Buy new:
-36% $10.19
FREE delivery Friday, May 17 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Ships from: Amazon.com
Sold by: Amazon.com
$10.19 with 36 percent savings
List Price: $16.00

The List Price is the suggested retail price of a new product as provided by a manufacturer, supplier, or seller. Except for books, Amazon will display a List Price if the product was purchased by customers on Amazon or offered by other retailers at or above the List Price in at least the past 90 days. List prices may not necessarily reflect the product's prevailing market price.
Learn more
Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime FREE Returns
FREE delivery Friday, May 17 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Or fastest delivery Thursday, May 16. Order within 15 hrs 12 mins
In Stock
$$10.19 () Includes selected options. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Details
Price
Subtotal
$$10.19
Subtotal
Initial payment breakdown
Shipping cost, delivery date, and order total (including tax) shown at checkout.
Ships from
Amazon.com
Ships from
Amazon.com
Sold by
Amazon.com
Sold by
Amazon.com
Returns
30-day easy returns
30-day easy returns
This item can be returned in its original condition for a full refund or replacement within 30 days of receipt.
Returns
30-day easy returns
This item can be returned in its original condition for a full refund or replacement within 30 days of receipt.
Payment
Secure transaction
Your transaction is secure
We work hard to protect your security and privacy. Our payment security system encrypts your information during transmission. We don’t share your credit card details with third-party sellers, and we don’t sell your information to others. Learn more
Payment
Secure transaction
We work hard to protect your security and privacy. Our payment security system encrypts your information during transmission. We don’t share your credit card details with third-party sellers, and we don’t sell your information to others. Learn more
$7.89
Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime FREE Returns
A copy that has been read, but remains in clean condition. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. The spine and cover may show signs of wear. Pages can include limited notes and highlighting, and the copy can include "From the library of" labels or previous owner inscriptions. 100% GUARANTEE! Shipped with delivery confirmation. If you're not satisfied with purchase please return item for full refund. A copy that has been read, but remains in clean condition. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. The spine and cover may show signs of wear. Pages can include limited notes and highlighting, and the copy can include "From the library of" labels or previous owner inscriptions. 100% GUARANTEE! Shipped with delivery confirmation. If you're not satisfied with purchase please return item for full refund. See less
FREE delivery Friday, May 17 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35. Order within 15 hrs 12 mins
Only 1 left in stock - order soon.
$$10.19 () Includes selected options. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Details
Price
Subtotal
$$10.19
Subtotal
Initial payment breakdown
Shipping cost, delivery date, and order total (including tax) shown at checkout.
Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items.
Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.

Zone One Paperback – July 10, 2012

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 2,259 ratings

{"desktop_buybox_group_1":[{"displayPrice":"$10.19","priceAmount":10.19,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"10","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"19","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"pErCty4x73kFzru305TAwWsoNRhdgV%2FBDR5XQL%2B3%2FrSPjgP%2FtX9huwd0maoUm5f8EYLPFWSZ7YJJSVj%2B2s4RcUYbAK0rINAz7R6HNMOZgsjwDARcROZ47iJHOyrlNW%2Bs9LmR2Az%2BKdqEYBXC5o1nIA%3D%3D","locale":"en-US","buyingOptionType":"NEW","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":0}, {"displayPrice":"$7.89","priceAmount":7.89,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"7","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"89","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"pErCty4x73kFzru305TAwWsoNRhdgV%2FBJ%2BT1EvZbz8d8pNsHlcnFVuEDst5Pf7E3FU966nahxVpa%2F2vNBNPAb8wUWJfJWvoNeAiq50PF8ImSFnRYNFXYoGiQON0RPZA7oLRXoG3ABE6iSRLnUPr7mvHH8LD4GqF8cKCickSDOngCW8lap%2BwQlsH4fWuVqqDI","locale":"en-US","buyingOptionType":"USED","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":1}]}

Purchase options and add-ons

NATIONAL BESTSELLER From the two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Underground Railroad and The Nickel Boys: A pandemic has devastated the planet, sorting humanity into two types: the uninfected and the infected, the living and the living dead. "One of the best books of the year." —Esquire

After the worst of the plague is over, armed forces stationed in Chinatown’s Fort Wonton have successfully reclaimed the island south of Canal Street—aka Zone One. Mark Spitz is a member of one of the three-person civilian sweeper units tasked with clearing lower Manhattan of the remaining feral zombies. Zone One unfolds over three surreal days in which Spitz is occupied with the mundane mission of straggler removal, the rigors of Post-Apocalyptic Stress Disorder (PASD), and the impossible task of coming to terms with a fallen world. And then things start to go terribly wrong…

At once a chilling horror story and a literary novel by a contemporary master,
Zone One is a dazzling portrait of modern civilization in all its wretched, shambling glory.

