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Showing posts with label Seth Grahame-Smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seth Grahame-Smith. Show all posts
Friday, March 12, 2010
Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter to be Made into a Movie
Will it ever end? Author Seth Graham-Smith seems to have the King Midas Movie Golden Touch. His new book, Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter will be made into a movie.
Friday, December 11, 2009
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies the movie - undead in a theater near you!
It’s official. Variety reports that Natalie Portman will be the next Lizzie Bennet in the movie of adaptation of the best selling literary mash-up Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Portman will co-produce with Annette Savitch.Only this week co-author Seth Grahame-Smith had denied rumors of the movie deal on his Twitter account. Guess he changed his mind.
Jane Austen was vacationing in Tahiti and unavailable for comment.
Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Thursday, December 10, 2009
Just in Time for Christmas: Pride and Prejudice and 30% More Zombies

Why does the publisher desire you to spend more money on this new edition? Because they've offered more carnage, more corpse slaying, and more gruesome cannibalism inside its 360 pristine white acid-free pages. With a satin ribbon marker and leatherette cover, you can confidently place it alongside the first-edition heirlooms on your book shelf.
Click on the image above for the enlarged version. Click on the links below to learn more about this runaway New York Times bestseller.- Click here for our original announcement of this deluxe edition
- Read Vic's review of the novel at this link
- Read Laurel Ann's review at this link
- Will Zombies Eat Elizabeth Bennet?
- The book club questions as listed on Oprah.com:
Questions:
1. Many critics have addressed the dual nature of Elizabeth's personality. On one hand, she can be a savage, remorseless killer, as we see in her vanquishing of Lady Catherine's ninjas. On the other hand, she can be tender and merciful, as in her relationships with Jane, Charlotte, and the young bucks that roam her family's estate. In your opinion, which of these "halves" best represents the real Elizabeth at the beginning—and end of the novel?
2. Is Mr. Collins merely too fat and stupid to notice his wife's gradual transformation into a zombie, or could there be another explanation for his failure to acknowledge the problem? If so, what might that explanation be? How might his occupation (as a pastor) relate to his denial of the obvious, or his decision to hang himself?
3. The strange plague has been the scourge of England for "five-and-fifty years." Why do the English stay and fight, rather than retreat to the safety of eastern Europe or Africa?
4. Who receives the sorrier fate: Wickham, left paralyzed in a seminary for the lame, forever soiling himself and studying ankle-high books of scripture? Or Lydia, removed from her family, married to an invalid, and childless, yet forever changing filthy diapers?
5. Due to her fierce independence, devotion to exercise, and penchant for boots, some critics have called Elizabeth Bennet "the first literary lesbian." Do you think the authors intended her to be gay? And if so, how would this Sapphic twist serve to explain her relationships with Darcy, Jane, Charlotte, Lady Catherine, and Wickham?
6. Some critics have suggested that the zombies represent the authors' views toward marriage—an endless curse that sucks the life out you and just won't die. Do you agree, or do you have another opinion about the symbolism of the unmentionables?
7. Does Mrs. Bennet have a single redeeming quality?
"Elizabeth passed the chief of the night in her sister's room, alternately tending to Jane's needs and amusing herself by keeping a dagger balanced on the tip of her finger for hours on end..."
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