The winner of Magnolia League by Katie Crouch, Mercy by Rebecca Lim, Divergent by Veronica Roth, and the bookplate Veronica signed to go along with her book is...


Shannon P.




Release Date: April 26, 2011
Publisher: Atria
Age Group: Adult
Format: ARC
Source: Publisher
Pages: 256
Buy: Fountain Bookstore / Amazon
Description: Amazon
R is a young man with an existential crisis--he is a zombie. He has no memories, no identity, and no pulse, but he has dreams. His ability to connect with the outside world is limited to a few grunted syllables, but his inner life is deep, full of wonder and longing.
After experiencing a teenage boy's memories while consuming his brain, R makes an unexpected choice that begins a tense, awkward, and stragely sweet relationship with the victim's human girlfriend. Julie is a blast of color in the otherwise dreary and gray landscape that surrounds R. His choice to protect her will transform not only R, but his fellow Dead, and perhaps their whole lifeless world.

"I don't think it ever is. The truth is, I'd still be working on Deathday if I could. It's out there now and I haven't read it since I finished my copy edits because I'm afraid that I'll want to continue to change it. And that's not saying that I'm not happy with it, but each book you write is imbued with what you were feeling or going through at that particular time. Also, I hope that I'm a better writer now, that I've learned a few things since writing Deathday. But there does come a time when you have to let it go, and for me that usually happens when I catch myself rearranging sentences obsessively." - Shaun David Hutchinson, author of The Deathday Letter.

"When my agent starts asking where the book is J. It’s so hard to know when it’s done, done. I think you just have to find a point where it’s as good as it can get for the moment and promise yourself that you won’t open the file again until you’ve gotten feedback. Nothing worse than sending a manuscript off to your agent and then tweaking it so that it’s ‘better’. They really hate it when you tell them to put down your book because you’ve got a new version coming." - Cynthia Omololu, author of Dirty Little Secrets. 
"The most important thing I've learned about myself is that I am one lazy dude. Seriously. It takes a lot for me to get up and sit in front of the computer and write. I have all kinds of ways that I trick myself into working. Few of them actually succeed. But I've also learned that I love writing more than anything else. I love creating characters and sharing them with the world." - Shaun David Hutchinson, author of The Deathday Letter.