Look for Colson Whitehead’s new novel, Crook Manifesto!
Read more Read less

Books with Buzz
Discover the latest buzz-worthy books, from mysteries and romance to humor and nonfiction. Explore more

Frequently bought together

$10.19
Get it as soon as Friday, May 17
In Stock
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
+
$16.20
Get it as soon as Friday, May 17
In Stock
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
+
$13.58
Get it as soon as Friday, May 17
In Stock
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
Total price:
To see our price, add these items to your cart.
Details
Added to Cart
Choose items to buy together.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"It's a book you want to read rather than one you should read ... while still providing the chilling fleshy pleasures of zombies who lurch, pursue, hunger.... One of the best books of the year." —Esquire

"Whitehead writes with economy, texture and punch. . . . A cool, thoughtful and, for all its ludic violence, strangely tender novel, a celebration of modernity and a pre-emptive wake for its demise." —
The New York Times Book Review

 “Uniquely affecting. . . . A rich mix of wartime satire and darkly funny social commentary. . . . Whether charged with bleak sadness or bone-dry humor, sentences worth savoring pile up faster than the body count.” —
The Los Angeles Times

"A zombie story with brains. . . . [Whitehead is a] certifiably hip writer who can spin gore into macabre poetry.” —
The Washington Post

"
Zone One is not the work of a serious novelist slumming it with some genre-novel cash-in, but rather a lovely piece of writing...Whitehead picks at our nervousness about order's thin grip, suggesting just how flimsy the societal walls are that make possible our hopes and dreams and overly complicated coffee orders." —Entertainment Weekly

"Colson Whitehead's
Zone One isn't your typical zombie novel; it trades fright-night fodder for empathy and chilling realism…yielding a haunting portrait of a lonely, desolate, and uncertain city." —Elle

"The stylistic exuberance on display would be overwhelming if it weren't so well controlled, shifting weightlessly from M*A*S*H-style battle narrative to a melancholic Blade Runner-like vision of Urban devastation. . . . The smallest of details is marked by originality of language." —
The New Statesman

“Leave it to the supremely thoughtful and snarkily funny Whitehead to do interesting things with a topic that lately has seated itself in the public’s imagination. . . . Not just a juicy experiment in genre fiction but a brilliantly disguised meditation on a ‘flatlined culture’ in need of its own rejuvenating psychic jolt.” —
The Seattle Times

“If you’re going to break down and read a zombie novel, make it this one.” —
The Wall Street Journal
 
“Stylishly entertaining. . . . [Whitehead’s] sentences are interesting, his plotting brisk, his descriptions lucid, and his asides clever.” —
The Plain Dealer
 
“In precise, elegant prose [Whitehead] deliberately layers the ever more disturbing elements of the story, one upon the other, allowing the reader to discover the horror in the same fragmentary manner we imagine frantic survivors might. . . . Resembles Cormac McCarthy’s
The Road. . . . An intense meditation on the way we cope with disaster and the stubborn, often inexplicable, persistence of the human will to survive.” —Minneapolis Star-Tribune
 
 “A sharp commentary on the rat race of contemporary life. . . . Zone One lifts all the gore and gunfire and oozy bits one might expect from the genre. But this is Whitehead, so there’s also popular culture to critique and parallels to draw between zombies and contemporary society.” —
The Houston Chronicle
 
[Whitehead] takes the genre of horror fiction, mines both its sense of humor and self-seriousness, and emerges with a brilliant allegory of New York living.” —New York Observer

"Highbrow novelist Colson Whitehead plunges into the unstoppable zombie genre in this subtle meditation on loss and love in a post-apocalyptic Manhattan, which has become the city that never dies."
—USA Today

"For-real literary—gory, lyrical, human, precise." —GQ

"A satirist so playful that you often don't even feel his scalpel, Whitehead toys with the shards of contemporary culture with an infectious glee. Here he upends the tropes of the zombie story in the canyons of lower Manhattan. Horror has rarely been so unsettling, and never so grimly funny." —
The Daily Beast

