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The Z Word

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“Sexy, scathing, delightful, and intimately devastating.”—Gretchen Felker-Martin, author of Manhunt and Cuckoo

Packed with action, humor, sex, and big gay feelings, The Z Word is the queer Zombieland you didn’t know you needed.

Chaotic bisexual Wendy is trying to find her place in the queer community of San Lazaro, Arizona, after a bad breakup—which is particularly difficult because her ex is hooking up with some of her friends. And when the people around them start turning into violent, terrifying mindless husks, well, that makes things harder. Especially since the infection seems to be spreading.

Now, Wendy and her friends and frenemies—drag queen Logan, silver fox Beau, sword lesbian Aurelia and her wife Sam, mysterious pizza delivery stoner Sunshine, and, oh yeah, Wendy’s ex-girlfriend Leah—have to team up to stay alive, save Pride, and track the zombie outbreak to its shocking source. Hopefully without killing each other first.

The Z Word is a propulsive, funny, emotional horror debut about a found family coming together to fight corporate greed, political corruption, gay drama, and zombies.

256 pages, Paperback

First published May 7, 2024

About the author

Lindsay King-Miller

20 books53 followers
Lindsay King-Miller won the Colorado Young Authors Award in the second grade with a story that was blatantly ripped off from Goosebumps. Her influences have not changed much, although she’s become more sophisticated about their incorporation.

Lindsay earned a BA in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona and an MFA in Writing & Poetics from Naropa University. She was the director of the Tucson Poetry Festival, founded the Tucson Poetry Slam, toured as a slam poet, taught composition and creative writing to middle school, high school, and college students, and wrote the popular advice column “Ask A Queer Chick.”

Her first book, Ask A Queer Chick: A Guide to Sex, Love, and Life for Girls who Dig Girls, was published by Plume in 2016.

Her personal essays and culture writing have appeared in Bitch Magazine, Glamour Magazine, Vice.com, Cosmopolitan.com, The Guardian, and many other publications in print and online. More recently, her fiction has appeared in Fireside Fiction, Baffling Magazine, and numerous other lit mags and anthologies.

Her debut novel The Z Word is forthcoming from Quirk Books in 2024. Lindsay is represented by Kate McKean at Howard Morhaim Literary Agency. When she’s not writing, she’s thinking about what she wishes she were writing. She lives in Denver, Colorado with her partner and their two children.

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5 stars
164 (16%)
4 stars
358 (36%)
3 stars
323 (33%)
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98 (10%)
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33 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 305 reviews
Profile Image for mehta (a little inactive atm).
242 reviews41 followers
Shelved as 'dnf'
May 22, 2024
DNF @ 17%

The scrumptious cover and the premise of sapphic zombies in an unabashedly queer romp had me starting this book on its release day, but sadly the story is just not working for me.

It feels like the author is trying to introduce every type of stereotypically queer person to the point where they feel like caricatures; I don't want any community of a demographic, including queer communities, to feel so curated in a book.

The main character, Wendy, has a pretty generic personality, and I don’t feel enough chemistry between her and the characters around her to propel me to continue the book. There's a back and forth dynamic between her and her ex that seems oddly stale because the dialogue between them feels too wooden.

If the premise sounds interesting to you, give the book a try, it might work out better for you. For me, it's a pass for now.
Profile Image for Danika at The Lesbrary.
605 reviews1,508 followers
April 27, 2024
I was so excited to pick this up, because I've been looking for a new fun and gory sapphic zombie adventure. At first, I thought I’d found it with this, but I couldn’t suspend my disbelief enough at the ending to recommend The Z Word. Something about me as a reader is that I can hang with almost any weird premise and will sail over plot holes without hesitation, but I care deeply about characterization, and that’s where this one fell short for me.

I predicted the plot reveal, which, while obviously unrealistic, still worked for me. The character reveal, though, made no sense to me, and it soured the whole book.

