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Overview

Six months have passed since the terrifying battle with Charlie Pink-eye and the Motor City Hammer in the zombie-infested mountains of the Rot & Ruin. It’s also six months since Benny Imura and Nix Riley saw something in the air that changed their lives. Now, after months of rigorous training with Benny’s zombie-hunter brother Tom, Benny and Nix are ready to leave their home forever and search for a better future. Lilah the Lost Girl and Benny’s best friend Lou Chong are going with them.

Sounds easy. Sounds wonderful. Except that everything that can go wrong does. Before they can even leave there is a shocking zombie attack in town. But as soon as they step into the Rot & Ruin they are pursued by the living dead, wild animals, insane murderers and the horrors of Gameland –where teenagers are forced to fight for their lives in the zombie pits. Worst of all…could the evil Charlie Pink-eye still be alive?

In the great Rot & Ruin everything wants to kill you. Everything…and not everyone in Benny’s small band of travelers will make it out alive.

Editorial Reviews

Children's Literature
Zombies are a very popular topic for young adult fiction right now. But unlike what is often found in zombie novels, Maberry paints the zombie in human turns, not as mindless killing machines, but as victims of an unexplained epidemic. It's been fifteen years since First Night and it is only over the past summer that Benny has begun to understand the world that he is now a part of. Benny's brother, Tom, has spent the summer months teaching Benny and his friends how to be warriors and survive in the Rot and Ruin outside their town. Benny and Tom, along with two of their friends, intend to discover exactly what is happening beyond the wasteland that surrounds their town and to discover, once and for all, if civilization is returning to the country that used to be the United States. Their journey does not begin well and they find themselves caught up in a revenge scheme that places all of their lives in danger and threatens the safety of those they left behind in Mountainside. Dust & Decay takes up where Rot & Ruin left off, and while Dust & Decay can be read on its own, it is recommended that Rot & Ruin be read first. Reviewer: Danielle Williams
VOYA
Fifteen years ago, First Night was the catastrophic pandemic that wiped out vast populations who would later be reanimated as mindless, staggering zombies, hungry for flesh. The sequel to Jonathan Mayberry's Rot & Ruin (Simon & Schuster, 2010) revisits Benny, his brother Tom, love-interest Nix, and their friends as they venture out in search of non-undead life outside of Mountainside. The characters saddle horses and decapitate zombies with swords in this world devoid of phones and the Internet. Drama runs high when zombies invade; friends are separated and forced to battle zoms in the Gameland—where kids must fight for their lives, and an old nemesis reemerges. Pages from Nix's journal are scattered throughout the text, explaining key concepts and vocabulary (in case you missed the first book). Hopping on the pervasive post-apocalyptic trend, this sci fi-meets-western story is packed full of action and adventure, offering lots of guy appeal. A smattering of romantic moments elicited more than one eye-rolling moment. The language is easy to comprehend, the characters are relatable, and the action-filled plot keeps the story moving. The western elements, seldom seen in teen fiction, are a welcome addition. Serious sci fi readers will probably pass on this, but fans of Suzanne Collins's Hunger Games will devour this. Reviewer: Stephen J. Koebel
School Library Journal
Gr 8 Up—In Jonathan Maberry's sequel (2011) to Rot & Ruin (2010, both S & S), teens Benny, Nix, Lilah, and Chong set out on a quest to find the jet spotted at the conclusion of the first book. Benny's brother, Tom, a closure specialist, guides them out into the Rot & Ruin (the land populated by zombies east of Mountainside, their home in California), in search of that jet and, hopefully, civilization. But the zombies aren't the only—or the worst—things in the Rot & Ruin. Preacher Jack and White Bear are at the heart of a subculture of zombie pit fighting that has become a cruel entertainment. Maberry writes with an incredible visual style, multiple points of view, and greater character depth in this sequel to make for a more nuanced and expanded universe. Excerpts from Nix's journal are intercut with the narrative, giving listeners brief respites from the almost non-stop action. With his quick-paced style and unique setting, Maberry makes you care about the characters and their quest. A very open ending leaves plenty of room for a sequel. Brian Hutchison does a fine job of voicing the large cast of characters. In an ever-growing field of zombie books, teens will be drawn to this series—Charli Osborne, Oxford Public Library, MI

