The difference being that this middle school novel is written entirely in Haiku. Loeb, its zombie protagonist has a problem: the object of his affection, Siobhan, is a lifer (i.e. human). What to do? In scenes set around a lunch table (the menu: brains) and around the school, eyes roll and jaws drop (literally). Also featured in the cast of characters is Carl, a chupacabra (bloodsucking critter) and Mrs. Fincher, a sympathetic and seductive librarian.
K.A. Holt is a writer, a terrible cook, and a mother of three (not necessarily in that order). When she's not busy imagining how she would survive a zombie apocalypse, she's busy imagining how she will survive the day. Kirkus and Publishers Weekly praised her first book for children, MIKE STELLAR: NERVES OF STEEL, with words like precocious and complex, and savvy and sharp.
GAHAN WILSON is an author, cartoonist, and illustrator. His work has appeared in THE NEW YORKER and COLLIER'S Weekly among other publications. He is a very prolific and celebrated illustrator.
A funny, irreverent, and unconventional verse offering that's sure to find wide curricular appeal. Booklist
Gross-out humor and romantic tension enmesh in this clever novel told in haiku&a standout choice for reluctant readers. Publishers Weekly, STARRED review
Middle school poetry geeks will enjoy this funny, irreverent novel in verse. Library Media Connection
This intriguing book definitely has an audienceone that appreciates, quite literally, tongue-in-cheek humor. School Library Journal
The shuffle-and-stop rhythm of haiku is amusingly appropriate for the zombie narrator, and Holt's use of language is consistently clever and playful. SLJ Teen