General Frank Sherman, Lieutenant Colonel Anna Demilio and some other players will attend and participate in the collapse of the world as we know it due to the discovery and spread of the virus Morningstar, last known zombie virus on the African continent Juqu ' obviously in the USA.
This book is a mix between, I cite only what I know, World War Z and The Chronicles of Armageddon. We have the right to effect a comprehensive and global view of the spread of the virus, as in the book of Brooks, with the classical frame of the threat underestimated, prevention being sacrificed on the economic altar, the attempt (failed obviously) military to contain the threat. And a second shorter section of road movie with a team of competent deserters.
The zombies or carriers are of two kinds: moving (living and fast) and trailing (dead and slow), a mix of what is usually done.
The story is credible, clear and incisive style, the military side pretty well restored. It is more primary than World War Z and more closer in style to chronic armageddon, and we have a first volume without downtime through chapters well restoring the gradation of events: Smoke, sparks, flames, fire , fire, conflagration, holocaust, and ash fallout.
Apart from the episode NSA whose epilogue is not credible for two pennies and a little too frequent use of the term foupoudav (damn rotten in advance for non-fans of Ryan), the author us Book a nervous premir well opus, which devours a few too short hours and inevitably calls for the reading of the second volume.