Full review at the Lesbrary.
Profile Image for Sunny.
781 reviews4,985 followers
May 23, 2024
Bloody and gruesome but written in a very contemporary, unserious, and light-footed way. Character perspectives were all infuriating or annoying in different ways, and the “message” and tropes of queer found families and messages dyke drama felt forced, clunky, but most importantly— obvious. Basically a story of unhinged terrible gays doing unhinged terrible shit but alcoholic seltzer flavored… Zombie apocalypse in Arizona moment!
Profile Image for Alex.
63 reviews4 followers
June 12, 2024
Wendy is so down bad it’s not even funny. No seriously, it’s not funny, there are zombies girl get it together.
Profile Image for Dennis.
895 reviews1,825 followers
May 8, 2024
I was really excited to pick up Lindsay King-Miller's fiction debut, THE Z WORD. It sounded like a unique horror story that infused humor and sex and queer identity, and it is exactly that!

Our main character Wendy is bisexual and struggling to find her place within the queer community in San Lazaro, Arizona. She has recently ended her relationship with her ex-girlfriend and is having a hard time with it. Wendy's journey towards freedom from this relationship and having her embrace her sexuality is a strong narrative within this story. When people start turning into zombies, Wendy and her clique, including drag queen Logan, silver fox Beau, sword lesbian Aurelia and her wife Sam, mysterious pizza delivery stoner Sunshine, and Wendy’s ex-girlfriend Leah, team up to try and find out exactly what is going on.

THE Z WORD is a hilarious, sexy, queer journey for readers who enjoyed Maeve Fly (CJ Leede) and Manhunt (Gretchen Felker-Martin) infused with the movie Zombieland. The social commentary and characterization of each of the main crew of characters is what makes THE Z WORD shine. It's hard not to love the characters in this book, even with all their drama. The book dives into serious issues with dark humor and wit. I very much am anticipating seeing what Lindsay King-Miller writes for readers next.
Profile Image for Becky Spratford.
Author 4 books645 followers
April 1, 2024
Review in the April 2024 issue of Library Journal

Three Words That Describe This Book: satire, queer heroes, zombie apocalypse

Draft Review:
Pride is about to kick-off in the small town of San Lazaro, AZ, home of Seabrook, a hard seltzer maker who is the corporate sponsor of Pride across the globe. As the queer community gathers to celebrate, readers are introduced to the main characters through the eyes of the novel’s narrator, Wendy, a transplant to AZ who is still finding herself, especially after her difficult break up with Leah. There are hosts Aurelia and her wife Sam, Logan, a drag queen, Beau, an older lesbian, Sunshine, the nonbinary pizza delivery person, and of course, Leah. When a drunk party attendee begins acting strangely there is no looking back as this sexy, thoughtful, and fast-paced sardonic zombie adventure begins. Told with layers of unease stemming from forces both supernatural and very real, readers will love to root for this band of survivors, a found family that works together to figure out what is happening, and try to stop it from destroying everything they have worked so hard to build.

Verdict: King-Miller expertly balances the social commentary and fun in a novel that will have readers cheering for her queer heroes and questioning their own brand loyalties, at the same time. A title that will have wide appeal for fans of novels like Jennifer Government by Max Barry to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Seth Grahame-Smith to Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin.


Despite the serious issues this is a fun book to read-- the dark humor and author's intention that readers enjoy of the story shine through. But it is very thought provoking and seriously looks at the dark side of corporate's embracing "Pride."

The found family theme is also strong-- as seen in the best band of survivor stories.

The Queer characters are satisfyingly fully developed and are both on the side of good and evil. This was excellent to see.

The ending in unsettling for a variety of reasons as well-- in a good way-- in a perfect for thought provoking horror way. Endings to zombie stories are hard to stick the landing on, and this is a debut, which also don't walls stick the landing. This one succeeds despite the odds.

For fans of all satirical Zombie stories from a more on the nose campy Zombieland (movie) to the more serious Severance by Ling Ma. Even something like Breathers by S.A. Browne which is from the zombies perspective would appeal here.

