BLACK REDNECK VS SPACE ZOMBIES
by Steven Roy
The title of this book has everything to do with
a great sci-fi zombie story and just a hint of racism. Jefferson Balladeer ’was adopted by a white
redneck family and grew up wanting to be the first Black Redneck. At the age of seventeen, he is told a half truth
about his adoption and leaves Picayune, Mississippi in a huff, never
looking back, until his adopted brother dies ten years later. Jefferson comes back to handle the affairs
and sell off the estate ASAP. He wants
nothing to do with his hometown or the people he knew growing up. Unbeknownst to him, an alien life form,
called the Devourer, has decided to take up residency on his land. Specifically
in his catfish ponds. And so the battle
begins.
The plot is pretty straightforward for a hero battling
monster story. The chapters are short
and listed as quirky title names vs numbers; The Devourer Feeds On Birds. There are some flashback scenes, which Steven
Roy clearly states are flashbacks. I’m
not sure if Steven did this on purpose, keeping in the theme of a B-rated
movie, or he just didn’t know how to segue from one scene to another.
Most of the main characters are very
compelling. The ones that stick out in
my mind are Jefferson, Mary and Tom, and Gray Man and Old Ed. I thought Daisy’s character could have been
enhanced a bit, but the story is from a male perspective. Maybe he doesn’t understand women that
well. Oh, and I almost forgot Shorty and
of course the Devourer. I thought Steven
did a great job in descripting the biology of an alien life form and how the
alien grew and reproduced herself.
I enjoyed some of the witty and humorous dialogue. And the story did draw me in and I couldn’t
wait to get to the end. But the story is
told in a stilted narrative style, telling vs showing, and I know this story would
have been so much better if the author had spent just a bit or time with
filling in the emotional gaps. I felt
like this was a 2nd or 3rd draft and not the polished script. And please, get rid of the over usage of metaphors.
Steven Roy acknowledges that he had an editor,
but you couldn’t tell it. There are so
many grammar errors, cause and effect errors and past and present errors that
get in the way of the reading.
Supposedly he corrected some of these errors. I would hate to see what this story looked
like before.
Final Analysis:
Even though I really like the story and would recommend the book, I can
only give 3 feathers. It’s just not fair
to other Indie Authors who actually take the time and spend the money to make
their books presentable. BTW, awesome cover.
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