The Zombies That Ate The World

The Zombies That Ate The World
Publication information
Publisher Les Humanoïdes Associés
Format Ongoing series
Genre
Publication date February 2004 – present
Number of issues 10
Creative team
Writer(s) Jerry Frissen
Artist(s) Guy Davis, Jorge Miguel
Colourist(s) Charlie Kirchoff
Collected editions
The Zombies That Ate The World ISBN 978-1-934692-66-0

The Zombies That Ate The World (French: Les Zombies qui ont mangé le monde) is an ongoing comic book series written by Jerry Frissen and illustrated by Guy Davis.[1][2] It is published in France by Les Humanoïdes Associés and reprinted in North America by Humanoids Publishing/Devil's Due. It is also published in Spain, Germany and Finland.

Publication history

The Zombies That Ate The World was originally published in the French Métal Hurlant from issues 141 to 145 (2003-2004) and in the American version from issue 8 to 14 (September/October 2003 - November/December 2004).

When Humanoids Publishing stopped publishing Metal Hurlant, the series continued and was published in France as hardcover albums. Four albums have been published and a fifth one is said to be in production. Devil's Due began publishing a US version in 2009.

Plot

In a world where humans have to live with the living dead, a new job opportunity is born: zombie catcher. Karl Neard, his sister Maggie and his Belgian friend Freddy Merckx embrace this career in hopes of making easy money. Unfortunately, the job isn’t that simple: not only are zombies dead bodies walking, but they also have a terrible scent and an awful sense of humor. As a matter of fact, zombies just don’t care about anything, since their lives are behind them and they have an eternity to enjoy. Karl and his team end up attracting all sorts of freaks in 2064 Los Angeles.

Reception

The Zombies That Ate The World was praised by people such as movie directors George A. Romero and Tobe Hooper and comic book author Mike Mignola.

The Belgian character Freddy Merckx in the series is a pun on famous Belgian cycling champion Eddy Merckx.

Collected editions

The French albums are:

  1. Une Odeur Épouvantable (54 pages, 2004, ISBN 978-2-7316-6344-0)
  2. Les Esclaves De L'Amour (48 pages, 2005, ISBN 978-2-7316-1636-1)
  3. Popypop Ne Répond Plus (48 pages, 2006, ISBN 978-2-7316-1774-0)
  4. La Guerre Des Papes (48 pages, 2008, ISBN 978-2-7316-1903-4)

A trade paperback collection was solicited but Devil's Due went out of business around that time:

Humanoids eventually released their own collections:

Norma Editorial collected all four albums in one book for the Spanish market.

Notes

References

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