All told from Wendy's POV except for short chapters from people who are turning into zombies. Introduce as said character is attacking Wendy and her crew, but it gives humanity to the people caught up in the corporate greed.

Sex level here-- I would rate it 2.5 out of 3. Sex on the page, but only 2 or 3 scenes and in realistic detail. Also lots of up front discussions of consent and ramifications of a broken condom.

Readalikes: Jennifer Government by Max Marry meets Manhunt by Gretchen Felker-Martin. It really reminded me of a GN I read last year as well--Boy's Weekend. That book would greatly appeal to readers of this novel and vice versa.

More soon
Profile Image for Jude in the Stars.
942 reviews621 followers
July 4, 2024


I tend to think I’m a smart person, but for some reason, it took this book for me to realise that zombies fall into the horror genre. I don’t know, I kinda always thought they were fun rather than scary. In books anyway, because I can’t do movies, the whole blood and gore thing doesn’t work for me if I see it. It’s one instance where not being able to picture what I read makes it better. Anyway, it’s not so much that I thought they weren’t horror, it’s that I never thought about whether they were.

So I started listening to this audiobook and was enjoying it a lot as some sort of maybe twisted comedy and then it got seriously horrific. The good news is, I kept enjoying it. Wendy is this vaguely pathetic woman who cheated on her girlfriend because she was scared she would leave her and is now regretting her choices. But it’s pride and she’s at this party, and Leah, her ex, is all over Sam and Aurelia, the two women hosting the party. Wendy hopes to find solace in the arms of Logan, aka Dahlia DePravity, and it kind of helps a little, but then everything goes to hell when some partygoers turn into zombies.

As you might expect, there’s a lot of action and fighting, but also a (un)healthy dose of internal conflict, gut-wrenching betrayals, twists, heartbreak… And the kind of desperate sense of humour that tricks me into having fun despite dozens of people dying.

Underneath it all is a not so subtle societal commentary about corporations buying their way into Pride and the lengths they’re willing to go to in order to have their cake and eat it too. I mean, there’s a reason I keep saying that capitalism is a killer. On that topic—corporations and pinkwashing, not actual capitalistic murder—I recommend this enlightening and disturbing piece on Popular Information.

The narration is good when it comes to pacing and feelings, even though the voices aren’t very distinctive. It feels more like a great reading than performing, which was a bit surprising since Mara Wilson is an actress. It works, however.

All in all, an enjoyable debut novel.

I received a copy through Libro.fm and I am voluntarily leaving a review.

Read all my reviews on my website (and please get your books from the affiliation links!): Jude in the Stars
Profile Image for emily.
745 reviews112 followers
July 3, 2024
Others seem to be kinda disappointed by this book, but for me, it did almost exactly what I wanted it too. It was a generally lighthearted zombie horror novel. Dark comedy vibes, maybe. I had a damn good time! I see a bit of what some other readers are saying re: characterizations—bc usually I’m a full character reader, too, and I need those connections more often than not. But idk, I just had a vibe. It was goofy and sad and succeeded in making me cry just a lil at the end! Which I was surprised by. Would I have loved a bit more character interaction that delved a bit deeper, yes, bc I always want that, but I think if you go in basically treating it like the blockbuster summer flick equivalent of a book, you’ll likely have fun.

Personally, I wanted more of Aurelia, and she was my fav, but I had a damn good time with this.

Fuck capitalism, and fuck homophobes. It’s getting rough out there yall, and we gotta stick together.
Profile Image for Kelsee.
45 reviews27 followers
June 12, 2024
When I first read about the plot of this book, I was so excited! A zombie apocalypse during Pride? Our main character is Bi? Let me at it!

About 20% or so into the book and I just started to feel like the plot was never going to get started. . . then all of a sudden you're in the middle of the story going how did we get here? 50% in and you start to hate our naïve main character that has you scoffing at every decision. (But I should've seen that coming when she was described as a "chaotic Bisexual." *eye roll*) How do you make a character a stereotypical white woman AND a stereotypical Bisexual at the same time??? Her constant trust in the police reminded you, you can still be queer and still be a part of the problem in the system. Which was even more frustrating when you realize that her and her (TOXIC) ex, Leah, are the only white people in a group of queer people of color and both in one way or another caused the deaths of others by the hands of the police or corporations!