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781442402355
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
  • Publication date: 8/30/2011
  • Pages: 528
  • Sales rank: 19,551
  • Age range: 12 - 17 Years
  • Lexile: 770L (what's this?)
  • Series: Rot and Ruin Series
  • Product dimensions: 5.90 (w) x 8.30 (h) x 1.70 (d)

Meet the Author

Jonathan Maberry
Jonathan Maberry

Jonathan Maberry is a New York Times bestselling author, multiple Bram Stoker Award winner, and Marvel Comics writer. He’s the author of many novels, including Assassin’s Code, Dead of Night, Patient Zero, and Rot & Ruin. His nonfiction books cover topics ranging from martial arts to zombie pop-culture. Since 1978 he has sold more than 1,200 magazine feature articles, 3,000 columns, two plays, greeting cards, song lyrics, poetry, and textbooks. Jonathan continues to teach the celebrated Experimental Writing for Teens class, which he created. He founded the Writers Coffeehouse and co-founded The Liars Club, and he is a frequent speaker at schools and libraries, as well as a keynote speaker and guest of honor at major writers’ and genre conferences. Jonathan lives in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, with his wife, Sara, and their son, Sam. Visit him at JonathanMaberry.com and on Twitter (@jonathanmaberry) and Facebook.

Read an Excerpt

1

BENNY IMURA WAS APPALLED TOLEARN THAT THE APOCALYPSE CAME with homework.

“Why do we have to study this stuff?” he demanded. “We already know what happened. People started turning into zoms, the zoms ate just about everyone, everyone who dies becomes a zom, so the moral of this tale is: Try not to die.”

Across the kitchen table, his brother, Tom, stared at him with narrowed eyes. “Are you deliberately trying to be an idiot, or is it a natural gift?”

“I’m serious. We know what happened.”

“Really? Then how come you spent most of last summer complaining that no one my age tells anyone your age the truth about the living dead?”

“Telling us is one thing. Essays and pop quizzes are a whole different thing.”

“Because heaven forbid you should have to remember anything we told you.”

Benny raised his eyebrows mysteriously and tapped his temple. “I have it all right here in the vast storehouse of knowledge that is me.”

“Okay, boy genius, then what started the plague?”

“Easy one,” Benny said. “Nobody knows.”

“What are the leading theories?”

Benny jabbed his fork into a big piece of buttered yam, shoved it into his mouth, and chewed noisily as he spoke. It was a move calculated to annoy Tom in three separate ways. Tom hated when he spoke with his mouth full. He hated it when Benny chewed with his mouth open. And it would muffle most of what he said, which meant that Tom had to pay even more attention to the yam-packed mouth from which the muffled words came.

“Radiation, virus, bioweapon, toxic waste, solar flares, act of God.”

He rattled it off so there was no break between the words. Also annoying, and worth at least another point on Benny’s personal Annoy-O-Meter.

Tom sipped his tea and said nothing, but he gave Benny the look.

Benny sighed and swallowed. “Okay,” he said, “at first people thought it was radiation from a satellite.”

“Space probe,” corrected Tom.

“Whatever. But that doesn’t make sense, because one satellite—”

“Space probe.”

“—wouldn’t carry enough radioactive material to spread over the entire world.”

“We think.”

“Sure,” conceded Benny, “but in science class they told us even if one of the old nuclear power plants did a whatchamacallit, there—”

“Meltdown.”

“—wouldn’t be enough radiation to cover the entire planet even though it has more radioactive materials than a satellite.”

Tom sighed. Benny smiled.

“What conclusion can you draw from that?”

“The world wasn’t destroyed by radioactive alien space zombies.”