About the Author

COLSON WHITEHEAD is the Pulitzer-Prize winning author of The Underground Railroad. His other works include The Noble Hustle, Zone One, Sag Harbor, The Intuitionist, John Henry Days, Apex Hides the Hurt, and one collection of essays, The Colossus of New York. A National Book Award winner and a recipient of MacArthur and Guggenheim fellowships, he lives in New York City.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Anchor; Reprint edition (July 10, 2012)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0307455173
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0307455178
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.16 x 0.69 x 7.95 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 2,259 ratings

About the author

Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.
Colson Whitehead
Brief content visible, double tap to read full content.
Full content visible, double tap to read brief content.

Colson Whitehead is the author eight novels and two works on non-fiction, including The Underground Railroad, which received the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, the Carnegie Medal, the Heartland Prize, the Arthur C. Clarke Award, the Hurston-Wright Award, and was longlisted for the Booker Prize. The novel is being adapted by Barry Jenkins into a TV series for Amazon. Whitehead’s The Nickel Boys received the Pulitzer Prize, The Kirkus Prize, and the Orwell Prize for Political Fiction.

A recipient of a Whiting Writers' Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a MacArthur Fellowship, he lives in New York City.

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
2,259 global ratings
Book
3 Stars
Book
Good product. It came with a bent edge in the back.
Thank you for your feedback
Sorry, there was an error
Sorry we couldn't load the review

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2011
I thoroughly enjoyed Zone One from cover to cover. Technically first button to last button since I read it on my Kindle. Having said that, I knew what to expect before purchasing it in the first. I first heard about it via author Glen Duncan's review in the New York Times' Sunday Book Review (Oct 28, 2011) then the wide variety of opinions noted here on Amazon. Also, I checked out some of the responses to Duncan's review posted online. Mr. Duncan later had a follow-up to his review which appeared in the Times' Arts section (Nov 17, 2011) in order to address the polarizing reaction to the review. Had I still been on the fence about buying the book, the wide variety of opinions, including another author posting a written response to his own review, would certainly have pushed me over the edge.

Don't buy this book if you are looking for standard when-zombies-attack material. I am not trying to make it sound like I am thumbing my nose at that genre. Nothing could be further from the truth. A good story is a good story. I am always open to checking out a well-written zombie or vampire story. I can also appreciate the other extreme. As a side note, I have spent way too much of my time over the past couple weeks trying to figure out which translation of the Iliad to purchase. You have to have some appreciation of both horror and literary writing in order to enjoy this book. There are moments that would be right at home in any horror tale. At the same time, I was using the Kindle's built-in dictionary on a regular basis.

I would not even say that the zombies, or I guess I should say infected, are really the cornerstone of Zone One. The zombie apocalypse and continued mass infections would be better described as part of the setting for the story. This is not a tale about life on the run from a zombie horde. The novel is a reflection on a way of life that for better or worse is gone and not coming back. This includes the narrator reflecting back on his own life as well as how other characters respond to the catastrophic loss that has occurred. The moods and various reactions are covered both in the immediate aftermath of the disaster and the attempts at reconstruction.

Obviously I would recommend this book. Just not to everyone.
7 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on May 2, 2017
This is an interesting but complicated read. The author is obviously talented and very intelligent, which is both good and bad. The good is that the story is challenging and engaging. It is written with enough detail that one becomes interested and invested in the main character, dubbed "Mark Spitz" by fellow survivors, and his current place in this universe as well as his harrowing back story. But the bad is that the author uses such a wide vocabulary that I found myself having to look up word meaning often as I read. Thank goodness Kindle has a ready dictionary at hand. My other issue was that the story jumped from "Mark's" present to memories and back with little warning. I got lost at times, especially if I had to interrupt my reading for something and then come back to it. It was a bit disorienting. For this reason it lost one star in the rating. The book is also basically one very long (as in the majority of the book) chapter and one chapter less in length. By the end the reader does get a full sense of just who this man is, his motivations, his cynicism at this point, and also the very, very bleak outlook most of the characters around him have. I recommend this book for those who like a challenging read and a break from the usual mindless drivel of most horror fiction. And this is really so much more than just horror fiction. Rather than insisting the reader come down to the level of the story, Mr. Whitehead insists the reader come up to the level of the fiction, which is a nice change of pace.
16 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2011
Colson Whitehead's Zone One is a loving tribute to the last forty years of zombie related popular culture, and the author positions it in such a way that his influences (largely horror filmmakers like Romero and Carpenter) are instantly apparent to the reader. This is when the novel is at its best. Whitehead is capable of painting a vivid picture of the zombie apocalypse and the fundamental ways that once the world descends into survival mode it can never truly go back. This B-movie influence also means that Zone One is filled with the same societal critiques leveled by horror directors like Romero thirty years ago. Unfortunately, ironic jabs at consumerism don't really hold the same weight in 2011, particularly when the cynical reader might interpret Zone One as a cash-in of its own, considering the current commercial landscape surrounding the zombie phenomenon.

