th Oct 2013
Pages: 234
MY REVIEW:
A copy of Braineater
Jones was sent to Confessions of a Reviewer by the author Stephen Kozeniewski
in exchange for an honest review. This is said review.
Another new one
on me. Never heard of Stephen Kozeniewski before he sent me this through
Confessions, for a review. I love it when new authors (to me) take the time to
contact me and push their stuff for a review. You sometimes get stuff that, to
be honest, I put down after a page or two. Sometimes you get stuff like this.
Looks a bit bizarre and maybe not in your normal reading piles but worth a
shot. Imagine my surprise when I noticed Mr Kozeniewski’s name in an anthology
I started to read at the same time. Coincidence? I think more fate. After
reading Braineater Jones I’m going to jump straight to his story in the anthology.
He is rather bloody good.
A man awakes face
down in a swimming pool. Well, he doesn’t really wake up. That’s because he is
dead. The huge hole in his chest sort of points to that. He has no idea where
he is, who he is, what happened to him or where he needs to go. He adopts the
name of Braineater Jones and sets about tracking down his killer. His only
friend, it appears, is an “undead” like himself. Problem is, he is only a head
with no body and pretty useless in a bar brawl.
After discovering
that the only thing that will keep him from craving the human flesh he is
naturally attracted to is alcohol, Jones and the head embark on a mission to
find a constant supply of booze, solve a few cases as PI’s and find Jones’
killer before their time runs out.
First question –
how to categorise this? That is such a hard question. The story is set in
November 1934. You read the story through the eyes of Jones, reading his
entries in his own personal journal from 31st October through until 1st December.
Each day describes what has happened to him and the “head” in their quest for
booze and answers. That is really all I want to give you on the plot itself
because you need to read this to follow the journey yourself. You really need
to read it!
It’s noir. It’s
horror. It’s dark fiction. It’s full of dark humour. Most of all this is just
pure, absolute fun. I absolutely loved it.
The atmosphere is
perfect. You have a dark, almost smokey feeling which sets the scene perfectly.
You can imagine Bogart or someone of that era playing parts in this story.
Every time someone walks into a bar you can sense the music playing in the
background, the sights, and the smells. It stinks of the 30’s during
prohibition.
That’s what
absolutely makes this book. You have to remember at points that the main
character is a zombie for crying out loud. We only see zombies in modern day
movies that leave a lot to be desired. I noticed someone say they could see
this made into a film with Bruce Campbell as Jones. I couldn’t think of
anything more perfect. This would become a cult film. This should become a cult
book. It is that good.
Zombies that walk
and talk and think and have their own place in society as long as they drink
alcohol! I want to be a zombie in the 1930’s.
Hidden within the
main story are little snippets of side stories that bring you back to reality.
There are Nazi’s in this. Americans collaborating with Nazi’s just before the Second
World War. Whether intentional or not, it examines the culture of that time
period. The racism, the homophobia, the language used, talking about women as
dames and reminding them of their place in society. It’s not in your face but
it does remind you of how it must have been to live in those times.
And it has
zombies!!! In the 1930’s!
To summarise: It
has zombies! In the 1930’s! This is not your typical zombie story. I loved that
fact. It oozes noir. It oozes atmosphere. It is a horror of sorts but if you
are expecting jump out of your seat scary, then it is not. It is very dark with
a lot of dark humour. It will make you cringe and laugh at the same time. It
will make you root for the underdog. It’s just good fun and well worth the time
it will take you to read it.
I for one cannot
wait for more from Mr Kozeniewski.
General rating:
★★★★★ Absolutely loved it and it comes highly recommended.
Horror rating:
★★★ Creepy but could have had more.
You can buy Braineater Jones here:
Book Synopsis:
Braineater Jones wakes up face down in a swimming pool
with no memory of his former life, how he died, or why he’s now a zombie. With
a smart-aleck severed head as a partner, Jones descends into the undead ghetto
to solve his own murder.
But Jones’s investigation is complicated by his crippling
addiction to human flesh. Like all walking corpses, he discovers that only a
stiff drink can soothe his cravings. Unfortunately, finding liquor during
Prohibition is costly and dangerous. From his Mason jar, the cantankerous Old
Man rules the only speakeasy in the city that caters to the postmortem crowd.
As the booze, blood, and clues coagulate, Jones gets
closer to discovering the identity of his killer and the secrets behind the
city’s stranglehold on liquid spirits. Death couldn’t stop him, but if the
liquor dries up, the entire city will be plunged into an orgy of cannibalism.
Cracking this case is a tall order. Braineater Jones
won’t get out alive, but if he plays his cards right, he might manage to
salvage the last scraps of his humanity.
Stephen Kozeniewski (pronounced "causin' ooze
key") lives with his wife and two cats in Pennsylvania, the birthplace of
the modern zombie. During his time as a Field Artillery officer, he served for
three years in Oklahoma and one in Iraq, where due to what he assumes was a
clerical error, he was awarded the Bronze Star. He is also a classically
trained linguist, which sounds much more impressive than saying his bachelor's
degree is in German.
Stephen’s author page can be found here.
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