Then step three is you find out if the thing can be killed with a chainsaw. Step two is to anticipate what the creature is going to do next, based on what you determined in step one. So in any situation like this, step one is to find out what category of creature you’re dealing with. This is humanity’s greatest fear, which is why at the moment half of the world’s horror novels, movie posters and video games have zombies on the cover. They are basically walking epidemics, and are the worst of the worst-case scenarios, because such a creature could, hypothetically, wipe out civilization. But then you've got the fast breeders, like zombies (if they existed, which they don’t) where breeding is all they do. Within that group you've got slow breeders like vampires (if they were real, which they’re not) which breed in a small-scale controlled way, but mainly to avoid extinction rather than spread. The Breeders are an exponentially bigger problem. award-winning novel Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits, which is now in. He’s a freak, a singular being and once you kill him, he’s gone. New York Times bestselling author David Wong takes readers to a whole new level. Work looks like magic to those unwilling to do it. People like me know that there is no magic. It is an excellent introduction to David Wong s a writer and his style of wacky gonzo-esque humor if you are a fan of Transmetropolitan or Snow Crash by Neil Stephenson. So for instance, Frankenstein’s monster would fall into the second category if he was real. Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits by David Wong () on . Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits is fun as hell. “There are really only two kinds of monsters in the world, which you already know if you've been watching horror movies: Breeders and Non-breeders.
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