Her incessant reminders of how she didn't feel apart of the queer community, instead of feeling relatable as a Bisexual woman, felt annoying when you realize her entire friend base were all queer people heavily involved in the community. WOMAN, WHAT MORE DO YOU WANT? SOMEONE TO TATTOO THE PRIDE FLAG ON YOUR BUTT? YOU'RE SITTING IN THE HEART OF IT.

I feel like King-Miller really wanted to make a statement with this one about rainbow washing, "political freedom fighting influencers," and sucky hard seltzers in a way that was fun and commercial. Instead, it just felt out of touch socially and the Target Pride collection equivalent to "Love Is Love."

My extra star rating truly is for the "secondary" characters in this novel who actually had personalities to stay engaged for. Sunshine (the non-binary pizza warrior we didn't know we needed), Logan/Dahlia DePravity (the sexiest drag queen in the world), Aurelia (the most loving house mother you could ask for), and Beau (the coolest lesbian I've ever read). You all deserved a better plot.
Profile Image for Alé the feral reader.
239 reviews148 followers
Read
June 14, 2024
DNF @ 50 pages in😫

I was so excited for a queer zombie book but I already guessed the ending and it is so blatantly obvious that it’s bothering me (yes I did look it up to confirm sns).

The characters were unlikeable and this just felt like surface level. I had high hopes for this but sadly it did not deliver
Profile Image for Stacy40pages.
1,665 reviews228 followers
May 5, 2024
The Z Word by Lindsay King-Miller ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Wendy is bisexual and trying to find her place in the queer community in her new town. It’s hard when her ex is hooking up with members of the community. And then those people start turning suddenly violent and empty- and it starts spreading.

I wouldn’t think a zombie style book would be my thing, but this was just straight up fun. There’s some serious blood, and steamy sex, as well as a lot of lgbtqia diversity. All the characters were awesome; well except for one. It left off with room for a sequel also ; but there was still closure.

“I want to make it through this, but even more, I want them to make it. My friends. The people I love.”

The Z Word comes out 5/7.
Profile Image for AJ Tracy.
18 reviews
June 29, 2024
I read this during pride month and honestly that feels like a hate crime.

When I picked this up I was like omg lesbian zombies with trans and nb rep!!! Sounds so fun and camp and pride! Instead I got “Lizzo would be disappointed in me” and mermaid leggings. MERMAID LEGGINGS THIS WHOLE TIME SHE WAS WEARING MERMAID LEGGINGS. Honestly this feels like a horrendous fanfiction pulled straight from 2016 tumblr just gayer.

Speaking of which, how are you going to be queer and make your queer rep feel forced??? Same with racial and cultural diversity. Like the author is fr just bringing up the complete license plate demographics of characters who have 20 words of page time total. I really do not care that this zombie that is getting its head cut off is a white, bisexual woman in her mid 40s with a gray bob. Like main characters sure give me their identities and descriptions but I don’t need to know the corpse’s identity????

In addition, even though the main characters had a wide range of backgrounds and identities which was cool, they still all sucked! Idk how you manage to make characters that are absolutely horrendous and awful while still being painfully under developed, but King-Miller did it! I hated pretty much every character in this book except for my queens Logan and Beau, we love them!!! I was not sad about literally any of the deaths. At one I was actually like thank god that bitch is gone.

Plus my absolute fav! A book that assumes you have the intelligence and critical thinking skills of a 3rd grader! The whole premise is that the zombie-ism is a metaphor for homophobia and bigotry. Cool concept! It’s all about attacking corporate pride and those who profit off of the struggles of vulnerable communities. Awesome message! But I do not need that spelled out for me in every other sentence. I am able to see metaphor and make inferences and read beyond the lines without the author hitting me over the head with it. Especially because the target audience is clearly queer people??? Like we’re gonna get the fucking point.