Probably wasn’t destroyed by radioactive alien space zombies,” Tom corrected. “How about a virus?”

Benny cut a piece of chicken and ate it. Tom was a great cook, and this was one of his better meals. Yams, broiled chicken with mushrooms and almonds, and rich green kale. A loaf of steaming bread made from the last of the winter wheat sat near where Benny could plunder it.

“Chong’s dad says that a virus needs a living host, and zoms aren’t alive. He said that maybe bacteria or a fungus was sustaining the virus.”

“Do you know what a bacterium is?”

“Sure … it’s a bug thingy that makes you sick.”

“God, I love it when you display the depth of your knowledge. It makes me proud to be your brother.”

“Kiss my—”

“Language.”

They grinned at each other.

It had been nearly seven months since Benny’s lifelong hatred and distrust of Tom had transformed into affection and respect. That process had started last summer, shortly after Benny’s fifteenth birthday. On some level Benny knew that he loved Tom, but since Tom was his brother and this was still the real world, the chances of Benny ever using that L word were somewhere between “no way” and “get out of my way I’m going to throw up.”

Not that Benny was afraid of the L word when it came to someone better suited for it, namely the fiercely red-haired queen of freckles, Nix Riley. Benny would like very much to toss that word up for her to consider, but he had yet to do so. Shortly after the big fight at the bounty hunters’ camp, when Benny had tentatively tried to bring up the subject, Nix had threatened bodily harm if he said that word. Benny had zipped his mouth shut, understanding completely why the moment had been so inappropriate. Charlie Pink-eye Matthias and the Motor City Hammer had murdered Nix’s mother, and the insane events of the days that followed hadn’t allowed Nix to properly react. Or grieve.

Those days had been the weirdest mix of absolute horror, black despair, and soaring happiness. The emotions he’d felt didn’t seem to even belong in the same world, let alone the same person.

Benny gave Nix her time for grief, and he grieved too. Mrs. Riley had been a great lady. Sweet, funny, kind, and always a little sad. Like everyone else in Mountainside, Jessie Riley had suffered terrible losses during First Night. Her husband, her two sons.

“Everyone lost someone,” Chong often reminded him. Even though they’d been toddlers, Benny and Chong were the only ones among their friends to remember that night. Chong said that it was all a blur of screams and shouts, but Benny remembered it with a peculiar clarity. His mother handing him through a first-floor window to Tom—who was a twenty-year-old cadet at the police academy—and then the pale, shambling thing that had been Dad coming out of the shadows and pulling Mom away. Then Tom running away, his terrified heartbeat hammering like a drum inside the chest to which he held a squirming, screaming Benny.

Until last year Benny had remembered that First Night in a twisted way. All his life he had believed that Tom had simply run away. That he had not tried to help Mom. That he was a coward.

Now Benny knew different. Now he knew what kind of torment Tom had suffered to save him. He also knew that when Mom had handed him through the window to Tom, she had already been bitten. She was already lost. Tom had done the only thing he could have done. He ran, and in running had given value to Mom’s sacrifice, and that had saved them both.

Now Benny was fifteen and a half, and First Night was a million years ago.

This world was no longer that world. On First Night the old world had died. As the dead rose, the living perished. Cities were incinerated by the military in a futile attempt to stop the growing armies of the dead. The electromagnetic pulses from the nukes fried all electronics. The machines went silent, and soon, so did the whole country. Now everything east of the small town of Mountainside was the great Rot and Ruin. A few other towns littered the foothills of the Sierra Nevada north and south of Benny’s home, but the rest of the old world had been consumed.

Or … had it?

During that adventure in the mountains east of town, Benny and Nix had seen something that to them was as inexplicable and potentially world-changing as the zombie plague had been. Flying high, high above them had been a thing Benny had only ever read about in old books.

A jet.

