
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
By Seth Grahame-Smith, Katherine Kellgren, Seth Grahame-Smith Jane Austen
Subjects: zombis, Modales y costumbres, Young women, Courtship, Darcy, fitzwilliam (fictitious character), Novela, Bennet, elizabeth (fictitious character), Jóvenes (Mujeres), Sisters--fiction, Inglaterra, Hermanas, Open Library Staff Picks, Parodies, pastiches, Fitzwilliam Darcy (Fictitious character), Elizabeth Bennet (Fictional character), Ps3607.r33848 p75 2009, Families, Clases sociales en la literatura, New York Times bestseller, Bennet, Elizabeth (Fictitious character) $v Fiction, Cortejo amoroso, Zombies, Manners and customs, Orgullo, Darcy, fitzwilliam (fictitious character)--fiction, Darcy, Fitzwilliam (Fictitious character) $v Fiction, Humor, form, parodies, Austen, jane , 1775-1817, Fiction, mashups, Fitzwilliam Darcy (Fictional character), Parodies, imitations, Zombies--fiction, Young women--england--fiction, Social classes, Courtship--england--fiction, 813/.6, Fiction, Social classes--england--fiction, Social life and customs, prejuicios, Darcy, fitzwilliam (fictitious character), fiction, Bennet, elizabeth (fictitious character)--fiction, Sisters, Darcy, fitzwilliam, Parodies, Clases sociales, nyt:e-book_fiction=2011-07-16, Bennet, elizabeth (fictitious character), fiction, Families--england--fiction, Bennet, elizabeth, Ficción, Cuentos populares de terror, Elizabeth Bennet (Fictitious character), Fiction, horror
Description: Great first line; it had to be polished, “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a zombie in possession of brains must be in want of more brains.” Zombies and katanas give it the zing the original, tedious novel lacks. Everyone is happy in the end, except for those who deserve a bad end--and the people who turn into zombies.
Comments
You must log in to leave comments.