And finally, I could have forgiven a lot of these sore spots. I could have excused some of the outdated cliches and cringey descriptions if the plot or writing of this book was at all decent. But it’s not. The plot is predictable and boring to the point where calling it a horror or thriller is insulting. And the writing is mediocre at best. I’ve read better fanfics written by 15 year olds on ao3.

This would be the worst book I’ve ever read, but I’ve had the displeasure of reading Cassandra Khaw’s writing soooooo

Profile Image for Cari.
Author 18 books159 followers
October 2, 2023
OMG, I loved this book!! Perfect read for spooky season - I wish it was out this year so more people could read it. Our protagonist Wendy is fresh off a complicated breakup and still sad. She attends a party to kick off Pride weekend, which her ex is attending, of course. But there's one girl in the crowd who does not look good. Not just sick, but deranged sick. The virus or whatever it is spreads from her to more and more people in the queer community, leading to tragedy and fear everywhere. Wendy and her ragtag group of queer friends have to figure out what to do as the problem gets worse and worse. This is an engaging read from beginning to end - I only put it down a few times because I didn't want it to end. I'm hoping there will be a sequel or at least a follow-up. It's also very emotionally complex, so it's not just a monster of the week kind of thing.
Profile Image for Valdemar Cavazos.
289 reviews3 followers
May 17, 2024
I wish I could call this a cookie cutter zombie read but it’s not even that.

If you take nothing else from this review take that this isn’t a zombie novel with LGBT+ social commentary. It’s an LGBT+ social commentary novel with a smattering of zombies here and there.

I wish I could say main characters were interesting and deep but that would be lying. Leah and Wendy are extremely dislikable from start to finish. Leah is rather self absorbed while Wendy’s full character arc is angsty shitty adult to slightly less angsty shitty adult.

The main characters should have been Beau or Aurelia who are fantastic.

The synopsis also goes out of its way to call this book sexy. There are two sex scenes with one being meh and the other cringey.

The social commentary is heavily yet clumsily applied to the story. I can’t help but think of “Chain Gang Allstars” which handled it better and in a way that didn’t break up the narrative flow.

I’m grumpy about this book but please don’t let this deter you from reading or listening to this novel. Obviously it has an audience and the majority had a good time.
268 reviews
May 29, 2024
So, everyone queer dies tragically and the MC is still hung up on her ex who got them all killed. Also, there wasn’t enough zombie behavior. The zombies didn’t spread fast enough and there wasn’t enough downfall. I’d barely call this a zombie book. More like a poor take on conspiracies and making money off queer communities.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Brooke Gerber.
79 reviews3 followers
June 9, 2024
in good news, they’ve started writing trashy zombie books for gay people! in bad news, they really put them emphasis on ‘trash’
Profile Image for Diamond.
13 reviews2 followers
May 18, 2024
Would I read it again? Probably not. Was it fun? Yes. Am I in love with Sunshine? Also yes.
Profile Image for Bbecca_marie.
897 reviews25 followers
June 26, 2024
The Z Word
by Lindsay King-Miller

Thank you so much @quirkbooks for the gifted copy.

Blurb:
Chaotic bisexual Wendy is trying to find her place in the queer community of San Lazaro, Arizona, after a bad breakup—which is particularly difficult because her ex is hooking up with some of her friends. And when the people around them start turning into violent, terrifying mindless husks, well, that makes things harder. Especially since the infection seems to be spreading.

✨My thoughts:
Okay but why did I devour this book like the book was going to run away from me?! This cover is such a vibe and really sets the tone for this super fun zombie read. It’s hilarious, gruesome, and even a little spicy. Not at all what I was expecting but I loved it all the same! At 253 pages, you’ll easily get lost in this story, and binge this Pride journey into a zombie land all its own. The Z Word is out now!

Happy reading 📖 🧠 🩸
Profile Image for Tabitha -.
436 reviews87 followers
June 13, 2024
Thank you to libro.fm for an audio copy!