A sleek jumbo jet that flew out of the east, banked in a slow circle around the mountains, and then headed back the way it had come. Now Benny and Nix were counting down the days until they left Mountainside to find where the jet had come from. The calendar pinned to the wall by the back door had black Xs over the first ten days of this month. There were seven unmarked days, and then a big red circle around the following Saturday. April 17, one week from today. The words ROAD TRIP were written in block letters below the date.

Tom thought that the jet was flying in the general direction of Yosemite National Park, which was due east of the town. Benny and Nix had begged Tom for this trip for months, but as the day approached, Benny wasn’t so sure he still wanted to go. It was just that Nix was absolutely determined.

“Earth to Benny Imura.”

Benny blinked and heard as an after-echo the sound of Tom snapping his fingers.

“Huh?”

“Jeez … what planet were you orbiting?”

“Oh … just kind of drifted there.”

“Nix or the jet?”

“Little of both.”

“Must have been more about the jet,” Tom said. “There was less drool.”

“You are very nearly funny,” said Benny. He looked down at his plate and was mildly surprised that it was empty.

“Yes,” said Tom, “you were eating on autopilot. It was fascinating to watch.”

There was a knock on the door. Benny shot to his feet and crossed the kitchen to the back door. He was smiling as he undid the locks.

“That’s got to be Nix,” he said as he pulled it open. “Hey, sweetie …”

Morgie Mitchell and Lou Chong stood on the back porch. “Um,” said Chong, “hello to you, too, sugar lumps.”

© 2011 Jonathan Maberry

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 5
( 65 )

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See All Sort by: Showing 1 – 20 of 65 Customer Reviews
  • Posted December 11, 2011

    more from this reviewer

    LOVED it

    Ok I am SO IN LOVE with this series.. The second book was just as great as the first one.. I must say though I did not see the end going the way that it did.. Kind of a disappointment but not the down fall to the liking of the book.. In this one you are so familiar with the characters that when something happens you feel like you know or feel a little loss at things.. Weird I know but that is how I felt I am so looking forward to another one.. I would recommend these books to everyone I know..

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 22, 2011

    Page turner!

    Another fantastic read from Maberry. Its killing me I don't have the time to read it one sitting (which I have done with some of his past novels). Great story!

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted September 5, 2011

    Loved It!!

    Non stop action, couldn't put it down. Awesome addition to the story and I am hoping for a third book.

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted September 5, 2011

    Womderful

    Best zombie book i've ever reaf. Big praise for rot &ruin the first volume. Can't wait for the third book!!! Fff so ijtense couldn't put it down finished it in two day 384 pages. Great read.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 20, 2012

    Love it

    Hey so i think that mayberry should get a best author ever award. So here is what happend i have a librarian friend who gets me free books and one day i got rot and ruin from her. That one took me a month to read. But dust and decay ( in my opinion) was better. I tore through that book in a week and one day. :) I ABSOLUTLY LOVE THIS SERIES!!!!!! Matti age 12

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 6, 2012

    Best zombie book ever

    Best zombie book ever

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 5, 2012

    Dust and Decay

    Its a great book and its really devistating cant wait for flesh and bone

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted October 28, 2011

    more from this reviewer

    Just a snack before we get down to post-Zombocalyptic business

    After being so hyped up on ROT & RUIN, of course I rushed to devour DUST & DECAY like a good zombie who needed a fresh new brain. Was it as tasty as its predecessor? Let me tell you, dear Readers, this sequel was slicker and smarter, but it was simply an extra side of appetizer before the main course begins.

    Now that Tom and Benny have fully commited themselves to the "family business" and plan to set out into the Ruin in search of answers, the action packed into DUST & DECAY channels the same intensity as its predecessor. I already knew Tom Imura was cool, but holy smoky eyes, does he ever dish out the badass and demonstrate why he is a force to be reckoned with! Smart, strong, honorable, innovative - Tom embodies the ideal hero figure. Even better, Benny gets to prove his worth this time around. Much more mature, thoughtful, and less whiny - he follows in Tom's footsteps and shows promise into being just as strong and amazing as his older brother.