Heavy-handed Romero regurgitation aside, Zone One tends to suffer from a pacing that is almost unforgivable in the kind of genre story that it's attempting to tell. The novel's 260 pages takes place over the course of three days in New York, supplemented with copious flashbacks to the protagonist, Mark Spitz's, efforts to survive following the Last Night. Nothing really happens until the final thirty pages. Then things kind of happen. Quickly and vaguely. The audience that this novel is aiming at, the hardcore horror enthusiast, will find not only nothing new in Zone One, but nothing new at an alarmingly slow pace.

It's left straddling the line between a "literary" novel and a "genre" novel, but it doesn't quite do either satisfactorily. It has some very pretty description and excellent atmosphere. Even the characters are often engaging, though they tend to feel frozen in time in a way that continues to highlight the disappointing pacing. In the end, though, the novel ends up in most sections being boring. And say what you will about zombies, they are not supposed to be boring.
5 people found this helpful
Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
Scott Hutchison
5.0 out of 5 stars A Literary Zombie Novel
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on May 31, 2021
Beautifully written, elevating thr zombie novel from what might appear to some to be the strict limitations of the genre, into something very, very different.
Even better than Max Brooks' 'World War Z', the author has really sat and thought what it would be like to live in the period after a world fell to its knees before the shuffling dead, but had yet to go completely prone to them.
Highly recommended.
Lana
5.0 out of 5 stars À lire !
Reviewed in France on November 25, 2018
Très bon livre, comme la plupart des œuvres de Colson Whitehead, notamment The Colossus of New York ou encore Sag harbor. Sa technique vous piège dans le temps et dans une réalité de New York très intéressante qui met en relief la question de l'identité et de la culture (new yorkaise ici )
Damien Omen III
5.0 out of 5 stars Zombie-lit grows up
Reviewed in Australia on February 24, 2022
Really enjoyed this tale! I saw a review that critiqued that it was written with a thesaurus at hand, but I think that's a pretty weak criticism - it's just not a typical low-brow monosyllabic dumbed-down zombie story. What's wrong with that? NOTHING. If you want easy and dumb, go read a comic.
(And if you read it on a kindle, like I did, well just tap that obscure word you're not quite sure of and ¡POW! : dictionarise that sucka!! 😉 I like to do that anyway on some words just to learn their provenance/derivation).
But I digress... this reminded me of a very strange hybrid of Daniel Wilson's Robopocalypse (recommended) and Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities (utterly hilariously amazing); it's equal parts grunt-squad-fight-their-mission and a social commentary on the hollowness of modern acquisitive capitalism, with a dash of On The Road's journey of self-discovery through the great American wastes.
When you've lost everything, you utterly re-evaluate what is that you need to survive. And it ain't a new ottoman.
Will definitely trawl the author's back catalogue to see what's on offer. Five stars and copious thanks to Colson for elevating the genre!
Ps major props for quoting Public Enemy's Welcome to the Terrordome - the 1st time that's ever happened in a novel I've read!👍
2 people found this helpful
Report
Sarah Fitz
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic story and characters
Reviewed in Canada on February 18, 2016
Really excellent book. If you ever got to the end of a disaster story and thought, "Then what happened?", this is the book for you. I always want to know about the rebuilding more than the destruction.

The characters are intriguing and deeply real. The story itself is compelling. Don't read this book while trying to fall asleep unless you want to sit up all night reading and be late for work the next day.
One person found this helpful
Report
Aragosta
4.0 out of 5 stars Bleak in a good way
Reviewed in Italy on August 30, 2014
Living in zombie world is tough, and reading this book you get that. It's grim, violent, sad, but the survivors might get through. Just keep going, you've got to keep gioing! Seriously, a good take on the genre. Not great, but good.