"The first pride was a riot, The last pride is a bloodbath" - how awesome is that tagline? 🤣

This was a very quick and entertaining read. One of the things that turned me off is that it felt like the author was trying to make sure every color of the rainbow was included and it just didn't feel like genuine. It basically just felt like they were just trying to shove the whole alphabet in there. (But I mean, we love rep!)

Another was that none of the characters, even the ones in deep relationships, didn't have any chemistry. And there was a spicy scene.... but also why are we gettin' jiggy during a zombie apocalypse? It was just ... odd. 🤣 but I mean, it was hot. 🤣

Regardless of those things - it was still a fun and funny read!
Profile Image for Krissy (books_and_biceps9155).
982 reviews59 followers
May 13, 2024
This book was so fun! It gave me Maeve Fly vibes and I had me lolling! I really enjoyed the social commentary in this, and the characters were larger than life. They really shined and popped out of the page! The chapters are short which is always a plus. A bit of steam and zombies, who knew that it could be so fun?! Thank you @quirkbooks for my advance copy!
Profile Image for Horror Reads.
425 reviews155 followers
May 30, 2024
This is a queer, sexy, bloody, and fun novel which starts at the beginning of a "zombie" outbreak.

Maybe not really zombies. These aren't the dead come back to life. But the infected definitely fit the zombie mold, with only base instincts to devour human flesh and spread the infection through bites.

Set in a small town during Pride week, a strange series of events at a party soon turns into a quest of survival as this infection spreads and bodies start piling up... and in turn trying to attack any living human they see.

You have many queer characters in this novel. While I generally don't like romantic arcs in my horror, the strained relationship between Wendy and Leah is integral to the narrative as there will be a twist later which affects all of the remaining small group of uninfected.

As bloody as it is, this novel doesn't take itself too seriously. There's enough quirky and weird banter and situations which will allow you a laugh or two between the action filled narrative. It's a really fun read and the reason for the outbreak is unexpected and takes a turn for a certain character that I didn't see coming.

I absolutely enjoyed this one and I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Anna-Marie.
127 reviews6 followers
July 20, 2024
I listened to the audiobook with my wife before bed every evening and she turned to me tonight and was like "we're on the same page here right?"

It felt like a NANOWRIMO novel, which is to say it felt like a quickly written first draft of something that has bones to be fun and adventurous and good but really never left the first draft space.

I loved aspects of it, the POV of Sam was moving and so well done. But Wendy felt like the most obvious author self insert character. Leah was the worst character, period. And overall, no one was developed very well, and descriptions of characters come in at random at times.

I wanted a fun and energetic queer zombie story and this really wasn't it. Cool cover though!

Editing to add: The most stressful part of this book was a condom breaking.
Profile Image for Bek (MoonyReadsByStarlight).
343 reviews74 followers
June 19, 2024
4.5 ⭐️
A wild action-filled romp with messy queer drama and critique of rainbow capitalism. A good balance of lightness and seriousness for the sort of story that it is. I also think that the mixing in of other POV and the chapters from the past added to it. I really enjoyed it!
Profile Image for Izzy.
111 reviews
July 11, 2024
terribly written, absolutely performative, with annoying, one-dimensional, and unsympathetic characters. i could get over some of these things if it didn’t position itself as a book that speaks for the queer community.
Profile Image for Anna.
58 reviews2 followers
July 1, 2024
Campy queer horror is EVERYTHING to me and, boy, does this book have it in spades. I was almost giddy with the amount of diverse LGBTQ+ rep throughout the story. If there's one thing I'm certain of, it's that even in the throes of a zombie apocalypse, queers will still be messy as hell (affectionately).
Profile Image for Annie.
64 reviews
May 27, 2024
4.5
Hab gelächelt, hatte Gänsehaut und habe wiedermal festgestellt, wie fucked up die Welt ist. Es hätte genau so irl passieren können und ich wäre nicht sonderlich überrascht. Liebens- und nichtliebenswerte Charaktere, so bunt aber charakterliche Grauzonen (love it), raging badasses. Alles dabei!
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