    I loved the diversity of the bounty hunters - good, bad, newbie, experienced, funny, wacky, solitary - they made an already spectacular zombie story into something even more memorable. From surfer dudes to roller derby queen to woodland hermit, they show that courage can be found from any background - and also that anyone can become a survivor.

    If you read the book jacket or any sort of summary, you know that our band of heroes do not make it very far into the Ruin - and ultimately land in Gameland. It sounds like a pretty straightforward plot, but Jonathan Maberry milked the journey for all its worth! Introducing new characters both good and bad, having old characters disappear or break away from each other, DUST & DECAY will be sure to make you wonder how everything fits together. It seems pretty strange to watch how quickly the world falls apart since ROT & RUIN, but given the zombocalypse, I suppose nothing is permanent - and everything is always mutating.

    Don't get me wrong, DUST & DECAY is an excellent stepping stone for the series. Yet, considering that we leave ROT & RUIN with the intent to find the mysterious jet, the characters did not make it too far in that direction. Gameland stood in their way. Leaving their hometown virtually defenseless and prey to other less honorable bounty hunters was not acceptable. Still. I wanted them to find more signs of an outside world in Book 2. This sense of not getting too far away from the beginning reminds me a little of LOST. I hope that Book 3 gets our characters to where they want to be - and that they all get to survive until then.

    The deaths in DUST & DECAY did not feel as powerful as those in ROT & RUIN - if that makes any sense. In ROT & RUIN, Jonathan Maberry drove home point that zombies are ex-humans who had loved ones, so the deaths played a part in delivering that message. DUST & DECAY did not have as clear a message, and the deaths seemed to prove that life was unfair and ugly sometimes. And there was ONE particular death that will totally change the whole scheme of things - and I hope that Book 3 will be strong enough to survive without this character!

    I think DUST & DECAY served as another "Book 1" to get to know the characters as they mature and prepare themselves to face the harsh world in order to find answers. Whereas ROT & RUIN focused on the Imura brothers' relationship, DUST & DECAY begins to set the stage up for the group dynamics. It will be exc

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 22, 2012

    G Cant wait to read!

    I read rot and ruin and I cant wait read this one

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 19, 2012

    A

    A

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  • Posted May 13, 2012

    I definitely have to give kudos to Jonathan Maberry for once aga

    I definitely have to give kudos to Jonathan Maberry for once again writing a book I found almost impossible to put down. After reading Rot and Ruin last year I knew that Dust and Decay would be on the top of my list for must reads. And I was not disappointed. I look forward to finding out what happens to Benny and Nix. The ending was a heart breaker and written in such an unforgettable way. I would not recommend scrolling further down into the reviews if you havnt read it yet, as there are many spoilers.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 16, 2012

    Amazing read

    This book was so good! I cannot wait for the next one. The ending had me crying my eyes out, but hopefully they make on their own.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 14, 2012

    Good read

    Really good but the end was sad

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 11, 2012

    So sad

    The book was awesome. I cannot belive Tom died. Cannot wait for next book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 6, 2012

    Cant wait

    Cant wait for the 3rd book " flesh & bone" :D

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 20, 2012

    Awesome

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 18, 2012

    Good but sad

    He was my fave charecter why did he die in the end!!!!!! Really good sad ending thats when he dies

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 23, 2012

    Awesome

    I read the first book, rot & ruin and i loved it so i sampled thus and even the beggining is good! Im going to borrow the book from overdrive on my local library

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  • Posted February 16, 2012

    Was it good? Yes... it was good.

    Following Rot & Ruin would not be easy but this book produced. I thought the ending was a little flimsy but enjoyable none the less. The idea of kids fighting off hordes on zombies is also hard to swallow but hey, who am I to put it down.

    Put it this way.... I can't wait for the next book in this series. That is as good an endorsement as I can give it.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 15, 2012

    Good but sad ending

    Why!!! Why did he have to die??? Im not gonna say the name(s) because i dont want to ruin it for the people who didn't read it yet.

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