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Book Reviews of Ex-Heroes

Ex-Heroes
ExHeroes
Author: Peter Clines
ISBN-13: 9781934861288
ISBN-10: 1934861286
Publication Date: 2/25/2010
Pages: 274
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 17

3.9 stars, based on 17 ratings
Publisher: Permuted Press
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

3 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

gibby357 avatar reviewed Ex-Heroes on + 57 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I can't believe this is this Author's first novel. The depth of the characters, the details, the way the story was woven and came together, was indicative of a more seasoned writer. Great action with Super heroes and Zombies and more than a few twists along the way. I enjoyed every minute of it and hope there is a sequel in the future. Also, with the characters, this would make an awesome movie! Great read!
maxcage avatar reviewed Ex-Heroes on + 34 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I tried a sample of Ex-Heroes and was immediately hooked! Bought it and devoured it (pun intended). Excellent mix of super-hero action and zombie apocalypse horror. Highly recommended!
reviewed Ex-Heroes on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Superheroes and zombie novels appeal to the fourteen-year-old boy in me, and when I read one, I am usually disappointed because I am no longer a fourteen-year-old boy. Ex-Heroes is the ultimate superheroes+zombies mashup, with the Earth's surviving superheroes (okay, Los Angeles's surviving superheroes) protecting what remains of the living human population from the undead hordes after the zombie apocalypse.

This very "high concept" premise makes for a fun story that would make a pretty entertaining comic series, and Clines delivers plenty of gonzo superheroic action combined with gonzo zombie gore. You can really see he is trying to describe multi-panel superhero slugfests and gut-ripping zombie action in full four-color spectacle just as it would appear on the pages of a comic book, which is why the fight scenes are prolonged and detailed and full of roars and screams and sound effects and people getting knocked through walls and blasted about, interspersed with hero/villain banter and the occasional monologue. So Clines has the feel of the genre for sure.

But that's all this book is: a novelized comic book. The characters are interesting insofar as we get flashbacks to their origins, a description of their powers and major personality quirks, and then their current doings in post-zombie-apocalypse LA, but no one really comes alive as more than a comic book illustration accompanied by a list of vitals. Cerberus is the chick in the mecha suit, Stealth is the emotionally detached mastermind who dresses in leather lingerie, Gorgon is the guy whose underage girlfriend got zombified and now he is muchly angsted, the Mighty Dragon is Superman with fire-breath, etc. The Big Bad, when he finally appears, is only mildly threatening since we're pretty much told he's an idiot, which means he'll rack up a few casualties and then be defeated.

Clines delivers servicable action, but his writing is not great and his characterization is about par for a comic book. This is a fun but eminently forgettable romp, though I might listen to book two the next time I need some entertainment only slightly less mindless than a zombie movie.